• About
  • Services
  • Clients
  • Project Snapshots
  • Contact
Amplify Public Affairs

POLC: How We Did It - the role of money in the Obama and McCain campaigns

The theme of this keynote conversation, the last session I was able to attend, wasn't particularly supposed to be money.   Joe Rospars (Former Director of New Media, Obama) and Michael Palmer (eCampaign Director, McCain) talked about what they did, their results, and lessons for future campaigns, but from early on the focus was definitely resources.

Why resources?  Well, aside from being able to buy more TV ads, the Obama campaign had more staff.  Probably a lot more staff.  One New York Times story about August campaign spending, for instance, said "Mr. Obama, the Democratic candidate from Illinois, spent $2.7 million on salaries in August, compared with $1.1 million for Mr. McCain, the Republican of Arizona."

So what can you do with extra staff time?

  • Be in more places - Obama had profiles and updates on Facebook and MySpace and LinkedIn but also Eons, BlackPlanet, MiGente....
  • Build tools - Online phonebanking. iPhone app (built by supporters, not the campaign itself). Election day turnout system. Polling place finder. Investing in technology to make the campaign more efficient.
  • Send many targeted messages - Segment, use the ladder of engagement to get people more involved over time, identify your best advocates - all of those strategies take time.
  • Create your own news - From the NYTimes Bits blog: “The campaign’s official stuff they created for YouTube was watched for 14.5 million hours,” Mr. Trippi said. “To buy 14.5 million hours on broadcast TV is $47 million.”

With less money/time, you should probably focus on the sites with greater returns and find existing tools.  It's still worth targeting your messages and creating your own news, even if you can't follow those strategies to the same extent.

As Palmer said, McCain's campaign tried to keep up with Obama's, but I'd say one place they might have done better is the last point: they started out offering reporters and bloggers lots of access, but that tightened as they did more poorly.  If you don't have a national campaign's ability to get messages out with TV ads, etc., you can't afford to follow their example.  In the age of Google, more content about you means finding more supporters.  More supporters gets you more donations gets you more staff time gets you more supporters - you can win an election that way.

April 21, 2009 in Grassroots, Recent Trends, Social Media | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: Barack Obama, election, election08, Joe Rospars, John McCain, Michael Palmer

POLC: Reaching Congress, according to Congress and according to advocates

My two morning panels were an interesting contrast: both talked about social media and influencing Congress, but from very different perspectives.  First we heard  from four members of Congress who are active on Twitter. Then we heard from advocates (from Fleishman-Hillard mainly) about how to reach Congress.

First the major similarity: both panels know communication is changing, that it's becoming more decentralized and more personal.  Congressman Tim Ryan (D, OH-17) said social media "accelerated the decentralization of messaging."  Bill Black of Fleishman commented that most lobbyists look with horror at the idea information is being dispersed - but now organizations realize they can't afford not to be doing blogging, Twitter, etc.

But unlike the advocates' view of the future,  the elected officials seem to be coping with the stream of messages, so far.  Senator Claire McCaskill (D-MO) reads all her @replies each evening.  Congressman Steve Israel (D, NY-2) said he'd tweeted about Jay Bybee and gotten responses from "sophisticated" people knowledgeable about the issues, and that was valuable and had more impact on his office than messages through other channels.  Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R, WA-5) commented that she has email screened so only messages from Washington State residents reach her, and so far it's OK that that doesn't work on Twitter right now (McCaskill has started asking her constituents to use #mo, but they aren't tracking that yet).  They'd like more staff/funding to push these ideas further - Ryan would like to organize discussions between his office and individual classrooms, for instance - but so far the mix of professional and more personal (McCaskill about a cellphone dropped in the toilet, Ryan being told he bought the wrong food during the Food Stamp Challenge) is working.

The advocates are focused on cutting through noise - and making their advocacy look authentic.  They know the politicians talk about things like Ryan's stack of letters six inches tall in his district office, or Israel getting "astroturf phone calls is what we call them."  John Wonderlich of the Sunlight Foundation has heard staffers talk about hitting Reply All and getting huge numbers of bounces.  Black mentioned a member of Congress getting a postcard purportedly from himself, supporting the opposite of his position.

So the advocates recommended associations reaching out beyond their members to find more supporters, though sometimes the biggest audience for your messaging campaign might be your own members ("look, we're doing something about the issue you care about!").  They suggested making things tangible - once 100 people in a district signed in support of more funding for locally grown food, Michael Bassik of Air America said MSHC Partners (his old employer) would go buy locally grown food from that district and deliver a basket along with the signatures.  Pat Cleary of Fleishman talked about the Fix Housing First campaign, and how useful Twitter was for putting out a constantly updated feed of information - Black went to a fundraiser for his old boss Steny Hoyer and learned the bill would be delayed for Sherrod Brown's return, and the only people who knew were those in the Fix Housing First network.  And as Bassik said, "there's still no substitute for an in-person meeting with a member of Congress."

None of that sounds much like "I sent an @reply and the senator read it."  Advocates are still focused on mobilizing lots of people and on having in-person relationships with officials.  Officials seem more likely to value individual, personalized messages.  One questioner stood up in the elected officials session and talked about new tools being able to generate phone calls at a rate he thought Congressional offices just couldn't handle, and the same is certainly true of social media.  I'm expecting a collision in the near future, and I expect the advocates' aggregate view to mostly win.  My hope is that the listening tools now being developed for corporations, with evaluation of each mention's tone, will be adapted to Congressional listening.  That's the only way the offices are going to be able to scale.

(Added) More on Congress and Twitter and advocacy and astroturf:

  • Congress panel liveblog from Jill Miller Zimon at Writes Like She Talks
  • Congress panel recap from National Journal
  • Matt Bai in the New York Times on "the promise of false intimacy between politicians and voters"
  • Claire McCaskill on why she tweets
  • Eagle-Tribune on fake letters to their editor

One last note on the power of Twitter: Israel was delayed in getting to the panel (and John Culberson unfortunately couldn't make it because of flu).  Israel tweeted "Traffic! They can figure out how I can instantly communicate with you, but not how to move a disabled car from the left lane of I-95 in DC!"  A minute later, @nerdette, otherwise known as Tanya Tarr, retweeted his message and I saw it.  About ten minutes later, the moderator read it to the session.  Once Israel arrived, I saw Tanya taking a picture of the panel.  A couple minutes later, she posted a link to the picture on Twitter. New communications in action.

The Congressional panel also marks the debut of my username on television: my question was read (though not answered) and the panel was broadcast on C-SPAN. I'm unduly amused by this. You can watch the archived session to catch all the funny bits I've left out.

April 21, 2009 in Grassroots, Issue Advocacy, Recent Trends, Social Media | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: advocacy, Ben Clark, Bill Black, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, cathymcmorris, Claire McCaskill, clairecmc, congress, John Wonderlich, johnwonderlich, mbassik, Michael Bassik, nerdette, Pat Cleary, patcleary, polc, polc09, politics online, repsteveisrael, Steve Israel, Tanya Tarr, Tim Ryan, timryan, twitter

Mobile Monday DC tonight at Amplify: "Texting for Dollars"

Tonight Amplify is again hosting Mobile Monday DC, for a discussion about "Texting for Dollars." We'll hear experts talk about how to raise money using new mobile phone systems, so you can let supporters donate to your nonprofit just by sending a text message. Come hear from:

  • Christian Zimmern - Mobile Giving Foundation
  • Josh Kittner - Red Cross
  • Suzy Twohig - Share our Strength


Please RSVP so we know about how many people to expect.

March 30, 2009 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: mobilemonday, momodc

Ada Lovelace Day: Cheryl Contee

Ada Lovelace Day celebrates women excelling in technology.

Cheryl Contee went on from our team (when we were Issue Dynamics) to Fleishman-Hillard and then to her own consulting shop, Fission Strategy.  In each role, she's been a force for using websites, blogs, and social media to promote companies and causes online, as well as a popular speaker at industry events.  And in her spare time, she's built the Jack and Jill Politics blog into "one of the most influential African American political blogs on the internet this campaign cycle and a stalwart online advocate for Barack Obama and against racism in campaign discourse" (and got quite a bit of media attention when she revealed her identity as well).

Check out Cheryl's blogging or her Twitter feed, and please participate in Ada Lovelace Day by blogging about a woman in technology whom you admire!

March 24, 2009 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: AdaLovelaceDay09

Recovery.gov: transparency and its complications

Yesterday, President Obama signed the $800 billion economic stimulus bill, and as announced a couple weeks ago in his YouTube address, his web team has created Recovery.gov to allow people to track where the money goes. Some observations:

  1. There isn't much there yet. Not too surprising, but there are very few pages on the site so far. They haven't even yet copied the whole bill text over from its place on WhiteHouse.gov, letting people see the plan and its implementation in one place.
  2. Lots of interactive items. I particularly like the scrolling timeline (apparently a Drupal module). The jobs map's pop-up information blocks look far more utilitarian than the rest of the (lovely) site design, and I can't click through for more specifics, but perhaps they'll come. The challenge with providing lots of data (which the site will do) is to also allow people to effectively visualize it.
  3. Consistent design with WhiteHouse.gov and Change.gov. Very smart. You know you're on an Obama administration site the moment you land there, and with Obama's approval ratings high, the new site will have an automatic boost in people's trust. Branding was a strong point of the campaign, so much so that it inspired copying.
  4. It's built on Drupal. (Announcement by project founder Dries Buytaert.) This is a technical point, but with sociological implications. Drupal is software designed for community sites, not for one-way information flow. Hopefully the site will take advantage of crowd-sourcing, building a community of news gathering like the one that made Talking Points Memo Time's best blog of 2009. Change.gov included discussion, but it would be nice to see a post-inauguration site allowing more input than a comment form - though the privacy policy doesn't offer evidence that will happen, alas.
  5. How many sites can the White House manage? The stimulus is an unusually important bill, but I could see them also launching sites for health reform, for energy policy, etc., along with the already-announced FinancialStability.gov (and AStrongMiddleClass.gov, but that redirects to the main White House site). They'll need to consider how much staff time it takes not just to build but to manage each site: adding new information, guiding any discussion, and communicating with users who've requested updates. Updating WhiteHouse.gov has already proven challenging, though most of those issues seem to have been worked out.

A few reactions from the political technology community:

Nancy Scole of Personal Democracy Forum's TechPresident: What's Missing: (1) A Responsible Party. The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board which will oversee Recovery.gov, hasn't been formed yet. So, email away! But know that there isn't really yet anyone on the receiving end. (2) Data. Data. Data. Of course, with the act three hours old, there just isn't much yet. That said, whether Recovery.gov will give open-government advocates the raw data that they're hungering for is still an open question. The site is, thus far, populated by the shiny consumer-end charts. A that's good start, but no replacement, advocates say, for raw XML data then can then use for mash-ups and number crunching.

Ellen Miller of the Sunlight Foundation blog: The basics are pretty simple. Recovery.gov must make the raw data available and it must be housed in system so that data can flow in and out easily. There should be open programming interfaces that allow developers to share and analyze data. Timeliness is key, so is accuracy. That, plus a few simple tools for easy citizen access would be a great place to start. A little blogging now might help with a few of the basics: What data is getting collected and how often? Who has to report? How often will the data be updated and how often will it made available to the public? What’s the database going to look like what’s the relationship to USASpending.gov? What kinds of content will Recovery.gov produce around the data? (Will there be regular emails when new information is available, blogging with analysis, etc.)?

Dennis McDonald: It’s not just the performance of the “stimulus” package that will be interesting to track, though. How the Administration develops the systems and processes that are needed to track and report on progress in an open and interactive fashion will also impact the recovery. Whether you call these systems and processes “e-government” or “government 2.0” or something else entirely, they will need careful planning as well as speed and experimentation. No one has ever tried to do “open government” before on such a massive scale. As I’ve pointed out already, the challenges that must be faced are great.

Micah Sifry of Personal Democracy Forum: I'm sure Obama's pronouncements on the shape of Recovery.gov are probably keeping his new media team awake 24-7, but his political team ought to be paying attention too. Imagine if citizens take his exhortations to heart and start monitoring their local government(s) to track how the money is being spent, and the site makes it easy for them to visibly share and pool those reports. Who exactly is responsible if, say, a school construction grant isn't being used properly? Recovery.gov could be a great tool for making government work, but along the way, it might also make a lot of existing government workers pretty unhappy.

Hopefully I can add more later - I'm particularly waiting for Colin Delany's take, as well as Patrick Ruffini's and Mindy Finn's.

February 18, 2009 in Issue Advocacy, Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: community, drupal, obama, politics, recovery.gov, technology

THE POWER OF VIDEO

It seems like this should be a video posting.  I am deeply impressed by the ever growing power of video as a tool for change.   Yes, YouTube has been making change for awhile now.  Most recently, and for me the most dramatic, demonstration of the power of video was the story about the human rights group B'Tselem in Israel that gave over 100 cameras to Palestinians.  The purpose was to document abusive actions by Israeli Soldiers, West Bank Settlers and others against Arab and Palestinian people.  The videos have captured some awful things.

To its credit, Israel, when it received these videos acted swiftly to denounce the actions and to punish those involved.  The videos have now appeared around the world thanks to the Internet, blogs and YouTube.   It is fair to say that today; no one can assume their actions will remain hidden.  Of course, there are a host of privacy issues when video is taken of people engaged in ordinary acts of living and have no reason to expect their actions to be documented. 

The impact of the video/internet combination as a tool to hold power accountable is a game changer.   There are other examples.  In Virginia former Senator George Allen was brought now largely by the video tape made by a Warner campaign worker. And there are be more examples I am sure. 

Video is of growing importance in all campaigns.  The equipment is inexpensive and the quality is incredible even when taken by the least experienced.  Expect to see more and more organizations figure out how to integrate video into their work.  And expect to see the more change in the world as a result

August 01, 2008 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

The Presidential Election Blogosphere

Preswatch2008

Have a few minutes to explore? Spend some time at Presidential Watch 2008 (I know, not the best name). This site tracks the 292 most influential blogs and web sites covering the election. Use the mapping tool to find out which sites have the most influence. And, the trend charts will show you the relative popularity of the candidates (as topics of discussion) over time. Warning: You will spend more than a few minutes on this site if you aren't careful.

(Thanks to Trend Central for highlighting this.) 

- Kevin 

April 16, 2008 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: Blogosphere, Elections, Presidents

YouTube goes to Washington

YouTube, which has since September had a program that assists nonprofits to get the most out of their videos, and which runs a special channel for the US presidential election, is now giving its help to sitting legislators as well. On Friday, the Washington Post reported that YouTube will be creating a special commercial-free area for Congress to post video.

It's against House rules to link to commercial sites, but many offices have been ignoring that - their in-house system doesn't deal well with the bandwidth requirements of video. YouTube's cooperation will mean they can do what everyone else does: outsource this problem to Google.

We'll have to see whether lawmakers will pay attention to privacy questions around online advertising if their offices are insulated from the ads - and whether the videos they post are viewed enough for anyone to notice they're now playing by the rules.

April 14, 2008 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Fact: Women now outnumber men online

Here are some compelling facts from Yvonne Divita's recent blog post, "What DO Women Do Online?" Do you know who your reader is? Consider these statistics the next time you post to your blog...

  • Women now outnumber men online
  • This trend is being driven by the wave of teenage girls logging onto the Internet
  • Boomer women are logging on, too!
  • A new study by Blogher shows that over 36 million women actively participate in the blogosphere every week; 15 million of the these women are publishing a blog
  • Increasingly, these online women are organizing themselves offline, too.

For some more insight and advice, see Yvonne's recap of the Blogher conference in NYC earlier this month:

"Engage your women customers. Don't treat all of us alike. Know what you want to accomplish up front and create trackable content. Which is way easier online, btw. While this isn't new...I've talked about it before, it bears repeating. Women like to talk to each other - we communicate. We complain loudly, and we praise profusely. Find out how to get us to do the right one."

Good advice!

- Kevin

April 12, 2008 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: Blogher, Lipsticking, Marketing to Women, Teenagers, Women, Yvonne Divita

Want More Twitter Followers?

Of course, the first step in getting more Twitter followers is to follow more people yourself.  And not cewebrities (web celebrities) who are unlikely to reciprocate, although, those are good too.  But see who your favorite Twitterites are following and grab some of their friends.  Most folks will reciprocate the follow.

And if that doesn't work, I think my friend Jeff Hibbard has found a great way to promote himself on Twitter...

March 13, 2008 in Recent Trends | Permalink | Comments (0)

Next »

Authors

  • Elena Berger
  • Jennifer Berk
  • Nia Edwards
  • Alison McCauley
  • Julie Minevich
  • Raquel Ortiz
  • Kevin Reid
  • Sam Simon
  • Robin Strongin

Alumni

Matt Bennett
John Breyault
Shana Glickfield
Jina Sawani
Kaya Walton

Grab Our Feed

RSS

Categories

  • Advertising
  • Blogger Relations
  • Blogging
  • Constituent Relationship Management
  • Grassroots
  • Issue Advocacy
  • Marketing
  • Podcasts
  • Public Relations
  • Recent Trends
  • Research
  • Search Engines and SEO
  • Social Media
  • Strategic Alliances
  • Virtual Worlds

Friends, Clients, and Role Models

  • AMERICAblog
  • Amplify's Disruptive Women in Health Care
  • APHA's Get Ready Blog
  • Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media
  • Blogspotting
  • BlogWrite for CEOs
  • Care2's frogloop
  • CK's Blog
  • Convio's Connection Cafe
  • e.politics
  • Earthjustice's unEARTHED
  • gapingvoid
  • Global Neighbourhoods
  • Henry Copeland - Blogads
  • IFAW's Animal Rescue Blog
  • Intersections International
  • KDPaine's PR Measurement Blog
  • Lip-Sticking
  • MicroPersuasion
  • Nonprofit Blog Exchange
  • Personal Democracy Forum
  • Prognosis: A Healthcare Blog
  • Seth Godin
  • SmartBlog On Social Media
  • Web Strategy by Jeremiah Owyang
  • Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Archives

  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
919 18th St. NW, 10th Floor, Washington, DC 20006 | Tel: 202-263-2900
Advocacy Avenue Blog | Privacy Policy | Site Map