Sunday, November 2, 2008

Brave New World on November 4th?

The time is finally upon us. After nearly two years of campaigning we are about to elect a new president. This election has kept me so wrapped up in all the technology that I have not even had a chance to add my voice to it. Here are some of the amazing technologies that will forever be useful in future  campaigns:
  • Social Media Networking
  • Regression modeling of Polls
  • Get Out The Vote (GOTV) database mining
  • Voting Machine Fraud Blogging
  • Trash Emailing
  • YouTube Moments
  • Mobile Contact
While some of these items are completely non-partisan in nature and merely helped to inform us of campaign status (Poll regression modeling, Voting Machine Fraud blogging), the others were utilized to better advantage in getting out the message for the candidates. Who won this battle? Let's take a closer look.

Social Media Networking
The Obama campaign was on FaceBook, MySpace, Twitter, and LinkedIn before any of the other candidates during the long primary. I was not on the Obama bandwagon early, but I was impressed that I was being contacted in these areas long before anyone else. Any of us on FaceBook saw how many people were joining the Obama groups steadily over the course of the last two years. How many Obama buttons, Obama Lightsabers, etc. have we received during this time--too many to count?

On LinkedIn, Senator Obama asked my advice on topics facing his campaign and topics facing the country. I didn't fall for it: I knew he didn't send this personally nor do I think he read all of the comments. But I did send in my response when I thought I had something to say about a topic, and I received an automated response--that's better than when I was looking for a job and I would almost never get even the most cursory of automated responses ("Thank you for your interest, we will be contacting you if your resume meets our requirements.").

Between all of these social media items, this might constitute, as Mary Butler Twittered in my feed, his new communications channel after he's elected (IF he's elected). An unfiltered feed to the huge network he's built up and one that can get his message about his agenda out before the Limbaughs and Hannities of the world can lie about.

Are we witnessing the beginning of a whole new way of communicating in the Internet age between our government and the electorate?

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