Posts Tagged ‘obama’

Obama is a miserable failure, or at least that’s what Google says.

I kid you not, this one came across my RSS feed from two places. First Obama Is “Failure” At Google & “Miserable Failure” At Yahoo then again from Googlebomb Explodes for President Obama – Failure. It appears that even years after Google’s work to repair Google Bombs, it still managed to explode egg on the face of the new president.

What is a Google Bomb? 

For this of you who don’t know what I’m talking about … this is a Google Bomb:

obama miserable failure Obama is a miserable failure, or at least thats what Google says. image

As of eight o’clock tonight, if you search for  miserable failure at Yahoo, that’s the result. The above screen capture was taken a couple minutes ago and while I will admit it’s at Yahoo the same appears to have been working at Google for most of the day.

There’s a lot of great coverage on this if your on the right RSS feeds, so I’m not going to blabber on about it for hours but there’s a (now) funny article by Matt Cutts on the subject  Algorithm to reduce Googlebomb impact as well as a piece here on website called Why your search engine rank depends on your competitors. that explains what a Google Bomb is and how (*cough*) Google’s done a great job protecting us from them.

Barack Obama’s use of technology to take the White House

Barack Obama is a movement that changed the world. Much like Reagan made direct mail integral to modern campaign marketing and Kennedy took TV by storm, Barack Obama has literally changed the way technology will be used in every election (and marketing campaign) in the future.

Barack Obama is my hero. OK, more specifically, his team is my hero. Take a look at this great video on CBC’s website with Rahaf Harfoush, talking about what it’s like to work on the Obama campaign. There’s also a great article this morning on the CBC’s main website, sort of a Q&A about social media strategy and how the big O used readily available technology to shift the playing field from Republican dominated TV to the vast wasteland of the Internet. 

So, whatever the next four (or eight) years brings us, looking at how the Obama campaign shifted the playing field from large donations to nearly $200 million in smaller, grass roots donations is a key lesson for all Internet marketers.

First, Obama’s team ensured that they owned their proper domain names for their candidate and they protected their brand. A few years ago, Belinda Stronach ran for leadership of the Conservative Party of Canada. She’s rich, she’s powerful, she’s young, she’s attractive and if you believed her Internet presence, she’s into kinky sex fantasy fiction … oh wait, that was  belinda.com, not her official website belinda.ca … oops. People are funny, you tell them to go to a website and they’re going to go to the .com first … it’s the default, so if you’re going to protect your brand go for the .com first and then buy up all the others later.

After ensuring their brand was set, the Obama campaign used tried-and-tested methods of real world marketing genius to connect with their people, t-shirts. The only thing we love more than America? Free t-shirts. Look, I don’t get it but it appears to work. Actually, the reason it works is because it makes the marketing campaign about you, the participant not the company. The Obama campaign took it a few steps further, transforming their online presence from a technical resource to a personal community. Take a look at their community. It’s not a forum, it’s not a blog, it’s my. Back with I helped build the US Beer Drinking Team, I came up with a concept called Me Marketing and proposed to the concept to their parent company. The Obama campaign brilliantly called their community … my.barackobama.com … not only did this ensure their server load was balanced (*cough geek*) but also turned a bland social networking resource into something which belonged to the people he was trying to reach.

 

The footer of Obama's website continues the message.

The footer of Obama's website continues the message.

Jakob Neilson wrote a column years ago about Ten Usability Heuristics, I live and die by these ten rules and maybe without even knowing it, so do the people over at the Obama campaign. Neilson uses some pretty fancy speak but one of the basic rules he comes up with is what happens in the digital world should reflect the real world. All too often a website is the product of techies and back room IT people, instead of the marketing team but in the case of the Obama campaign, the website is powered by hope and it’s an extension of the real world values his team communicates in other mediums. Robin Williams has a rule for this too. It’s the R in CRAP (repetition), which is a good thing.

There’s a lot more to how Obama took the White House than his teams use of fancy marketing or web technology, some claim it was a backlash to Bush while others will argue it was simply his time. Personally, I’m more interested in the technology than the man and how his team has reshaped the political and marketing future for all of us.

Obama Makes the Most of Facebook

Using the latest technology from Facebook, the Obama-Biden campaign have once against steamrolled the competition to implement the latest offerings from Facebook.

Using Facebook Connect, you can connect your Facebook account with your My.BarackObama.com account. This will also allow you to see your friends who are on http://my.barackobama.com/, find local events and take part in Web 2.0 social networking. This is just one more example of how Barack is using online marketing to reach voters in the US election.

Rednecks for Obama

rednecks for obama rednecks for obama 20081009 189x300 Rednecks for Obama imageI’ve got to say, maybe as a Canadian I have had the wrong idea of Rednecks all this time because

  1. I thought that to be a Redneck you had to be a Republican and;
  2. Whoever designed the http://rednecks4obama.com/ website actually did a pretty good job.

All joking aside, I was a little surprised when I saw the words Redneck and Obama appear together in the URL but then after I spent a bit of time reading about it on the Internet, I came to the conclusion that all my almost all my preconceived notions of Redneck’s might be wrong. As for the site, my only advice to them could be to change the blue text on aqua to white on aqua but otherwise, thanks for a great look at an under reported side of America. That being said, I did read about them in the New York Times.