Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

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

by Jennifer Berk | Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

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:

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.

POLC: Social Media Platforms and Directing Traffic to Your Real Campaign

by Jennifer Berk | Monday, April 20th, 2009

I'm at the Politics Online conference parts of today and tomorrow, and this session on using social media in campaigns was the first one I attended.  True to the fact that politics is more than individual campaigns for office, a lot of the discussion was about Survivors of the Purple Tunnel of Doom, a Facebook group for people who tried to attend the Obama Inauguration and instead were stuck for hours in the Third Street Tunnel.  The panelists also talked about Save the Rich (influencing coverage of the recent tea parties) and the Metagovernment project (open source government).

Observations from the discussion about Facebook:

  • For messaging, Groups are far more effective than Pages (now Public Profiles).  In particular, with a Group your supporters can create self-organized subgroups and have their own conversations more easily.
  • Facebook Groups are less useful again than a Google Group – but only your most committed supporters will sign up outside Facebook.
  • Traditional media drives social media behavior: the Purple Tunnel Group was set up a couple hours after the inauguration, named after a Foreign Policy Magazine writer's blog headline, and was big enough early on that it made it into media coverage of the Inauguration problems.  And then it grew even faster.
  • Facebook is good for turning people out to events.  But people don't give money on Facebook, where it's not clear whether they don't trust Facebook, don't trust the Causes app, or just think fundraising "isn't what Facebook is for."

And about Twitter:

  • Don't underestimate a "tweet this" button on your website – you never know who has a Twitter account, especially this week.
  • Retweeting others from an organizational account often gets thanks.  People are surprised there's an actual human behind the account and pleased to be endorsed by the group.
  • Twitter isn't good at debates, and it's hard to move a debate elsewhere (see above about few people signing up outside Facebook).  [My observation: it works pretty well for interviews, though, so maybe we just need to try organized debates with rules for who speaks when?]
  • Consider constraining your topics, in general or at particular times.  It's unlikely you'll follow people when you only care about one of their five hobbyhorses.  On the other hand, Autism Twitter Day worked well, because it was people who didn't normally discuss autism and only for one day.  You were already following them for other reasons, and being flooded with autism information for a day wasn't enough to make you unfollow them.  [I think of conferences the same way sometimes.]  And in the process you learned something.

And what I thought was most interesting, about networks in general:

  • It's very hard to introduce a campaign on a social media site if you don't already have a network there.  You can't just appear and say, "Everyone has to listen to this!"  But if you already have connections, they'll probably help out – retweet, etc.
  • You never know how large your second-level network is.  You can see how many friends each of your friends has on Facebook, or how many followers each of your followers has on Twitter, but as soon as someone learns about you in one place and then spreads the word somewhere else, you don't know how far you can reach.

Thanks to moderator Andrew Turner and panelists Marisa McNee, Dave Meyer, and Ed Pastore for an interesting session.

Practical Twitter Usage

by Blogger Relations | Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Twitterlogosmall You’ve heard of Twitter and tweets.  What about Twitpitching and tweetups?  Read all about it on ReadWriteWeb.