Presidential Campaigning in the Media
Getting that message out to the voters - it's going to begin
soon! The wonderful advertising round of the Presidential 2008 election
season is about to get underway. Already, the major candidates have each
blessed us with a "Holiday wishes" ad spot. It was brief, sweet, and to
the point, and not shown too often, so that viewers don't spend the
Holidays resenting the candidates, but with a definite air of "we'll be
right back to pound you with the heavy advertising on January 2nd!" So,
here's what kinds of hustling they're run on you, and its relative
effectiveness.
Direct mail flyers - not nearly as successful as they used to be
- even if you like the candidate, it's not like you're going to frame
their pamphlet or anything. You'll probably just give it to the kids to
color or fold it into an origami swan and send it away, like you do with
all of your junk mail.
TV commercials - yes, they're on the list. What could I tell you about TV commercials that you didn't already know?
Radio ads - radio works better for local elections than it does
for national ones.
Don't count on hearing too many candidate ads on the
radio, because talk radio is so segregated by party that anybody
listening is already voting for that candidate's party anyway, and music
radio is almost dead because Internet has replaced radio for music,
whether legally by iPods or illegally by piracy. Most of the people
listening to radio music are probably people too young or too
indifferent to vote.
Newspaper and magazines - Print ads are a different story.
They're always worth the money. And with the wide spread of the most
diverse cast of candidates in history, they'll be looking for targeted
voters in narrow demographics, which is just what magazines do best. No
matter what your reading material of choice is, there's a candidate just
for you this year, and they'll be smiling at you from the sidebar of
your subscrembed reads.
Web page ads - Now you're talking! Huge, animated ad banners are
already popping up all over the Internet like zits at a prom, and
they're made of Flash all the way. So they'll bounce, wiggle, blink, and
frolic, and probably even talk. This is a good time to get adblock for
you Firefox browser, which is becoming even more valuable than the mute
button on your TV remote. This is the pick for the number one
expenditure of ad dollars from the candidates.
Internet YouTube ads - Oh, another big one. They've already been
going for quite a while now. This is one time you won't see claims of
copyright infringement if you copy a video from YouTube to your blog -
when it's a candidate plug! Candidates will be knocking themselves out
to try to make hip, cool spots to post on video feed sights.
Internet blogs - Another big one with a bullet. Every candidate
even remotely serious has a web site up, and this being the 21st
century, a website is nothing without a blog. Blogs are useful for
getting a message out to your supporters, getting feedback, and all the
while keeping that close, cozy connection with the readers that only a
blog can give. They'll either be maintained by campaign managers, or -
in the case of underdog candidates, by the candidates themselves.
Remember how it was said in 2004 that the Presidential race was won and
lost in the blogs - count that double for this year.
Podcasting - This one's iffy. Podcasting is just like running a
little TV or radio show out of your garage, so it's great for
campaigning, but the problem is that podcasting just hasn't gained the
tech-savvy audience that knows where to go or what to do with it yet.
Better to leave it up to the occasional fan, who will be too happy to
record the TV interview and cut a podcast for his blog readers to
download.
"Viral" Internet marketing - Deadly poison. One candidate was
stupid enough to try it, and he's in trouble for it, so the rest have
learned fast from that mistake. The candidate shall not be named here,
but he's too obscure for you to have known anyway - unless you visited a
major social news site in the past six months and notices the deluge of
link spam and the paid shills who were voting it all up and gushing how
much they loved the candidate. When you fake a grassroots campaign on
the Internet, it's called "astroturfing" - laying down fake grass. Make
no mistake, this candidate's campaign is over, and he's under
investigation by the FCC for felony Internet fraud right now, so he may
even lose the office he currently holds. Not to mention that his own
ploy backfired when he picked up some real grass-roots support with some
money in it - from a racist hate-site. Yes, it may seem cheap to hire
third-world spammers to viral-market for you, but it doesn't pay in the
end.
To Your Success
Perzina Munroe
Enjoy life, we all deserve it
http://www.babydarest.com
http://www.12path.com/HBC/