In the early 1980’s when I was about 6 years old my dad ran for
County Supervisor. I remember wearing frilly dresses and going to
political parties. We ordered hundreds of bright blue and neon orange
signs that said “Leadership for the 80’s” and put them up in friends’
yards and on busy street corners. We canvassed neighborhoods knocking
on voter’s doors and had a phone call list a mile long with friends and
family members spreading the word. He lost that race and ten years later
we repeated the cycle when he ran for School Board (and unfortunately
lost that election, too.) He’s not planning to pursue any more of his
political ambitions; however, I’m still glad political fundraising methods have changed.
There was an article in The New York Times last week written
by Jim Rutenberg and Jeff Zeleny which discussed how President Obama
has created an almost corporate-like atmosphere as he pursues a second
term as president. Like a well-oiled Silicon Valley techno-machine, his
workers are busily scouting out past donors who gave in the beginning
and are currently missing in action. “Mr. Obama’s re-election team is
sifting through reams of data available through the Internet or fed to
it by its hundreds of staff members on the ground in all 50 states,
identifying past or potential supporters and donors and testing e-mail
and Web-based messages that can entice them back into the fold” reports
Rutenger and Zeleny.
President Obama, along with his Republican competitors, realizes that
much of the campaigning to win the race will be done on the internet.
“With the help of Web developers recruited from the private sector, [the
campaign] has dedicated considerable hours creating technology that can
make its Web site,
barackobama.com, fit perfectly onto any screen, be
it an iPhone, Blackberry or Droid — a seemingly small detail that
campaign officials say can make a huge difference when it comes to
enticing donors or volunteers to stay connected or click a ‘donate’
button” observes Rutenger and Zeleny.
Not by chance or trial and error, but through tangible reports, facts
and figures is science being applied to the partnership of politics and
social media. No longer are politicians from City Hall to the White
House relying on knocking on doors to shake hands with the voters or
passing out leaflets boasting of their past accomplishments and future
goals. Today’s campaign trail is littered with crisp mailers, a path of
Tweets and Facebook fodder to reach the masses and Fundly is proud to be a part of the future of political fundraising.
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