“‘Twas the night before the election…”

Here it is, the eve of the 2008 presidential election, and we’re (finally) about to elect a new president of the United States.  This election has been long in coming and it has spawned a new way of politicking.  (My own opinion is that it should have happened much earlier, but presidential campaigns are run by people who make money by creating TV commercials.)

I wanted to take a look at the level of online involvement that each campaign has inspired.  For the past nine months, I’ve seen plenty of banner and large box ads for Barack Obama - a wise choice in my opinion - but not nearly that much for John McCain.  Online display ads can be targeted and can bring a person right to an intended page so the person can get information that they are likely interested in.

But what intrigues me the most is  how the campaigns used social media as marketing and networking tools.  So I decided to tak a look at the larger social networks to gauge each candidate’s presence and the effectiveness.  Looks like Barack Obama wins hands down.

MySpace

As of this writing, Barack Obama has 834,815 followers on MySpace.  Compare that to John McCain’s 218, 136.  That’s almost 4 times as many followers for Obama than McCain, with a difference of 616,679 - only 9,000 less than Sarah Palin’s home state of Alaska.

Obama’s page is filled with videos that a visitor can view or grab for viral effect.  It has polling information.  Basically tons of information that a fan could use to reach out to others in hopes to either impress them into voting for Obama and how and where to actually vote.  His use of space was excellent and, for a page that has so much, it downloaded very quickly.   One of the best features is the “Obama Everywhere” section, where the campaign connects you to Obama profiles on Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, Flickr, iTunes, and Digg.  Very simple, but truly shows how valuable social media can be.

McCain’s page is giving me problems.  The masthead is excellent, but there isn’t much there.  A video, a chart comparing the two candidates, and a link to polling places s there, but not much else.  In fact, I’m getting a lot of blue space where there could be more info.  Problems downloading?  Poor execution on their part?  I don’t know…but I tried reloading twice and got the same thing.

Facebook

Here, Obama dominates once again.  He’s got 2,392,582 followers.  That’s larger than 15 of the 50 states.  Just as the MySpace prensence, the Facebook group page is filled with info to grab, fan followings, and up to the minute updates.  The cleanliness of the site itself makes it better than the MySpace page if you’re looking to be informed or to connect with others, while the MySpace page comes off as more enthusiastic.

McCain’s page is it’s equal in content as if features a game called “Pork Invaders”, a tribute to his crusade against earmarks.  But, unfortunately for the candidate, he has only 621,846 followers.  Again, that’s just over 25% of the amount Obama has.  Here, I’d say that the lack of overall enthusiasm on social networks shines through.  Updates are sporadic.  It makes it seem participation on these sites aren’t important.

YouTube

Well, you can obviously see a trend here.  Barack Obama has 1805 uploaded videos with 18,474,483 views and 115,208 subscribers.  John McCain has 330 videos with 2,044,717 views and 28,838 subscribers.  Not even close.   Again, four times as many subscribers.  The big difference is the amount of views and subscribers.

What I’m thinking is that the Obama people know that social networks  are a great tool and that their likely voters are part of that culture.  McCain’s team has undervalued this resource.

Twitter 

Yikes!  Obama’s got 113,304 followers and McCain’s got only 4,686.  While Obama doesn’t have that many updates, 258, McCain has only 25.  From the way they’re written, it seems as if they’re from a supporter…or at least someone that has a connection to the campaign, but isn’t officially tweeting.  A sorry effort.

Conclusions

While I think that social networks are more likely to attract younger people and younger people are more than likely to be Obama supporters, the difference in numbers here is telling.  It’s a combination of those demographic trends and a likely  lack of understanding and interest from the McCain people.  This is a big mistake on the campaign’s part and it could harm the GOP for a long time.

Social networking is how many now communicate.  How people get their news - or at least how they are directed to their news.  It’s how people connect with others.   That the Republicans haven’t taken initiatives to in some ways match the Obama’s campaign shows me that the apparatus put in place by the Democrats could give them the knowledge base and experience to dominate in online politicking for years to come.

This is going to be a close election, closer than most people think.  And while I can’t say that online social media efforts will win it for Obama if he ends up being victorious, the connections that people make on line, the enthusiasm that it breeds, and the calls to action will, in my opinion give Barack Obama hundreds of thousands of votes…votes that can make a difference.

Here’s some fresh news from AdAdge that Barack Obama has been awarded the AdAge Marketer of the Year award, edging out Apple and Zappos. 36.1% of all votes went to Obama, compared toApple’s 27.3% and Zappo’s 14.1%.

Just weeks before he demonstrates whether his campaign’s blend of grass-roots appeal and big media-budget know-how has converted the American electorate, Sen. Barack Obama has shown he’s already won over the nation’s brand builders. He’s been named Advertising Age’s marketer of the year for 2008.

Mr. Obama won the vote of hundreds of marketers, agency heads and marketing-services vendors gathered here at the Association of National Advertisers’ annual conference. He edged out runners-up Apple and Zappos.com. The rest of the shortlist, selected by Ad Age’s editorial staff, was rounded out by megabrand Nike, turnaround story Coors and Mr. Obama’s rival, Sen. John McCain.

I don’t know but this all sounds like “grassroots” campaigning and politics to me; that said, the Barack Obama campaign has a certain level of religiosity and passion that might just have welled into campaigning, using AdAge as a platform.

I wonder.  I might be wrong.

It’s just a little fishy. Sounds a little bit of memetic engineering mixed in with a high passion base rolled into a high probability that modern ad men and ad women are urban liberals and might use the awards to make a vocal statement.

Again, I might be wrong.

Mind you, if this is a conspiracy of Barack Obama campaigning and pro-Obama activation, then the success in fact proves and reinforces the award as rightfully — and with passion — belonging to the Obama/Biden ticket.

What do you think?

I’m taking a look at some of today’s keyword buys the buys by the two presidential campaigns and - at least as it relates to today’s new stories - they appear to be at least timely.  That’s because today, Wall Street is having a meltdown with the Lehman Brothers heading to bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch essentially selling itself to Bank of America. 

When I put in “Lehman Brothers” I got an ad for Barack Obama:

Worried About the Market?

Read About Obama’s Plan to Revive
the Economy and Sign Up for Events
BarackObama.com/Economy

The link goes to a landing page in which a video automatically starts - a 20 minute long video.  It was rrded earlier this year and doesn’t address today’s headlines.  It shouldn’t begin automatically and it needs to be shorter.  It’s a  speech - not the best idea, but it does address “economic woe issues”.  

The page also lists a few basic proposals that Obama is laying out on taxes and then invites people to sign up to receive into and to be invited to events.

McCain, at least when with is effort on Lehman Brothers, hadn’t purchased the keyword.

But McCain didso for Merrill Lynch:

Merrill lynch

Learn About John McCain’s Plans for
The US Housing Crisis Today!
JohnMcCain.com/HousingPlan

He then asks us to sign a petition, but he doesn’t really tell us what’s on the petition:

There are important steps to strengthen the foundations of the millions of businesses small and large that provide jobs for American workers. There is no government program or policy that is a substitute for a good job. John McCain’s vision for addressing the housing crisis would also strengthen the U.S. dollar and help to control the rising cost of living that hurts our families.

John McCain has proposed principles for addressing the housing crisis in the short-term as well as in the long-term to assure it never happens again. He offers straight talk on the housing crisis and will not play election year politics with the housing crisis. He will evaluate everything in terms of whether it might be harmful or helpful to our effort to deal with the crisis we face now.

When we commit taxpayer dollars as assistance, it should be accompanied by reforms that ensure that we never face this problem again. Central to those reforms should be transparency and accountability.

To me, this doesn’t make sense.  People searching for those terms who then click on these ads will be looking for deeper information.  At least in my opinion. 

Both could use a “statement from the campaign” type of area that addresses today’s issues.

At this point, McCain’s group - led by Eric Frenchman - has been blowing away Obama’s.  Today, not so much.  But that will be just one day of many.

I’ll be looking at their search strategies more and more often until Election Day.

Google’s come up with a great idea.  They’ve apparently reached out to several leading political journalists and bloggers to include their shared Google reader feeds on political stories for “Power Readers in Politics”, a service that people can catch what some of their favorite political prognosticators are following.

The service includes the Readers from the McCain and the Obama campaigns.  But what I like about it best is that they don’t go after the same standard DC media crowd (that’s if they even know what Google Reader is).  Instead, they’ve turned to guys like Patrick Ruffini, one of the founders of The Next Right.

After a while, I’ve gotten sick of the same old go to folks that are nothing more than fallback personalities because assignment editors or producers haven’t bothered to take the time to learn about anyone new.  This changes that.

Check it out.

Disclosure: Philosophically, I’m equidistant between John McCain and Barack Obama. I like both. And I haven’t decided whom I’m going to vote for. I’m an independent and I’ve always voted for the person.

Okay…

When I say internet, I don’t mean the thing that was started by the Pentagon after World War II. Nor do I mean this great medium that we can do marketing on.

When I say internet, I mean the internet as a catalyst that’s causing huge cultural shifts in the way we as individuals and organizations present ourselves, from the way we communicate and the way we handle commerce. It’s changed. It’s a massive change, it’s a widespread change, it’s a permanent change.

Therefore, the next American president, regardless of who he is and key members of his team MUST seek to understand digital media. They MUST understand how this will affect society. It’s becoming too important and too ingrained in the lives of too many Americans.

What made me think this way was that I read two articles (here and here) in two days regarding John McCain’s understanding of technology and the internet. He’s got little to no understanding of either.

This past January, McCain responded to Mike Allen, a reporter for the Politico as to what he preferred - a Mac or a PC by saying

“I am an illiterate that has to rely on my wife for all of the assistance that I can get.”

This isn’t about Mac vs. PC, it’s about attitude, interest, and involvement. Commerce has changed, communication has changed, entertainment has changed, and individual behavior has changed. We’ve changed. We need a president who understands this. We can’t afford to have someone who plays the role of the technoboob. The media will smirk (because they won’t see why this is vital), the political arena will chuckle. It will be fodder for Letterman and Leno.

This is no longer cute. It’s no longer good enough to play up one’s ignorance. He’s not your granddad or dad that you’re showing how to use the web with him playing along out of curiosity and courteousness. The internet is not a teen phenomenon. It’s not Elvis and Buddy Holly. It’s 50 years of rock ‘n roll, still going strong.The internet is what the vast majority of Americans are about…and about where we are going.

If McCain is elected, he’ll be the leader of the country…one that has about 225,000,000 people that have internet access, one that has billions of dollars (or is it trillions) of ecommerce being completed each year. He’ll need to get a grip on this cultural shift.

If you think this is silly, then you’re not getting what I’m saying. I don’t care about left or right, Democrat of Republican. And, no, he doesn’t need to have his own Facebook page or join Twitter. He needs to realize that this paradigm shift is being created by and, as a result, greatly impacting his constituents, the people who will be looking for him to lead.