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Obama 2.0 KUDOS: Speakers notes
- 1. Obama 2.0: Social media KUDOS lessons
Author(s) Leo Ryan & Dan O’Connor
Created January 21, 2009
This document accompanies the slides for the presentation “Obama 2.0, Social
media KUDOS lessons”, delivered by Leo Ryan from social media agency
Ryan*MacMillan as a part of the Digital Training Company’s Obama 2.0:
Lessons in Social Media from the Obama Presidential Campaign held at Adam
Street Club in London on January 14th.
The story so far
The reason we are here is down to two remarkable dates
2004: The cover of Time magazine features Obama’s now ubiquitous face
and asks “Could this man be president?”
2009: Barack Obama is President-elect of the USA.
How does someone go from being a two-term state legislator to President of
the USA in just 4 years? Not exclusively but certainly in part by using
social media effectively, achieving in such remarkable figures as 3,705,707
Facebook friends.
Our approach today
Today we’re going to attempt to develop an understanding of how Obama
and the Democrats used social media by looking at
What do we mean by social media?
How can you use a simple (KUDOS) framework to plan and evaluate
social media activities?
The background to Obama’s success with social media
How Obama used social media to be elected President
A KUDOS analysis of 3 key social media elements of the campaign
We’ll finish with a workshop (about how the challenges facing your
brand can be met using lessons learnt from the Obama campaign).
So lets get started…
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 1
- 2. The importance of social media
I am going to assume that you are all on board with the idea that social
media is an important and increasingly effective way of communicating with
your audience – otherwise you wouldn’t be here. However – just in case
there’s any doubt here’s just one reference for you;
A recent Forrester survey stated that the most trusted source of information
about products & services (71%) is the opinion of friends, family and
colleagues. Online consumers share that information with each other
through social media. That’s above and beyond all other forms of
information including, and in some research especially, advertising.
Defining social media
Social media is a term used to cover a multitude of sins so lets agree right
up front what Ryan*MacMillan means by this term. Our working definition
that we put forward to the IAB’s social media council is; “All of the
activities, platforms and practices that enable users to create and share
knowledge, opinions and content.”
For example, a user takes a video and uploads it to YouTube, and other
seers view it, rate it and link to it. In this case the activity is video uploads,
the platform is YouTube and the practices are those of rating, viewing and
linking.
So specifically we mean;
Blogs and commenting on blogs
Forums and posting on forums
Creating, distributing and the use of widgets and tools
Creating and distributing content in all of its various forms
Engaging with communities. Again, a very broad definition to cover all
kinds of communities from multiplayer online games to academic forums
and to help groups for mums.
KUDOS; a framework for planning and evaluating social media activity
With its importance and the parameters agreed on, the next thing we can
probably agree on is that it seems like some kind of unholy sprawling mess.
This social media malarkey is a far cry from the nice, neat tidy channels
we’re used to of radio, outdoor, TV and print.
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 2
- 3. So how do we go about getting our heads around all of this – what tools are
available for us to plan, manage, optimise and evaluate our social media
activities if they are so new and varied? From our experience of two years of
planning and executing a range of social media activity for brands,
consultancies, charities and Govt departments we have developed a
framework for managing this; KUDOS.
The advantage of KUDOS is that its simplicity makes it easy to get your
head around it. This means that you can use it to quickly assess the large
amount of information that social media activity provides us with, quickly
assess your involvement and keep learning. KUDOS provides you with a
simple structure which allows you to quickly get involved in the
conversation and to start experimenting by helping you to work out which
activities you are going to try and when you’ve tried them helps you to work
out which ones are worth continuing with.
The foundation of KUDOS is that we believe social media is a contract
between the brand and the audience. And like a contract it needs to be
balanced on both sides or it won’t work; it needs to be for both the brand
and the audience;
So for an activity to successful it must equally satisfy the needs of both the
brand and the audience and in way that imparts Knowledge which is
Useful, Desirable, Open and Shareable. The Knowledge could be any piece
of content relating to your brand, from dynamic, up-to-date, information
about flight times, as with Travelocity’s updates, to financial tips, as Halifax
bank does with its ‘Share Price Alert’ service. It could be podcasts with your
product development crew, as in the case of General Electric’s series on the
brand’s emerging technologies, or the sort of branded content seen in
TripAdvisor’s ‘Places I’ve Visited’ Facebook widget. These pieces of
Knowledge should be Useful to your audience. This is not simply a case of
ensuring they get the best price for a hotel room. It also means helping
them understand changes you’ve made to your products – as Sky Movies
did so well by explaining some changes in their channels on an online
forum, assuaging the anger and confusion of their customers. Equally, your
social media activities should be Desirable to your audience. So music
recommendations from Last.fm can keep them ahead of the trend, exclusive
web-casts let them chat with their favourite authors, and discussion
forums can let them demonstrate their own expertise in topics from
computing to cookery. Social media activities should also be Open about
where the useful and desirable knowledge is coming from. Failure to
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 3
- 4. disclose conflicts of interest never works well in the social media world, as
Whole Foods CEO John Mackey found out when he used a pseudonym to
badly disparage a rival brand. Your activities should also be Open to
audience participation. This can be as simple encouraging consumers to
leave comments on a blog post (and always responding to them!), or the
more complicated algorithmic ratings system for movie review scores at
IMDB. Finally, any social media activity should be Shareable – your
customers must be able to link to it or pass it on, either through their
preferred networking site or aggregator (Facebook, Reddit, StumbleUpon,
Digg, etc. etc.) or just through the word of mouth enabled by email.
To help us to understand how Obama managed to achieve such success
with his social media activity we’re going to use the KUDOS framework to
evaluate key pieces of his social media activity. While KUDOS can be both a
quantitative and a qualitative evaluation tool – in this instance we’re going
to stick to qualitative.
Some History: The Democrats’ historic use of social media
Before we turn our attention to Obama’s use of social media let’s get
ourselves acquainted with the back-story, because it would have been a
very different situation if Obama had just leapt into the fray of social media
without an existing history of liberal campaigning in social media.
Lots of earlier efforts by laid the groundwork, provided best (and worst)
practice examples and built up a groundswell of interest for the 08
Campaign to then build on.
The face of US politics has profoundly changed since 2004. What was once
a seemingly solidly right wing, religiously conservative country, will, after
20th January, have a liberal President and a solid progressive liberal
majority in both Houses of Congress. This change has been both mirrored –
and assisted – by the rise in the importance of social media to USA political
campaigns and communications.
2004: Howard Dean
In 2004, the Howard Dean campaign (for the Dem. Presidential nomination)
became the first campaign to successfully use social media technologies to
raise money online. While Dean was not the only candidate to do so, he was
the only candidate to take communications seriously and use the blog to
communicate directly with supporters, rather than the press.
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 4
- 5. Dean also made use of emergent social media tools such as MeetUp in
order to organise rallies. Primarily, though, he used social media to raise
money online. Online donations are quicker and simpler than mailing in
donations and so Dean was able to tap a whole new constituency of donors.
However, this fundraising did not translate into electoral victory. The
money AND SOCIAL MEDIA alone did not guarantee effective organisation
of, and communication with, the electorate. Dean lost the Democratic
nomination to John Kerry.
2006: Mid-Terms
In the 2006 mid-term elections various progressive grassroots movements
(think: DailyKos, MoveOn etc.) used emerging social media technologies,
such as Facebook and MeetUp, in order not just to raise money for
candidates but to organise offline support for those candidates.
The Democrats made use of this social media organisation and fundraising
to take back control of the US House of Representatives and the Senate.
The Dems went from a 202-233 deficit in the House to a 233-202 majority,
and from a 44-55 deficit in the Senate to a 51-49 majority (including 2
independents who caucus with the Dems).
And another neologism is born: Grassroots + online = ‘the netroots’.
2006: George Allen is an idiot on video
While campaigning for his seat in 2006, Republican Senator George Allen
used a racial epithet (‘macaca’) to describe a young, Indian, Democratic
activist who was filming one of his speeches.
Progressive netroots activists put the video online and blogged heavily
about Allen’s racism until the story hit the mainstream media. Allen went a
seemingly unassailable 16% lead in the polls to a 0.4% loss on election day
Note – for background read article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_election_in_Virginia,_2
006#Allen.27s_Macaca_controversy
2006 Follow the money
ActBlue.com – a fundraising website which allowed donors to give money to
several progressive politicians in numerous states – rather like an
aggregator site for fundraising helps the the DSCC (Democratic Senatorial
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 5
- 6. Campaign Committee) and DCCC (Congressional) out-raise the RSCC and
RCCC for the first time in a generation.
The finale: Obama 08
In 2007-2008, Barack Obama perfects the new social media political
activities, successfully using social media to leverage his social capital so
greatly that he is able to transform himself from a total outsider into
President-elect of the USA. At the same time, those same progressive
political activists made use of the same social media activities as Obama in
order to help the Democratic Party gain stronger control of both Houses of
Congress.
The history lesson
We should see Obama as the climax of this ‘netroots’ movement and not as
an individual success story. There is a lesson here also for brands: jumping
into social media is a tough job – it is much easier if you are entering an
environment where your brand, company or area of interest has an
established dialogue. Which is not to say you can’t start, but to
acknowledge the importance of not just bowling up and trying to start a
conversation in a vacuum; find the relevant communities and engage with
them in the areas of interest they have already established
Obama’s social media activities:
So let’s take a look at some of the best examples of Obama’s social media
activities during his campaign to be elected President, and using the
KUDOS framework see if we can determine how and why they worked so
well:
Social media can be used to meet many objectives, but we’re going to focus
on how it can enable:
Donations to be made quickly easily and flexibly: helping candidates to
raise money
Candidates to engage with their supporters and potential supporters;
helping them to raise their profile and that of their positions, policies
and platforms
Cheap and effective organisation: As candidates organise their
supporters and the supporters organise themselves
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 6
- 7. So what are the strategies the Obama campaign used to leverage social
media to achieve these no doubt desirable objectives?
Making your own social media tool
Making effective use of existing social media tools
Using social media to join in with existing conversations.
Making Your Own Social Media Tool: MyBarackObama.com
The creation of MyBarackObama.com (or, ‘MyBo’ as it became known) was
inspired by the Obama campaign’s discovery that, quite independently of
them, a MySpace page in support of Obama had registered some 250,000
members: http://www.myspace.com/barackobama
Realising, as all brands should, that their supporters were already talking
about them, the campaign decided to meet its supporters where they
already were: online. So they created MyBarackObama.com, a social
networking site for supporters. Anyone could register for an account and,
by the end of the campaign, more than 2 million people had.
MyBarackObama had a very simple donation interface, like all the other
candidates did. What was smart about MyBo was that when someone
donated to Obama through MyBo, a full MyBo account page was created for
them, moving the Obama supporter from ‘just’ donation to (potential)
engagement with other supporters on the MyBo social network if they
wanted. In contrast, for example, Hillary Clinton’s online donors had to
create such opportunities for themselves by finding the functionality on her
website. It wasn’t automatic and it wasn’t clearly sign-posted. MyBo actively
encouraged engagement with the Obama brand by, for example, awarding
members ‘points’ for hosting events, introducing friends, raising money,
writing blog posts etc. The more points (i.e: the more engaged the
supporter, the higher up the points league table they went; winning prizes
etc.) MyBo provided supporters with a range of branded content and
branded assets in order to further encourage this engagement: podcasts,
blogs, posters, widgets, flickr and twitter feeds, wallpapers and even ring
tones and iPhone apps. It allowed supporters to organise themselves for
caucuses, door knocking campaigns, phonebanking and other volunteer
activities. MyBo treated Obama supporters as involved members of the
campaign, not as customers to be thanked and dismissed once they had
‘bought’ the product.
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 7
- 8. MyBo KUDOS analysis
Supporters Score Obama Score
K The branded content and 5 Voter, donor, volunteer data in 5
unprecedented detail
assets, knowledge of other
members
U Helps them find likeminded and 5 Raise money, awareness, helps 5
organise events etc. organisation
D Reward system, feel part of a 4 Other candidates have no 3
team competitive equivalent
O Customisable, constant contact 2 Take feedback and input from 3
& ’access’ to the campaign supporters
S Can invite friends etc. to join. 5 Spread message & request 3
organisation & help.
Totals 21 19
How John McCain Failed to Match MyBo:
It was all a bit of a wash. Nearly a year after the launch of MyBo, McCain
launched McCainSpace, on which supporters could only donate money or
raise money from others. On the original version of McCainSpace, there was
just about zero functionality. Membership was not automatic but had to be
approved (!) and often took days to register.
And the KUDOS? McCainspace gave supporters no Knowledge that they did
not already have, and so it was neither Useful nor Desirable to those
supporters. The length of time it took to register stopped it being really
Open. As to Shareable, well, you could forward links to friends, but with no
KU to make it D to attract them, why would you bother? McCainSpace was
an ‘out of the box’ social network which didn’t actually do anything for the
brand, it was just a social network. It may have raised some money, but it
did not raise awareness or advocacy. In contrast, the Obama team was
always present on MyBo, always keeping up the conversation with their
members – always being social with their social network. McCain was
trying to reap the benefits of a social network, but without actually being
social. It was a case of a brand having a social network for the sake of
having a social network, which is never a good idea. To make the network
tools work for the brand, the brand has to be social.
Make Use of Existing Social Media; friendfeed and meetup
While MyBO allowed the campaign to do a number of quite specific things
that existing platforms didn’t – its not always necessary to invent or
reinvent the wheel or the widget – so much development is going on in this
space that if you have a requirement there’s more than likely an existing
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 8
- 9. platform that will answer your need or address an audience. There was
basically no social media tool that the Obama campaign did not make use
of – Flickr, Twitter, Myspace, facebook, blogging, podcasts, forums, etc etc.
– which ran the simultaneous risk of information overload and of
supporters worrying that they were missing something somewhere.
Friendfeed is a tool that aggregates all of a users social media activities into
one place – corralling links to your Flickr photos, blog posts etc. Using
Friendfeed allowed the campaign to channel all its social media activity
locations through one portal, which in turn allowed their supporters to
follow as much or as little of the activities as they chose.
Friendfeed KUDOS score
Supporters Score Obama Score
K Lets them know what Obama is 5 Is knowledge only the Obama 4
brand has
up to, when, where. All the
latest news.
U They can use this to write their 5 Is useful to keep their followers as 5
uptodate as possible
own blogs, go to rallies, hold
meetings, etc.
D Keeps them up-to-date in a 5 Makes them look on top of social 5
rapidly-changing political race media, keeps their message alive
O Can decide which bits to follow 5 All the info all the time 5
and which not to
S Share with friends if they so 5 Want supporters to share this with 5
wish. others
Totals 25 24
MeetUp
Meetup is a social networking site that enables users to organise offline
meetings. The Obama team was hugely successful in using this during the
primary season, particularly for caucusing organisation. It permitted
supporters to organise themselves rather than be organised from the top
down. It moves the engaged supporters once more from customers to
members. The Obama brand moves from old-school top-down Customer
Relations Management to new-style, social-media enabled Customer-
Managed Relations (CRM to CMR).
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 9
- 10. Meetup KUDOS score
Supporters Score Obama Score
K Where’s the next meeting / 5 Times and locations of meetings 5
advertising my meeting
U Don’t miss meetings, or attract 5 Get people to attend meetings 5
supporters to mine about Obama
D Self organising 5 Better organised & in greater 5
numbers = votes
O On their terms their own way 5 Obvious usage 5
S Pass the info on to friends 5 Sharing info again 5
Totals 25 25
Why Hillary Clinton’s Use of existing tools failed in comparison to Obama
Hillary did have a blog, but in comparison to Obama, who updated 10-12
times a day with real, breaking news, Hillary’s blog only updated 3-4 times
a day, often with ‘non-news’ about her giving a speech or being about to
give a speech. There was little that was Useful or Desirable about the
Knowledge on Hillary’s blog. Clinton’s Twitter usage was no better: As Chris
at ‘Success Creations’ blog wrote:
“A quick look at Twitter shows a lopsided tale as well. Hillary Clinton’s
Twitter account has a paltry 958 followers, has only made 47 updates
and is following absolutely no one!...Contrast that to Barack Obama’s
Twitter account. It has 6661 followers, has made only 73 updates and
is following 6793 other accounts. Granted his campaign isn’t using
Twitter as effectively as it could. Even so he is doing better than his
opponent.... In contrast the Clinton camp seems to have tacked a social
media component onto their campaign almost as if it’s an afterthought.
“Oh, yeah. We’ll need a blog too, I guess.” snipurl.com/clinton_twit
The Clinton Twitter account that is following 0 (zero) other Twitter users is
symbolic of everything they are were wrong where social media is
concerned. They weren’t even giving the appearance of listening to their
constituency.
This is the same problem that McCainSpace demonstrated: social media for
the sake of being able to say ‘we’re doing social media’. There was no point
in Hillary having a social media tool like Twitter if, by not listening, she was
not actually being social with it.
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 10
- 11. Joining in Existing Conversations – A Tale of Two Williams
William 1: Will.i.am video mashup
The ‘Yes We Can’ video was a fan video made by a group of celebrities
including the rapper Will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas, Scarlet Johansson
and lots of other stars too cool for me to recognise. When I last looked the
main video that came up in the search results had 15.8M views and the
next had 6M. It’s a remix of one of Obama’s speeches with the stars rapping
and singing over the top of it. Copyright breaches? Omigod – you can just
hear the lawyers getting all agitated. However instead of issuing cease and
desists , the Obama campaign embraced this fantastic piece of fan /
celebrity /mashup endorsement and reposted it on the MyBo web site,
endorsing it and presenting it to a whole new audience.
KUDOS analysis of the Will.i.am video
Supporters Score Obama Score
K No new knowledge – it repeated 2 Based on an Obama speech – it 5
an existing speech was genuine knowledge from the
campaign
U Enabled public (online) display 4 Media storm of positive publicity 5
of support by downloading it,
embed in blog/facebook etc.
D Celebs make it seem cool 5 Increased awareness of candidate 5
and cool image
O Was genuine, unprompted and 5 Video made for free by the artists 5
enthusiastic. and then made available for free.
S Hosted on YouTube it was 5 Downloadable from MyBo 5
easily forwarded to friends,
linkable and embeddable
Totals 21 25
William 2. William Ayers (and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright issue)
Throughout the campaign Obama had to put into context a number of
relationships he had with different characters from his past including
William Ayres, a former radical and activist who was associated with
Obama and his (now former) pastor and religious advisor, Jeffrey Wright.
Wright has in the past said some unspeakably stupid things about the US
and terrorism (especially given that he was being recorded) and so Obama
was required to repudiate the man he once looked to for moral guidance.
Imagine the British equivalent of such an event, we would likely see Gordon
Brown on a Sunday morning talk show, perhaps, offering his apologies to a
seasoned BBC hack, or some junior Tory shadow minister would find
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 11
- 12. themselves prostrate on the Today show, proffering quick soundbites. What
we get with Obama, however, is a nice bit of KUDOS. Rather than go onto
the Sunday talk shows to distance himself from the loopy Rev. Wright,
Obama went to the Huffington Post, promptly producing a clearly written,
fairly straight-up blog post explaining himself:
http://snipurl.com/obama_article and so Obama set in motion the KUDOS
process. This is how: From the Obama brand’s point of view, the post is a
piece of Knowledge (that Obama does not endorse Wright’s idiocy) which it
is clearly Useful and Desirable for the brand to get out into their social
network. Crucially, being a blog post, it is Open (to criticisms and acclaim
in the comments section; currently there are an incredible 6,178 comments
on the article) and Shareable, with 3,154 different pages linking to it:
http://snipurl.com/obam_huffpo. For members of the Obama brand’s
social network, it is in Sharing the Knowledge of Obama’s repudiation
which is Useful (in terms of counteracting attacks from the Clinton and
McCain camps) and Desirable (in so far as it assuages their own concerns
about Obama’s links to Wright). The Openness of the blog post, also means
that members of the Obama brand’s social network can use it to promote
their candidate
Conclusions about the success of Obama’s social media activities
What the Obama campaign did best was letting supporters feel and act like
they were members of the organisation, not merely passive donors or
voters. It’s important to note that what they did was crowdsourcing, NOT
collective intelligence. The campaign sourced their support from the crowd,
but didn’t allow the crowd to determine their polices. As Markos Moulitsas
puts it: “They’ve made it very easy for people to hop on the band wagon, but
those in the back of the wagon still get no say in where the wagon is going.”
We can understand the success of Obama’s social media activities by using
the KUDOS framework. Of course, we should not forget that Obama also
used a lot of very traditional media activities (hundreds of millions of
dollars spent on TV ads in swing states, phone banking, mailshots etc.).
But there can be no doubt that in terms of raising money, promoting
awareness, and fostering his organisation, his social media activities were
central to his success as a candidate. One of the key reasons I believe that
these activities were so successful is that the needs of Obama and those of
his supporters were very closely aligned; Elect Obama as President. As
brands it is worth thinking about what we are attempting to achieve
through our social media activities – in doing so are our aims and those of
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 12
- 13. our audience as closely aligned as those of the Obama campaign, or are we
erring on the side of our own interests in the way that the MacCain and
Clinton campaigns did?
1.1 Squaring the Circle
Social Media can serve to advance three of the primary objectives in
politics, as we have seen;
1. Raise money
2. Raise awareness and engagement
3. Foster organisation
At R*M we think we can learn lessons for brands from the Obama campaign
and that social media can serve three analogous purposes for brands:
1. Increase sales
2. Raise awareness and engagement
3. Foster advocacy
There is no doubt that social media is increasing in importance for brands
who want to access the interests and passions of their customers. Hopefully
what we have seen today will encourage you to venture into this world but
with the interests of your audience at the forefront of your mind. We believe
that using the KUDOS framework will help you to do just that and we’d
welcome any feedback that you have on its application.
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 13
- 14. Useful links
Ryan * MacMillan: http://www.rmmlondon.com/
Digital Training Company: http://www.digitaltrainingcompany.com/
Slideshare presentation: http://www.slideshare.net/leoryan/ryan-
macmillan-obama-20-kudos-analysis-presentation
Links referred to in this presentation:
http://delicious.com/Leoryan/obama
About the speaker
Leo is a director of Ryan*MacMillan and responsible for our growing the
business and our client relationships. He started his life in digital in 1996
working in agencies in New York. He returned to Sydney as one of the
Directors of Hannan Interactive Publishing (IPMG), taking one of Australia's
largest publishing companies online and has been in London since 2002
working in agencies with Levi's. Sony CE, MTV and Diageo. He is a member
of the IAB's Social Media Council and sits on the board of the National
Gallery Company. An initial training as an architect has left him with an
abiding interest in the ways that form converges function with but unsure
that ornament is necessarily crime.
Please get in touch via email leo@ryanmacmillan.com or mobile 44 7946
603 981 or Skype: leoryan0707
http://www.linkedin.com/in/leoryan
http://twitter.com/LeoTwit
http://www.last.fm/user/Leoryanmusic
About Ryan*MacMillan
Ryan*MacMillan is a social media agency. We help brands take advantage
of the opportunities social media presents. We do this by planning,
creating, managing and measuring social media activity that connects
brands with audiences. We are headquartered in London with a team that
covers North America and Japan. Since we launched in 2007 we have
worked with clients including BBC Worldwide, Discovery Networks, Diageo,
Cap Gemini and Sony Europe. Read more on our blog:
www.ryanmacmilan.com
© 2008 Ryan*MacMillan Ltd 14