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Barack Obama’s Facebook Fans are 2.5 Times More Likely to Donate

It can be tough to measure your ROI on social media for political campaigns.  Your ultimate goal is to recieve someone’s vote, and you do not find out your results until well after the campaign. However, much of what we do on social media is about relationship building. Through engaging content you can take somebody who knew little about your candidate, engage them in conversation, and ultimately convert them into a volunteer, donor and/or voter.

We all know then quality of the Obama Campaign’s social media presence, but lets take a look what it has accomplished for his already powerful fundraising:

I’ll leave you with this…. if you walk up to a stranger on the street and ask for money the chances of them giving it to you are very slim. If you ask your friend for money, and they know it is going to a good cause, they are much more likely to contibute.

Social Media is the means with which political campaigns build relationships, inform, and engage in constant two-way conversations with voters. Through social media potential voters/donors/volunteers feel connected to the candidate, and are more open to the idea getting involved when they get the ask from another platform.

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Social Media Is For Complainers (But Should Not Be)

In the political world there is a fascinating trend. Those who complain tend to use social media the most effectively. By those who complain I mean those who are NOT in power:

1. Barack Obama (the candidate, NOT the president). He used social media to engage and empower the masses unlike any modern presidential candidate we have seen.

2. The republican party in 2010: “Republican lawmakers are far ahead of Democrats when it comes to spreading their message in 140 characters or less.” -Politico

A Burson-Marsteller study found that 67 percent of Republicans in congress are directly engaging voters using twitter, compared to only 41 percent of Democrats.

Robert Gibbs, The White House Press Secretary even vented his frustration about the “professional left” stating, “They wouldn’t be satisfied if Dennis Kucinich was president.” The professional left being, Democrats who are not a part of government.

These observations all have one common tie. Those in power fail to engage, those on the outside complain.

This is similar to talking about the weather, it seems that no matter what the weather is people complain, “it’s too hot,”"it’s too humid,”"it’s too cold.” To a total stranger, you can bond over how “bad” the weather is, because it is not something you can control. This is what is going on on both the right and left, people cannot control what the government does, so it is easy to complain about it.

I argue that this is not how it should be! Through engagement and framing the discussion on your terms, those in power can bring everyone under the umbrella and turn the complaining into productive dialogue. Here is how:

1. Ask questions. People want to feel empowered and like they matter. What better way to make some one feel important than having a congressperson ask them what THEY think.

2. Open your self up to criticism, let people tell you through social channels how they really feel.

3. Respond to them. Nothing makes people feel more worthless than apathy. Simply having a facebook or twitter account is not enough, if you do not interact with your fans or follow them back it says “I don’t care about what you have to say and you are not important to me.” This leads to complaining.

How this works together, Step one “What do you think about healthcare reform?”

Step two, a voter states “I don’t like how you voted on health care reform, I fail to see how it benefits me.”

Step three, the Congressperson responds, “I voted for health care reform because it will help more Americans gain access to affordable health care, what is it you are most concerned about?”

By engaging this person you make them feel important. By explaining why you took action, you promote transparency and bring people under your umbrella, not leave them out in the rain complaining about the weather.

Also, the more you engage the greater you brand grows virally, ensuring your message reaches more people for zero monetary cost!

Once you engage one person, the information is public, this answers the question for many other concerned voters without actually having to talk to them. Proving to be an effective and efficient form of communication.

Many old school campaigns fail to see the benefit of social media, I leave you with this food for thought. It is the story of an underfunded challenger who defeated the well funded incumbent by using an effective social media strategy. Find the article here.

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President Obama and a Supporter’s Hollow Feeling

Barack Obama is one of the most recognized politicians of our generation. His historic inauguration flooded The National Mall with over a million people, and according to Nielsen Ratings, 37.8 million people tuned in to watch it on TV. When you add the 7. 7 million people who watched it streaming live online, the total viewership rises to a total of 45.5 million viewers. This high number surpassed even Ronald Reagan’s record for inauguration viewers by over 4 million to be come the most watched Inauguration in history. But we all know the success of his campaign…

Since taking office he has left many of his supporters disappointed, and experienced a steady drop in approval ratings (see below) despite recent political successes. As a supporter myself, I have been left with that hollow feeling.This New York Times article even reports of this disconnect:

Inside Washington, President Obama is savoring springtime resurgence: signs of economic recovery, victory on health care, the upper hand in the financial regulation debate.

Outside Washington, not so much. Polls show the president with job approval ratings of 50 percent or lower, as Democratic strategists brace for a thumping in the midterm elections.

Since the time of publication, Obama has also added the passage of Financial Regulation and the extension of jobless benefits to the list of his successes, and yet his approval rating has continued to drop slightly. President Obama even recognizes his administration’s struggle to connect with the average american. “What I have not done as well as I would have liked to is to consistently communicate to the general public why we’re making some of the decisions. Because we’ve been so rushed over the course of the last year and a half, just issue after issue and crisis after crisis, we haven’t been as effective,” President Obama said recently in the New York Times. It is quite interesting that the man who connected with so many people as a candidate is failing to do so as president.

This disconnect inlies in the power shift that occurs. During the election the people have the power, and the Obama campaign engaged their supporters and made them feel apart of something greater. This ability to engage his supporters, especially through the net roots, is shown in this Trendrr graph showing the number of blog mentions from google. You can see an immense build up leading up to the general election. Were Obama runs into trouble is after he gets elected, the online buzz drops off to near its pre-primary levels.This drop off is because the the power is no longer in the people’s hands. You can call a senator as many times as you please, but ultimately the yes or no vote falls in their hands. People do not feel a part of this administration.

For people to feel a part of this administration, like they did for his campaign, Obama needs to engage the public, welcome them into the governing process, generate greater online buzz and empower the people.

What ways do think the Obama Administration could greater engage and empower the average citizen?

For more please check out my senior thesis and look for future blog posts!

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