Nothing is more raw in terms of
branding and marketing than American presidential political campaigns.
Candidates, and their respective parties, segment the voting market into
fine-tuning micro segments, target the electorate based on tightly defined demographics,
psychographics, and lifestyle, and brand themselves using every communications
tool in the book. Things that would be illegal in the business world, like
intentionally misleading facts or suppressing voters seem to be acceptable- if
not expected- in the American presidential political world. With one month of
campaigning remaining in this 2012 presidential election, presidential ad
spending recently soared past $700 million, an amount that has already exceeded 2008's total. What makes this amount even more interesting is this: the percentage of American voters who are truly "up
for grabs" is between 3-5% of voters (New York Times). So, if around 130,000,000 people vote
in this year's election (2008 figures were
131,000,000), parties and their surrogates will
be spending around $150 just on ads to target each swing voter, if you believe the New York Time's assertion. If that ain't
marketing and branding at its rawest, I don't know what is.
I wish to underscore the notion that this blog, which is probably closer to an essay, focuses in on the marketing and branding side of presidential elections- not the politics of it.
Stories of Sight, Sound and Substance:
Perspectives on Presidential Candidate Marketing
Since TV, they say, sight matters most.
On September 26th, 1960, Senator
John F. Kennedy faced off (pun intended) against Vice President Richard M.
Nixon in the first televised American
presidential debate.
Those who heard the debate on radio thought Nixon was the victor. Those
who saw the debate on TV, which was viewed by around 70 million Americans,
thought Kennedy was the clear winner (1). Another way of looking at it,
in this first debate, Nixon had the substance and sound advantage.
Kennedy had the sight advantage. But at the end of the debate, the producer of
the debate and founder of 60 Minutes Don Hewitt said , "When that [first]
debate was over, I realized that we didn’t have to wait for an election day. We
just elected a president. It all happened on television.(2)" Here's how it happened.
Telegraph image: tanned Kennedy, producer Hewitt, and pale Nixon |
This leads to the question- how much
more does sight matter in image building than sound and substance in a presidential debate? Let's check out some evidence.
President Reagan, master of the 85-10-5 rule. |
Here’s another take on how much more
powerful sight is over sound and substance. There's a story on Reagan that has circulated among many political marketers. It was also reported in Brian Stewart's CBC documentary the Reagan Years. This story tells of a left-leaning reporter who wanted to dint conservative Reagan's popularity by doing an “exposé” on network prime-time. The reporter aired video footage of Ronald Reagan smiling broadly with a
shovel breaking ground for a new school in a low income district with
school-board members applauding. Then a voice-over provided a punch that Reagan's education cutbacks were leading to problems in education. She’d show footage of Ronald
Reagan , surrounded by smiling seniors, cutting a giant big ribbon with event-sized
scissors for a new senior’s home while the voice-over would harshly criticize
Reagan's senior citizen subsidization slash. She’d have video clips of an
affable Reagan in jeans planting a tree with some tree planters while her
voice-over would blast his environmental record. On and on the exposé went.
And, immediately following the program, the reporter’s phone rang. It was the White House Press Secretary. And the reporter was prepared for her fate –
never to be invited back to the White House for press conferences again.
According to the story (and Stewart's documentary) the transcript of the conversation went something like this:
Reporter: Did you see my 15 minute
news segment tonight?
WHPS: Yeah. Thanks. It was terrific!
Reporter: What are you talking
about??? Didn’t you hear what I said?
WHPS: You don't get it. When the visuals are
that good, nobody hears what you say!
Recent academic research also supports this
notion that visuals matter more than what you say. Research exploring how much
do appearances of politicians influence voters was done by University of California Berkley political science professor Professor Lenz. His study with Chappell Lawson, Andy Baker, and Michael Myers went
like this: Voters in the USA and India were shown real election matchup photos
(think campaign sign images) from Brazilian and Mexican candidates. When asked
which candidate would make a better elected official, the study participants, regardless of where they lived, tended to select the same candidates. More importantly, their selections were actually aligned with the outcomes of the Brazilian and Mexican elections. Keep in mind, this study only dealt with the images of the candidates. There was no sound, no substance. Yet, our conclusion is consistent. Appearances of politicians heavily influence voters. In short. Visuals
matter most.
The information that I've presented
above is "old news" to the image makers of politicians (and
journalists-with-an-agenda) who understand the disproportionate influence that
visuals have. Their responses have been obvious: Feed the content broadcasters (and narrowcasters) a pipeline of images. Sometimes the images are more subtle, sometimes more overt. Here's a simple test, involving 3 images. What are these images
communicating about President Obama?
You can almost hear the angels sing when looking at President Obama's pictures.
What's this this picture of Republican Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan from the guardian trying to convey?
You can almost hear the goosesteps from the SS when looking at it.
If you are a Democrat marketer, these sorts of images go a long way to tell their story that President Obama is "saving the country from a Bush mess" or "Paul Ryan is scary". By the way, the halo-esque Obama images have been published on the bulk of major content publishers- from Reuters to AP to the cover of Newsweek and even on Fox. I don't think you need the poli-sci researchers to drive to the conclusion that, if voters are being blasted with contrasting images like this, that the winner can be predicted. Headlines and substance are trumped by sight.
What's this this picture of Republican Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan from the guardian trying to convey?
You can almost hear the goosesteps from the SS when looking at it.
If you are a Democrat marketer, these sorts of images go a long way to tell their story that President Obama is "saving the country from a Bush mess" or "Paul Ryan is scary". By the way, the halo-esque Obama images have been published on the bulk of major content publishers- from Reuters to AP to the cover of Newsweek and even on Fox. I don't think you need the poli-sci researchers to drive to the conclusion that, if voters are being blasted with contrasting images like this, that the winner can be predicted. Headlines and substance are trumped by sight.
We're now in a different era than when the first televised debate took place. Let's look at a some of the key phenomena that shape presidential campaign marketing in 2012.
Phenomenon 1- More complex issues and escalating amounts of information.
The outcome- More voter reliance on visuals to make decisions.
So if the average American doesn't have time (in many cases ability) to sift through complicated jargon and issues and needs to make decisions on voting, trusted heuristics are needed. For many voters, then, the issue becomes which candidate is more likeable and trustworthy? Since "trust",
"likeability", and other "favorability" characteristics are easily picked up visually (and humans are good at picking up visual communications quickly), the candidate's sight cues like facial expressions, gestures, posture and dress become that much more important in campaign marketing. This
is why leading pollsters like Gallup and Rassmussen Reports poll trust and likeability. They are shortcut voting proxies. Presidential candidate image makers are acutely aware of this as well. That's why during the debates, the politicos negotiate everything from the size of the podiums (so as not to make a tall candidate look awkward, or a shorter one look weak in stature) to background color of the screen. In a time constrained complex environment, visuals matter even more.
Phenomenon 2- Greater demand for news content.
The impact- More managing the downside for the candidate and less voter trust in media news.
Generally speaking, news used to be part of an old boys oligopoly. For over 30 years (beginning in 1948), 3 major national television sources (ABC, CBS, and NBC) and
a handful of widely distributed regional /topical newspapers (e.g. Wall Street
Journal, New York Times) framed the bulk of national news for
Americans. This began to change in the 1980s, when Ted Turner launched CNN (the first 24
hour news network) and USA Today hit the streets as America's first
national daily. But in 2012, scores more news channels, cable news networks, online news sources, independent news
reporters, and news data collection agencies have been established. This means the demand for finding news - faster - is greater than ever before. What sort of news sells
best? Bad news (See synthesis paper on the negativity bias Bad is stronger than good). So there is an increasing effort to find the bad news. Meanwhile, with content gaps, especially on
"slow news days", 24 hour news programs still need to fill their
lineup. So what do news-starved news organizations do?
The first is repeat content. Watch
any cable news show. "Headline news stories" can be repeated many many times an hour. From a political point of view political gaffes are a favorite. For example, according to the folks at You Are Being Manipulated, the "Dean Scream" (which had Democratic presidential primary candidate Howard Dean looking and sounding like a donkey), was replayed over 600 times on the major networks over 4 days.
I'll argue that a fundamental reason why President Obama has held the least number of Q&A's with the press / press conferences of modern presidents (Martha Kumar from Towson University tracks this data) and relies
heavily on his teleprompter is because he doesn't want to leave anything to chance. He wants to avoid the Dean Scream / President George W. Bush gaffes / Vice President
Joe Biden / Sarah Palin gaffes that end up being replayed over and over on the news, became fodder for comedians, and gaffe viral hits on
social media. And as for President Obama's dismal
performance during the first presidential debate of 2012, that's partly
explained by his price for teleprompter addiction.
President Bush's Top 10 Gaffes according to Letterman |
A second means to fill in news content is to bring in more talking heads and spin doctors. These folks are more likely play loosey-goosey with the facts (a politician at least has to face voters
as an accountability check, spin doctors don't). Just think of the interview with former Vice President Al Gore who claimed that Obama's weak performance in the first debate was due to the high altitude in Denver. (Even more astonishing is that none of the talking heads challenged him!) With news being reported like this, we can see why why 6 in 10
Americans in 2012 have
"little or no trust" in mass media to deliver the news
"fully, accurately and fairly."
The phenomenon- Voters search for reliable news sources.
The impact- Polarized electorate, The search for the Big Mo.
So where do folks go to find news
they trust? Many voters seek out news that reinforces their
pre-existing political notions.Conservative, gravitate to Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, or
Drudge Report. Liberals prefer MSNBC, Mother Jones, or the New York Times.
Another area to get "trusted" information is from friends. Friends tend to share similar socio-economic-educational characteristics, meaning that political views will tend to be more similar too. But let's say a socially-connected voter has a group of friends who post diverse political viewpoints (libertarian, conservative, liberal, communist etc) on social networks. If our voter were to click on the libertarian links more often, a social network algorithm would kick in and the progressive links would no longer be displayed. This is the case made by Eli Pariser during a Ted Talk. He also goes on to argue that Google searches on political information can be screened to based on previous searches. The upshot of this would be that if voting groups are not seeing proper representation of the other side's point of view, then a common fact-base, necessary for a good debate may be in jeopardy. This hardens partisan line resulting in two outcomes. First, less fluctuation in the voting blocks. Second, marketers need to make momentum stories to attract the shrinking number of swing voters.
Another area to get "trusted" information is from friends. Friends tend to share similar socio-economic-educational characteristics, meaning that political views will tend to be more similar too. But let's say a socially-connected voter has a group of friends who post diverse political viewpoints (libertarian, conservative, liberal, communist etc) on social networks. If our voter were to click on the libertarian links more often, a social network algorithm would kick in and the progressive links would no longer be displayed. This is the case made by Eli Pariser during a Ted Talk. He also goes on to argue that Google searches on political information can be screened to based on previous searches. The upshot of this would be that if voting groups are not seeing proper representation of the other side's point of view, then a common fact-base, necessary for a good debate may be in jeopardy. This hardens partisan line resulting in two outcomes. First, less fluctuation in the voting blocks. Second, marketers need to make momentum stories to attract the shrinking number of swing voters.
Obama's sweet Tweet: "This seat is taken" |
Eastwood at the RNC and the New Yorker cover (Oct): The empty chair belongs to 13 million of Obama Twitter followers |
The upcoming phenomenon: Mercenary news
A final phenomenon that I believe has started-
and I predict will grow tremendously is something that I call mercenary news.
As more and more people have smart phones with recording device, and more
footage is collected in private moments, footage will find its way going
to the highest bidder. We caught a glimpse of this from Romney's infamous 47%
moment. Of course, what Romney said was at best politically stupid, at worst- offensive, and it was not in a private moment. But he was captured
on film by a hidden camera. President Jimmy Carter's grandson, did some hard core sleuthing, found the video and accessed it
with a lot of persuasion and an undisclosed sum. Look for more of this type of news collection in the future. Especially
when close to $1billion dollars is allocated to presidential ad spending.
Yes, the election in the US is a case study in dynamic brand communications. But many of the techniques are the antithesis of what is effective for regular brands. In politics negative works and candidates are not forced to tell the truth.
ReplyDeleteI am surprised you didn't write a ton about Teddy Roosevelt Bob!
ReplyDeleteSuper interesting!
ReplyDeleteWhat do you think about media bias?
ReplyDeleteJILL, if you are refering to "liberal media bias" then this is for you http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/is-there-a-liberal-media-bias-in-election-2012-campaign-coverage-165253546.html
ReplyDeleteGuys- take the link listed above ----gaffe viral hits----- - it is so funny.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfZg4UIuZe4&feature=fvwrel The link... OMG!! SO FUNNY. Thanks for that easter egg bob!!!
ReplyDelete