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links for 2008-03-20

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 20th, 2008 7:19 am

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links for 2008-03-19

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 19th, 2008 7:22 am

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The Online Impact of McCain’s Decentralized Campaign

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 18th, 2008 9:15 pm

Last week, the McCain campaign announced a break from the BC’04 command-and-control model in the political department. There will be no political director, and instead authority will be devolved to the states and regions:

Sen. John McCain’s election planners are preparing to unveil a radically decentralized campaign structure over the next few months.

Instead of funneling authority through a few central figures at campaign headquarters in Arlington, VA, plans call for it to be dispersed to up to ten “regional campaign managers” –spread at satellite campaign offices throughout the country, according to two Republicans briefed on the plans.

The regional managers would have the authority to hire and fire, to adapt field programs to fit the needs of the states in their region. Unlike regional political directors, they would be part of the senior staff table at the campaign’s Arlington headquarters. Message and media, for the most part, would still be run through Arlington.

The Bush model was the epitome of national control and accountability, with marathon Saturday conference calls and spreadsheets tracking activity with precision down to the county level. With 62 million votes and a 20% increase in the Bush vote since 2000, you can’t argue with success.

So why break with the Bush model?

One can argue that they aren’t, as this seemingly well-informed Ambinder commenter suggests:

What this really means, is that the RNC will be running the campaign since they will be moving donors to RNC roles. The Regional Political Directors of the RNC will have final control. That is why DuHaime was brought back in and no one was fired from the RNC. On major issues, McCain (Rick Davis) will have final say, especially on message and media. But for door-to-door, let the “old” Bush team, do what they know. Every RNC RPD is part of the Bush model. That is why none of them were let go. It has been normal in the past to have a complete purge and that didn’t happen. This isn’t decentralization, it allows for better door efforts. Because the problem the RNC had in the past is grassroots in New Hampshire, is a lot different than grassroots in AZ. It will be interesting to see if it works.

Whether this is a genuine move towards regional control and flexibility, or merely a shift back to the historical norm of the RNC/Victory running GOTV, I’d like to raise a few questions about what this means for technology and the McCain campaign.

Technology thrives on standards. This is why Microsoft became dominant on the desktop, VHS beat BetaMax, and Blu-Ray prevailed in a short but bloody war with HD-DVD. Consumers and industry will aggressively seek to crown a de-facto standard before real progress can be made.

What does it mean if there are ten different power centers, and hence, ten different standards? Or, more likely, another campaign running on 2000-era Excel spreadsheets?  

Within the walls and with the limited time constraints of a political campaign, this sorting-out process works by brute force more than organic self-selection. A big reason why we had more online house parties than the Kerry campaign in 2004 was not just that more people on our side wanted to engage in this fashion. It’s that each battleground state had a specific goal for the number of house parties, and use of online tools was aggressively pushed in the field. It’s doubtful that this would have happened within a federated campaign structure without a political or field director whose sole job was to crack the whip on the basic blocking and tackling of the campaign.

The ideal environment for technology to thrive within a campaign is a common technology standard at the national level that devolves enormous power and responsibility directly to the local field organizer or volunteer. In effect, cutting out the middleman between Crystal City, Ballston, or Chicago, and the field.

This means that the campaign releases a powerful set of online tools that would leave any Tammany-era precinct captain green with envy: house party planners, online walklists, phone banks (both volunteer-to-voter and volunteer-to-supporter), and lists of high-propensity activists near you to help build Rick Warren-esque small group cohesion. One of the more impressive facts from the Bush ‘04 online field effort is that half of the RSVPs to house parties came not through guests the hosts already knew, but from others on the e-mail list ID’d on the site and automatically sent invitations to the closest party. Over half a million people attended parties.

One layer removed are the internal tools — the Voter Vaults, the extranets — which field staff use to create industrial strength walk and phone lists, and to upload and contact lists of offline volunteers.

A decentralized structure likely means that these tools won’t be developed significantly by the McCain camp, or will be pushed by the RNC, which has less brand affinity than the Presidential candidate and will not ultimately see the same surge in walk-in donations and signups than had the activity been pushed through JohnMcCain.com. While this may not matter to the activist who uses these tools quasi-professionally, it does matter to the casual activist who only gets involved once every four years. Publicly at least, most of the innovation should be happening through JohnMcCain.com, because that is the most efficient cash cow the campaign (or the party) has right now.

Here’s a concrete example of how good technology integration could matter — and why it may help to break down regional silos.

In my candidate trainings, I often retell the impressive story of Democratic Texas State Rep. Mark Strama, who moderated my panel at SXSW last year. Strama built his e-mail list the old fashioned way. He went door to door, and personally asked people for their e-mails. Not only was he able to get thousands of e-mails this way, but he was able to calculate that each of these individual addresses was worth $10 in online fundraising, not counting their volunteer activity, their vote, or the personal touch by the candidate. He used this to raise in six figures online for a state legislative race.

If the average is $10 for a low-involvement state rep. race, imagine what it is in a Presidential race, particularly if you get started early?  

Having a robust e-mail collection effort in the field is paramount. Everyone who attends a McCain rally should be asked to sign a supporter card that includes e-mail (and of course, offline info, but e-mail is the most efficient, low-cost mode of communication). Everyone on the other side of a door knock should be asked to give the same. Ditto for volunteer phone calls. And there should be a common technology platform for entering this information so that it instantly available to everyone from the person hitting send on the national fundraising and communications emails in Arlington, to the local county chair who is in a position to reach out from the Hotmail account. Though I didn’t quite have the same experience singing up to Obama’s site (and I also did from an Iowa address), this bit from Matt Stoller tells us how it should work:

In 2004 I signed up to volunteer with the Kerry campaign and got no response. By contrast, within a few hours of signing up on the Obama website, I was contacted by a local group called Metro DC for Obama, offered bumper stickers and yard signs and asked about my schedule and volunteer interests. I was also invited to several primary watch parties, and every tool on the site worked smoothly.

No local field organizer, or regional chair, should be allowed to claim that these are “my” names and hoard them. At stake is the efficient distribution of hundreds of thousands of supporter names, and up to $10 million in online fundraising. 

Without a truly national (or pan-swing state) field campaign cracking heads, I wonder how this happens. At least in such a way that rallies people directly behind the McCain brand.

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links for 2008-03-18

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 18th, 2008 7:18 am

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links for 2008-03-17

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 17th, 2008 7:23 am

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links for 2008-03-16

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 16th, 2008 7:20 am

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McCain’s Persuasion Strategy

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 15th, 2008 9:51 am

My posts on the Republican online campaign are sometimes prodding, but in at least one area, John McCain laps the competition: using his site to tell his story to first-time visitors and undecided voters.

I was really struck by this visiting the site today, on the 35th anniversary of McCain’s release as a POW.

The entire spotlight is given over to a brief, unobtrustive Flash intro on the anniversary. It highlights the Courageous Service video that has been a staple of his campaign and which has been highlighted on the homepage since the fall.

Many political websites try to be news sites and invariably fail because candidate website traffic skews to new and one-time visitors. By highlighting a boilerplate message-of-the-day in the top spot, you miss an opportunity to sell these visitors on the macro-message of the campaign. An emerging best practice is to highlight a news-driven story only when you have something really, really important to say.

What McCain has done well is to control the communications impulse of posting only the latest news up top, and actually use his website as a persuasion vehicle, which is relatively unheard of as far as Presidential campaign web sites go. This is what his homepage looks like on most days:

Notice the links to Courageous Service, About John McCain, Why John McCain, On the Issues. Yes, these links are in the nav too, but highlighting them here drives traffic. Underscoring the persuasion mission, there’s an Undecided section that aggregates narrative content and video from throughout the site.  

The Democratic candidates tend towards mobilization rather than persuasion, and their homepage choices have been more prosaic. For instance, an appeal for money and volunteer phone calls dominates Hillary’s homepage right now:

And Obama’s homepage is the same donation-driven “State of the Race” graphic they’ve had basically since January (though they did have that awesome One Million graphic that grabbed mucho donations).

By not varying their graphics much, both Clinton and Obama share an insight about repeat traffic with McCain, but I can’t help but think that McCain’s is more nicely done because it manages to convey substance.

In his homepage choices, McCain seems to be cutting against the grain of conventional wisdom which dictates that political web traffic is dominated by highly motivated activists. Don’t forget that in the primary, everyone is potentially an undecided voter. The persuasion strategy was definitely the right approach for the primary. Will it work in a general election where 95%+ of voters won’t move?

One obvious thing the McCain camp could do to enhance the activist focus is layer a splash page on top of this (see Obama’s here) to get the e-mail addresses and money he needs to compete. Remember that online campaigns are all about e-mail addresses, e-mail addresses, e-mail addresses. Or is the strategy here to go after undecideds figuring that McCain won’t get all-out support from the conservative activist base?

Meanwhile, the Obama/Clinton homepages are mostly about money and leave non-donors feeling somewhat empty. This is a mixed blessing, but a blessing nonetheless: raising $90 million in February ain’t nothin’ to sneeze at. But as the web becomes more and more mainstream, the proportion of undecided voters visiting the sites to make their decisions will only grow. It won’t just be about donors and activists. The McCain approach may be on the leading edge of something new.

What do you think?

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John McCain, Vlogger

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 13th, 2008 10:55 pm

How does John McCain go up against the $3 million-per-email Obama machine and the $2 million-per-email Clinton machine? It’s a big question with serious implications for the future of the Republican Party. And the answer is not incrementalism.

First, let’s look at the fundamentals.

How did Clinton and Obama get 20 to 30 percent of their voters to sign up for their lists? At a fundamental level, it’s because they did the big things online. They created a sense that the Web was The Place for anyone to come and show their support. They channeled their offline activity into email addresses and online donations. They did videos that were at once viral and strategic, and not just the expected bio pieces.

These newsworthy events early in the campaign forced hundreds of thousands of people to go to BarackObama.com or HillaryClinton.com to see what was up. While they were there, tens of thousands signed up for the list. And thousands gave donations, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars in single days in the sleepy 2007 months.

Yes, one can argue there was more organic interest, more Google searches, more media interest in Clinton and Obama. But the big events were force multipliers. When Romney, Thompson and Paul staged big online events during the primaries, their supporters responded in record numbers.

All of this launched a snowball effect. With the Clinton and Obama lists in the millions, it’s just a numbers game. They could send out crap emails and people would respond. And McCain could send out great emails and people wouldn’t respond because his list isn’t organically as huge.

The traditional political answer to drive people to your website is to go out and find people. To advertise to them.

That’s too expensive to do in any scalable fashion, particularly when the metric is signups and money. Online, it’s much easier to let people come to you by making them organically interested.

To wit: John McCain should do a daily video blog from everyday now until the election. And don’t make it “behind the scenes” fluff. More often than not, make it dead serious. Have him break news and introduce new messages and lines of attack. When he challenges Obama to debate, don’t do it in a speech, do it on the vlog.

In short, do what Fred Thompson promised but never eventually delivered on. Let people see the real straight-talkin’ McCain, and do it in a serialized fashion so that people come to expect it (there’s a reason why Buzz Out Loud #680 and TWiT #135 get big audiences).

This is also a strategic move on McCain’s part. If the footage next eight months against Obama is set-piece rally speeches, we lose. If the setting is more intimate and conversational, Obama is less of a threat, as we have seen from his uninspiring performance in debates.

In 2004, the Bush press shop would send around the paragraph or two in every stump speech that was different. Since most stump speeches were pretty much carbon copies of the last one, these inserts were news likely be the lede on an AP writethru within the hour.

In 2008, there is no reason not to launch many if not most of these messages on YouTube, or if one wants to follow the evil Peter Daou strategy, on an unembeddable JohnMcCain.com player with a huge signup box next to it.

In fact, campaigns that go the traditional route are missing out. By doing things mostly offline, they are missing an opportunity to drive people to the website to sign up and eventually donate. Do it on TV, and it’s an ephemeral one day story. Do it on the Web and, true, the message won’t stick around any longer, but the e-mail addresses you net that day will.

Plus, it’s not an either-or strategy. You give B-roll to the nets and force them to credit the URL. This drives even more traffic, while getting your message out in the same medium that would have seen your offline message anyway.

This ”Big Moments” strategy calls for John McCain to break his campaign’s most provocative news online. And start doing this now, so it can have a chance to snowball before the convention.

They’ll say this is too time consuming. No, it’s not. It’s two minutes of the candidate’s time everyday, speaking from the gut, with minimal editing. The staff time would invariably be less than what it would take to craft two minutes of a candidate’s speech that no more than a few thousand people would see live anyway. The less scripting and post-production the better.

They’ll say this is somehow unpresidential. No, it’s not. For one thing, John McCain is not the President. He is a candidate who is trying to be President. And McCain excels in natural, more intimate settings. Shooting the breeze on the back of the bus is also “unpresidential” but McCain does it anyway.

They’ll say it screws the media out of exclusives. Yes, it does. But with the web, campaigns have a viable distribution channel of their own, and as a Presidential nominee, the media is to some extent forced to repeat it. A medium like this actually gives the campaign a greater opportunity to shape the message. And is it in a Republican campaign or White House’s strategic interest to enable the New York Times’s continued relevance by giving them exclusives that give them a leg up over competitors? A campaign can break its own news through the medium it chooses.

At the end of the day, the goal is simple: to create a content magnet that sucks in any reasonably interested McCain voter, gets them on the email list in short order, and gets them organizing (and self-organizing) right away.

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links for 2008-03-13

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 13th, 2008 7:21 am

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links for 2008-03-12

by Patrick Ruffini :: March 12th, 2008 7:18 am

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Patrick Ruffini   Patrick Ruffini is an online political strategist, blogger, and wearer of many hats. More...


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