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"The Making of a
President," but "The Marketing of a President." Barack Obama's campaign is a
case study in marketing excellence.True, it was always going to be a
Democratic year. An unpopular war, an incumbent Republican president with
rock bottom approval ratings, and many Republican incumbents retiring from
Congress as a result all meant that change was in the air. Add to that the
economic meltdown that decimated millions of 401K retirement plans and
undercut any Republican claim to be the better steward of the economy.But,
even so, for an inexperienced single term African-American senator tagged
with the most liberal voting record to defeat the heir apparent in his own
party and then go on to hold off the much-vaunted Republican machine is a
truly remarkable achievement.
Much of it has to do with Obama's instinct for marketing. First, Obama's
personal charisma, his listening and public speaking skills, his
consistently positive and unruffled demeanor and his compelling biography
attracted the attention and empathy of voters. Second, Obama converted this
empathy into tangible support. More citizens volunteered time and money to
help the Obama campaign than any previous presidential candidate. Indeed, he
attracted more donors than the entire Democratic or Republican party
nationwide. Almost half of Obama's unprecedented $639 million in funds
raised from individuals came from small donors giving $300 or less. Third,
his fundraising prowess was aided by his appreciation and use of all
communications media , notably the Internet, to engage voters. Obama picked
up where Howard Dean left off.
He leveraged his website, the blogosphere, and even user-generated content
(remember Obama Girl) and video games to engage not just donors and
volunteers but all citizens. From the imaginative campaign logo to the
thirty minute infomercial, Obama's communications were professional without
being slick, attention-getting without being in-your-face.Fourth, Obama
reached out to all citizens. He targeted his message beyond previous or
likely voters. He built a coalition that energized young, first-time voters
and registered thousands of previous non-voters. His organization encouraged
early voting by Democrats to build well-publicized poll leads and to reduce
the chances of supporters being discouraged from voting by long lines at
polling places on election day. This policy of inclusion meant that voting
records were set in the general election and the primaries. Fifth, his
advertising messages and his tone and demeanor throughout the campaign
consistently communicated his upbeat themes of hope and "change you can
believe in."
The emotional appeal was buttressed with solid and specific policy details.
The ability to combine emotional with functional benefits and the discipline
to be consistent in positioning and message delivery are core to all
successful branding campaigns. Ads that dealt with specific policy issues,
even ads criticizing McCain, all continued to communicate the core themes.
Sixth, he anticipated and outsmarted the competition. Throughout, he showed
respect for Clinton and then McCain, even as he successfully tagged a McCain
administration as Bush's third term. But he and his advisers managed the
political chessboard brilliantly.
Early on, he anticipated and defused negative criticisms by admitting to
past indiscretions his autobiography. His campaign rebutted the criticisms
in a hostile biography point-by-point before they gained traction. Negative
advertising by his opponents was countered quickly, not only in ads but on
the internet as well. Seventh, he fought the ground war as brilliantly as
the air war. Building on Howard Dean's 50 state strategy, he built his
primary delegate count by investing time in Democratic caucuses in red
states; the organizations he built for the primaries in these states set him
up to win several of them in the general. In the closing weeks, he put
McCain on defense in multiple red states, making it tough for the Republican
to focus his efforts.
Having relied on public funding, McCain ended up having to make some tough
trade-offs regarding where to go and where to spend his money. Obama did
not.Finally, Obama chose an excellent marketing and campaign team, and
managed them well. From start to finish, there was no public dissension. He
chose a non-controversial, experienced Senator as his running mate who
complemented his lack of foreign policy skills. McCain only assembled a
smooth-running campaign team late in the day. And the maverick made a
surprise choice of an unknown running mate that, in the final analysis,
undercut his ability to tag Obama as inexperienced and called his judgment
into question.Like any great brand, Obama has built up a bond of trust with
the American people. His election has also given the US the opportunity to
reestablish its moral leadership around the world. But like any brand, he
has to deliver now on his promises, both actual and perceived. In the
current economy, that will not be easy. |