XI International Seminar on Elections and Political Campaigns Politics in the Digital Age Leveraging Online Tools for Better Citizen Engagement XI International Seminar on Elections and Political Campaigns The George Washington University MPA Building, Jack Morton Auditorium Washington, DC March 16, 2010
First Radio President Coolidge 1923 – First President heard Hoover 1929 – President-Elect address FDR 1933 – Golden Age of Radio, NBC national network: 37 markets Fireside chats Calvin Coolidge 1923 Herbert Hoover 1929
First Television President Truman 1949 – Inauguration televised Eisenhower 1955 – First televised press conference Robert Montgomery, news extended to 30 mins 1956 – Emmy: Governor’s Award JFK 1960 – Kennedy-Nixon debates, 70 million viewers Dwight D. Eisenhower 1955
Broadcast TV Cable TV Week of March 1, 2010 Academy Awards (ABC) 23.3 M American Idol (FOX) 13.4 M NCIS (CBS) 11.8 M Cable TV Hannah Montana (DISNEY) 3.5 M WWE RAW (USA) 3.3 M Spongebob (NICK) 2.9 M Burn Notice (USA) 2.7 M
First Internet President Clinton Nov 1995 – First WH.gov http://clinton.nara.gov
White House 1.8 – Launched March 2007
January 30, 2001
Chris Anderson: “The Long Tail” January 31, 2001 November 5, 2008
YouTube: Campaign 2004
February 2005 - October 2006 YouTube Oct 2008 – Surpasses Yahoo! as world’s #2 search engine
White House 2.0 RSS Text Photos Audio Video
White House RSS
Google Gov Search
Twitter / Twitterfeed – September 2007
BarneyCam
Government in iTunes
Platform and Content Sharing + Convergence of digital, user selected media with non-traditional content delivery methods. Netflix/Blockbuster competitors. The Long Tail – Chris Anderson, Wired Television can broadcast one show to millions with relative ease. Internet strength lies in ability to broadcast millions of shows to one.
FY2009 Budget
Social Media: From the Inbox to Ballot Box
Evolving Influence “One of the reasons we did so many of the David Plouffe videos was not just for our supporters but also because it was a way for us to get our message out without having to actually talk to reporters. … Increasingly by the general election very rarely did we communicate through the press anything that we didn't absolutely control.” – Anita Dunn
staffers Congressional More than 90% are active online The average age of congressional staff is 31. Here’s what they do: More than 90% are active online 90% use blogs to help determine constituent opinion 79% of Chiefs of Staff, 66% of senior policy advisers and 65% of LAs read blogs 72% watch videos online 65% use social networking sites 60% prefer to use online resources when preparing their Member for a vote staffers Congressional Source: Edelman
Creating a Groundswell Through Social Advocacy
@SenJohnMcCain
Top Tweets
Top Tweets
MSM vs. New Media vs. CGC
Facebook Constituency
Facebook Constituency
Engagement Through Video
Political Video
3rd position in Google out of 340,000 Search 3rd position in Google out of 340,000 News Alerts
Scott Brown for US Senate (R-MA)
NASCAR Dot Gov?
White House 2.0
White House Reality Check “Flagged”
Future of Dot Gov
Mobile 2000 Slow, stationary connections built around my computer 46% adults, 5% broadband, 0% wireless, 10% use cloud, 50% cell phone 2008 Fast, mobile connections built around outside servers /storage 75% adults, 94% teens on Internet, 60% broadband at home, 54% connect wirelessly, 53% use cloud, 85% cell phone Pew Research, Lee Raine, June 2009
Mobile Growth
Mobile Giving $5M raised in first 36 hours Approximately $140k per hour As word spread, pace quickened to $300k per hour
mobile.whitehouse.gov
Online Community Engagement
Edelman | Digital Public Affairs Contact Info David Almacy Senior Vice President Edelman | Digital Public Affairs Washington, DC (202) 326-1706 David.Almacy@edelman.com Twitter @almacy http://CapitalGig.com