# Local Discussion Monitoring For Global Brands

> Monitor regional issues, language differences, local sources, and city or market-level conversation.

> Monitor local discussion, regional issues, language differences, and city-level conversation for global or multi-market brands.

Use this cookbook when a global brand needs to understand what is happening in specific countries, cities, languages, communities, or local platforms.

---

## 1. Goal

Local discussion monitoring should answer:

- Which regions are talking about the brand?
- What local issues, languages, or communities are shaping the conversation?
- Are complaints concentrated in one market?
- Which local platforms, domains, authors, or hashtags matter?
- Does the global brand message work locally?
- Which local mentions need regional team action?

---

## 2. Choose Your Structure

There are two common setups.

### One Global Project With Local Filters

Use this when:

- The brand query is mostly the same globally.
- The team wants one dashboard.
- Regions are compared mainly through filters.

Setup:

1. Create one brand project.
2. Include global and local brand spellings.
3. Use country, language, domain, author, hashtag, and platform filters for regional analysis.
4. Use tags for regional themes.

### Separate Regional Projects

Use this when:

- Markets use different brand names.
- Local teams own their own reporting.
- Each region needs separate alerts.
- Local languages and sources are very different.

Setup:

1. Create one project per region or market.
2. Use region-specific terms, sources, hashtags, and topics.
3. Assign each project to the correct team or owner.
4. Configure alerts per region.

---

## 3. Suggested Query Structure

Include:

- Global brand name.
- Local brand spellings.
- Transliterations or local-language variants.
- Local product names.
- Regional campaign hashtags.
- Local handles.
- Local issue terms if the project is region-specific.

Example:

```text
("Brand Name" OR BrandName OR "Local Brand Spelling" OR "@localhandle")
```

For local issue monitoring:

```text
("Brand Name" OR "Local Brand Spelling") AND ("delivery issue" OR "store name" OR "local hashtag")
```

Keep language and country constraints in filters when possible.

---

## 4. Local Source Setup

Open:

**Sidebar -> Settings -> Monitoring -> Social Tracking**

Add:

- Local official pages.
- Local Instagram profiles.
- Market-specific hashtags.
- Local YouTube channels.
- Country or city review listings.
- Local forums or community pages where supported.
- Regional campaign pages.

Use **Backfill 30 Days** for important local sources when recent history matters. Use **From Now Only** for new campaigns, temporary local events, or lower-priority sources.

---

## 5. Filters To Use

For local monitoring, use:

- Countries.
- Languages.
- Nationalities where available.
- Domains.
- Authors.
- Sources and platforms.
- Hashtags.
- Subtopics.
- Intents.
- Sentiment.
- Priority.
- Reach.

If the country filter is sparse, use language, local domains, local authors, local hashtags, and platform filters as supporting signals.

---

## 6. Regional Review Workflow

1. Open the global or regional project.
2. Set the date range.
3. Filter by country or language.
4. Add platform or domain filters if needed.
5. Review Overview for volume and reach.
6. Review Sentiment Analysis for local tone.
7. Review Mention Analysis for domains, post types, CTAs, hashtags, and keyword trends.
8. Open Mentions.
9. Visit high-impact original posts.
10. Tag examples with the region name.
11. Add regional examples to reports.
12. Ask Kommon Poll AI to summarize the local filtered context.
13. Verify the summary with mention cards.

---

## 7. Local Alerts

Recommended alert rules:

- Negative sentiment in a target country or language.
- High-reach local author or publisher.
- Local scam or impersonation examples.
- Regional campaign hashtag spikes.
- Local review platform complaints.

Recommended channels:

- Email for regional summary.
- WhatsApp for urgent local incidents.
- Slack or Teams for local market teams.

---

## 8. Reporting Local Discussion

A useful local report includes:

1. Region or language.
2. Date range.
3. Volume and reach.
4. Sentiment.
5. Main topics or intents.
6. Key platforms or domains.
7. Representative local mentions.
8. Recommended local action.

For global reports, show each market using the same metrics and timeframe so comparisons are fair.

---

## 9. Best Practices

- Work with local teams to confirm keywords and slang.
- Keep local project descriptions explicit.
- Use local tags consistently.
- Verify translations and AI summaries before sharing.
- Do not assume missing data means no conversation.
- Compare markets only when queries and filters are equivalent.
- Review local sources monthly because pages, listings, and hashtags change.

---

## 10. Checklist

- Local spellings and handles are included.
- Local sources are tracked.
- Country and language filters have been tested.
- Local teams know which project to use.
- Regional alerts are routed correctly.
- Report format supports regional comparisons.
- Local mention examples are verified.
