Nov
17
2009
5

Does social media really influence how we vote?

Are the digerati and those inside the Westminster bubble unduly obsessed by the role that social media will play in the forthcoming UK General Election? The answer from Weber Shandwick CEO and former Labour spinmeister Colin Byrne appears to be ‘yes’. Weber released the findings of a consumer survey to the Guardian over the weekend which show that when it comes to influencing voting intention, traditional media reigns supreme.

According to 1,000 respondents, national and regional print and broadcast media were selected as influencing them most by 59% of people, political advertising and party broadcasts scored 10% and social media sites scored just 5%. While few would dispute the role that the traditional media plays in influencing voters, Byrne is perhaps rather myopic in advocating that we should all now agree with Hazel Blears’ dictum of “YouTube if you want to”.

Integration

The fundamental truth which the conclusion drawn from this research overlooks is that traditional media doesn’t sit in a silo from social media, nor political advertising for that matter. While mainstream channels may be where most news and views are consumed, they are no longer where content is exclusively being created and shared. Byrne cites the McBride affair in his Guardian letter, a perfect example of a story broken on a political blog which then received substantial and sustained mainstream media coverage.  Look at how the smears over the PM’s mental state in the blogosphere influenced Andrew Marr to ask Gordon Brown ‘that question’. Or how about the ‘We love the NHS’ campaign which similarly made the jump from online to offline. Are we really to believe that none of these stories have had an “impact on voters” and that their digital roots are of little importance as Byrne seems to infer?

Amplification

Let’s take a look at political advertising, the mainstream media and the internet.  On Friday the Labour Party used that well worn tactic of ‘leaking’ details of an upcoming advertising campaign to the press. The images from their ‘Jedward’ billboard graced the pages of the Mirror and were quickly followed-up with a woeful YouTube attack-ad on the same X Factor theme.  It was pretty obvious that the offline campaign would never see the light of day – Labour doesn’t have the money to buy the advertising space for one thing. The aim of this exercise was clear - use the images and YouTube video to generate coverage and awareness via the mainstream press.

As a strategy it was one which has been repeatedly shown to work. Unlike Labour’s ‘Davorge’ video below, the Obama campaign and its supporters were able to create quality content such as the Will.i.am ‘Yes We Can’ music video or the Hillary 1984 Apple parody. Both were watched directly by millions of voters, but this was dwarfed by the millions who read about them or watched them via the mainstream media.

In the forthcoming election, neither party will be limiting themselves to expensive outdoor or print advertising campaigns. Political advertising is the form of online video and virals which can reach people directly, but which are also powerful enough to generate mainstream media attention will be key. It was very telling that the very first thing that ConservativeHome did after being bought was to advertise for a team of online video producers.

Past performance is no guide to the future….

In many ways the fact that Weber’s survey shows social media so low down the scale in shaping how people will vote is hardly surprising.  I’m sure if you’d have got a similar response if you’d asked people about the influence of TV advertising on their shopping habits in 1956 before most brands started using the medium.  While our friends in the US have had two electoral cycles where digital has played a major role, for UK voters the next election will be the first. While consumption may not always necessarily correlate with influence, the statistics from the Obama election make for interesting reading.

According to research from Pew Internet, the 2008 campaign saw 45% of US internet users watching political videos online, one in five creating original content online via blogs, forums and social networks and a third of internet users forwarded information about the campaign to friends and family. I can see few reasons why UK voters would not be equally open to consuming and sharing political content in this way.

If Weber Shandwick’s survey results tell us anything, it’s that there is a huge potential for digital to play a bigger role in the UK as part of an integrated political campaign strategy. Mainstream media will be a top priority but as the few examples above illustrate, digital can’t be divorced from the coverage that voters could read in The Sun or watch on News at Ten. While ordinary consumers may be unfamiliar with the intricacies of how different media channels fit together, those of us in the PR industry should know better.

Perhaps there was an irresistible temptation to use these results to offer a few crumbs of comfort to political parties who are lagging behind online? I don’t know, but it would be wrongheaded for any political party to use these statistics as an excuse to rest on their laurels.

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Sep
30
2009
2

Denial is not just a river in Egypt

Nobody would accuse me of underestimating the importance of online media and digital platforms, but I would never be naive enough to assume that when it comes to political campaigning that national newspapers no longer matter. This seems to be the agreed attack line adopted this morning by Labour.

Everyone from Lord Mandelson to Charlie Wheelan to the Guardian’s Michael White have been on the TV and radio claiming that The Sun’s explosive decision to back the Tories doesn’t matter in today’s internet age with falling newspaper circulations.  Even Alistair Campbell who likes to give the pretence of now being a bit more objective, is trying to convice us on his blog that the Sun’s defection could actually be a good thing.

Labour’s Kerry McCarthy showed the naivety of this response with her ridiculous tweet last night that “Labour doesn’t need The Sun. We’ve got Twitter.” As wonderful as Twitter is, it won’t have been read by close to 8 million people this morning, alongside a full-colour pull-out poster helpfully detailing Labour’s failures.

There were some interesting sentiment analysis from the guys at Tweetminster yesterday in response to Brown’s speech, which classed 53% of tweets as positive with 21% negative. The analysis is great to see but I don’t think it tells us anything more than lots of delegates at the Labour Party conference and supporters were on Twitter yesterday afternoon.  I don’t think Twitter is significantly Labour supporting, so again McCarthy’s claim of ownership over the platform for Labour is doubly misguided.

The pure online impact of The Sun shouldn’t be underestimated either. This morning it’s launched a Google Adwords campaign (see below) bidding on keywords including ‘Gordon Brown’ and ‘Labour Party’ which state  “The Sun endorses The Conservative Party for the next general election.” The paper’s FeelingBlue campaign has already translated onto Twitter within hours.


Ultimately lets not forget the 23 million plus unique users per month to Sun Online. Beyond pure news coverage The Sun’s website will be a key battle ground for seeding video attack ads and virals during the election campaign - following today’s switch it’s a battle which Labour’s online team will struggle to win.

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Sep
27
2009
1

Operation Fightback – Can Labour do it alone?

The first afternoon of the Labour Party conference has been themed Operation Fightback. A succession of senior figures have been delivering their rallying calls, including Douglas Alexandar, outlining the party’s election campaign strategy. His pep talk climaxed with the (re)announcement of a national phonebank and an online network for party members. I’m sure news of these developments will have re-energised Labour campaigners up and down the country and will result in some sleepless nights over at CCHQ.

Despite the recent appointment of Kerry McCarthy MP as Labour’s so called Twitter Tsar, the accepted wisdom is that Labour will be unable to catch-up with the Tories without some hard-hitting external expertise.  Especially if Labour really believe their own spin, that they’re doing better than the opposition online.

Blue State Digital, the firm which led Obama’s online campaigning was widely believed to be the agency that Labour would turn to.  However, in a recent interview with PR Week Thomas Gensemer, founder of BSD criticised Labour’s online operation to date – leading many to assume that BSD would not be working with Labour after all. That said, this rather tetchy and fawning blog post from Gensemer responding to PR Week’s coverage perhaps indicates that discussions with Labour may still be ongoing?

It appears to be an issue not so much of Labour being unwilling to work with BSD, but being unable to afford them – for the moment at least.  With so many ex-Labour HQ staffers now working at BSD’s UK operation, it seems unlikely that some at least will not be seconded back to help with the party’s election effort.

All this contrasts heavily with some big investments by the Tories in the past seven days. Firstly we had the announcement that an external agency has been retained to handle online advertising and web development for the party in the run up to the election.  The deal includes building a series of online fundraising tools set be unveiled at the Conservative Party conference next week.

Secondly, the major seven-figure investment by Conservative Party deputy chair Lord Ashcroft in ConservativeHome has opened up a major second front in the Tories online election campaign. The announcement that the site is looking to recruit a team to develop video ads and virals is likely to be just the tip of the iceberg.

Ray Collins, Labour’s general secretary claimed in his conference speech today that, “We may be outspent by the Tories, but we will never be outgunned” – based on what we’ve see so far, this seems like wishful thinking.

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Apr
15
2009
0

What now for Labour’s online strategy?

The Smeargate controversy has reignited the debate about the direction of the Labour Party’s online strategy. With a general election just months away what must Labour do to get back on track? My thoughts below:

1. Drop Draper

Derek Draper’s late embrace of the blogosphere has become a text book example of exactly what not to do when devising and implementing an online strategy. From starting fabricated battles with popular bloggers in a vain attempt to drive traffic to LabourList, to his misuse of Twitter, Draper has ignored the key principles of honesty, transparency, decency and dare I say, humility, which should guide the online behaviour of a mainstream political party.

Draper’s intimate involvement in the development of the Red Flag blog is the manifestation of an ingrained command-and-control mentality, which both he and Labour Party HQ just can’t seem to shake off. The clearest lesson from Smeargate is that the media manipulation techniques of the late 90s no longer work. You can’t bully and intimidate the blogosphere into submission.

I really can’t see how Draper can continue to be editor of LabourList or have any further involvement in Labour’s online strategy. Gordon Brown needs to take John Prescott’s advice and publically signal an end to Draper’s role as a ‘new media’ adviser. Until he does, the stench of Smeargate will never be far from the Labour Party’s online activities.

2. Close LabourList

Presenting LabourList as an independent site when it was officially launched at Labour HQ in the presence of Peter Mandelson and other government ministers was farcical from the start. I said as much in a letter to PR Week, in response to which Draper “named and shamed” me as his ‘Zero of the Day’.

The fact that his ‘Hero of the Day’ was Baroness Vadera, just 24-hours after her much ridiculed remarks about “seeing the green shoots of economic recovery” confirmed to me that LabourList was modeled more on Pravda than ConservativeHome.

Mark Hanson this week makes a brave attempt at defending the future of LabourList and Draper’s involvement, despite Draper giving Hanson’s boss at Staniforth a direct lesson in his own corrosive brand of blogger relations.

The truth is that the reputation of LabourList is just too damaged through its association with Draper to have any credibility with the rest of the blogosphere, the mainstream media and most importantly with ordinary Labour Party activists. As reported in the FT, the sites trump card of access to the heart of government, with contributions from ministers is no more. A Labour Party source is quoted as saying “You won’t be seeing any of them going near it again.”

I suspect that there will be an attempt at a re-launch, but the party shoudn’t waste any more time and resources trying to flog a dead horse.

3. Let a thousand flowers bloom

It is a genuine shame that so many of the ordinary contributors to LabourList have been so let down by the people behind the site. There have been some occasional attempts to encourage real debate and kick start the process of filling the paucity of policy at the heart of the Labour movement. What should these activists do now?

My advice would be to go out there and create your own blogs and online communities. The more the merrier! You can buy some great WordPress ‘magazine style’ templates for less than £50, which are arguably more attractive and user-friendly than LabourList. There is no compulsion to pay Tangent Labs thousands to build a bespoke site running on bespoke technology.

Placing so much emphasis on one site was perhaps the biggest flaw in Labour’s online strategy. In the interests of balance there have been some successes - the metamorphosis of John Prescott into an online campaigner has been as effective as it has been surprising. Go Fourth and Alastair Campbell’s personal site have provided some variety but there hasn’t been a concerted effort to redress in both the quantity and quality of sites, the dominance of the Right-leaning blogosphere. Closing LabourList could be the catalyst this process needs.

4. Listen to good advice

The start of the year saw numerous conferences and summits called to help Labour get to grips with e-campaigning. These featured online gurus from Blue State Digital, the team behind Obama’s digital success, as well as experts from Google, MoveOn and MySociety. What Smeargate highlights is that most of this advice has gone in one ear and out the other. The Labour Party new media chief Sue Macmillan needs to demonstrate that the Labour Party is now acting on the advice of these experts and has learned the lessons from Smeargate.  Basically, don’t buy a dog and then bark yourself.

5. Promote Tom Harris MP

The Tories have benefited from placing an MP in the shape of Jeremy Hunt MP, shadow culture secretary, specifically at the forefront of their online campaigning. Labour should consider doing the same and Tom Harris MP seems to be the obvious candidate. His rapid denunciation of McBride and Draper’s activities highlights he has the moral compass necessary to drive Labour’s online activities in the right direction. His net-savvy demonstrated through his own blog and use of Twitter has gained him respect across the political divide. Harris’ position on the backbenches also gives him the necessary room to manoeuvre to question government policy and engage in open debate with party activists and ordinary voters.

There are few positives from this affair for those in the Labour movement. Perhaps one crumb of comfort is that the Red Rag blog or anything similar will now not been deployed in the forthcoming general election campaign. While all UK political parties still have much to learn from the success of Barack Obama’s online approach, the one thing nobody wants to see imported is the character assassination and innuendo which have become a routine part of the online political process in the US. What the Labour Party decides to do next will be watched very closely.

UPDATE: I would recommend reading this post from Labour activist and digital PR expert Stuart Bruce on his advice for Labour’s online strategy. Despite some stark differences with what I’ve written above, there is also some clear common ground.

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Apr
12
2009
1

Hate to say ‘I told you so’….

Following today’s revelations, below is a letter, an edited version of which was printed in PR Week on 16th January in response to the launch of Derek Draper’s LabourList blog…

Sir,

Labour’s new media ‘strategy’ revealed this week is arguably much like its approach to government – short-termist, gimmicky, aggressive and disconnected. Though Peter Mandelson writes on the new LabourList blog that the era of ‘command and control’ is over, it says it all that the party’s first major move online has been to create a space so clearly under the influence of Labour HQ. Would it not have been better to nurture the left-leaning blogosphere and support independent sites such as LabourHome?

The party’s piecemeal approach to rolling out a series of digital tactics betrays the lack of a real underlying strategy. Where is the focus on integrating Labour’s communication across online and offline channels or creating compelling content which can be used on multiple digital platforms? With the next election to be decided by floating voters, Labour seems obsessed with talking to itself and producing virals and widgets designed to amuse the politerati rather than inspire and engage with ordinary voters.

While Derek Draper clearly deserves points for trying, for the Labour Party this is no time for a digital novice.

Daljit Bhurji, MD, Diffusion

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