Best Integrated Marketing Communications Campaign in 2008
OBAMA
Marketing Communications – Term Paper Lance Shields
My Nomination I wholeheartedly and without hesitation nominate the campaign of presidential candidate Barack Obama for best integrated marketing communications campaign in 2008. On first consideration for this paper, choosing a company or product for best IMC campaign made sense. But in 2008, an underdog brand, an African-American, a first-term Democratic senator, and a politician chosen as most liberal in Congress at a time when rightwing politics reigned, Obama ignited the country and won the election with what I believe was the best communications campaign of the year and possibly one of the best political campaigns in U.S. history. And like any powerful brand, this paper will attempt to show through the one-third principle approach how Obama’s campaign succeeded to win the minds and hearts of Americans.
Obama - The Brand What are the values of the brand advertised and what was the goal of the campaign? Does the campaign target the appropriate for the brand audience and how can this audience be profiled?
Nike, Coca Cola, Obama. What do these three share? Clearly these three are brands that have been shown to have brand loyalty surpassing the majority of products, companies or human brands not only in the U.S. but throughout the world. By looking at Barack Obama as a brand, we can ask what are the values of the brand advertised. This must start with the values of the individual and extend to the leader. As an individual, Obama has been known to be liberal, interested in civil rights, Christian, well educated (a Harvard law graduate) and an engaged community organizer. One could say his personal brand values revolve around integrity, racial justice, truthfulness, directness, intelligence and freedom. These brand values form the base in which U.S. citizens perceive the man Obama. On top of these was built the brand image of Obama the potential leader and president of America. The top five brand attributes of Obama the President in surveysi done in 2008 and 2009 (with little change) were: 1. intelligent, 2.
liberal, 3. inspiring, 4. progressive, and 5. good. These attributes, whether planned or not, have been conveyed to the public and I believe have been key to Obama’s brand message throughout the campaign. Obama, as an underdog brand faced many challenges in the months leading up to his election. The goals I believe the Obama campaign strategist David Axelrod must have set were to overcome the inherent racism of Americans to choose an African-American president, to appeal to Americans’ sense of doing what is right to make liberal change happen (universal health care, being a leader in the green industry, withdrawing from Iraq, etc.), and get younger, normally unengaged people out to vote for him. In choosing a target appropriate for the Obama brand, as just mentioned, the Obama team went after the younger 20-30s public that previously felt unrepresented in the issues of past leaders such as George Bush. This audience could be profiled as disillusioned by war and blatant capitalism, environmentally minded, heavy users of social media, well educated, moderate to liberal, morally minded and ready for a change. The messaging and media needed to be planned and crafted to attract and recruit this dormant crowd and unleash their enthusiasm for a new kind of government.
Creative Strategy for Change Does the campaign uniquely and clearly communicate the brand values? Does the campaign take a creative approach that no other brand (at least in the category the brand competes) has taken? What are the creative and executional elements of that make it unique?
Obama's campaign used the slogan "Change we can believe in" and the chant "Yes We Can". “The campaign's remarkable consistency is the real accomplishment. Across towns, counties, states -- and with thousands of volunteers, no less -- across multiple media platforms, they've managed to drive a potent, single-minded design and messaging coherence that should shame many national brands”, ii said Brian Collins, founder of experiential branding firm Collins. With this consistency comes a vibrant, young and cool campaign all built around the idea of
change that can be actualized by each one of us. The logo was a key element that became a symbol for this change and Chicago based creative firm owner Sol Sender described his design as “The sun rising over the horizon evoked a new sense of hopeiii." Typeface Gotham was chosen to make a bold, modern, hip image for a progressive candidate. British soul singer Joss Stone was asked to do the campaign song due to her appeal to black and white votersiv. At the same time a multitude of creative works spread grassroots-style in digital in forms and often adopted by the campaign such as a variety of posters (most widely distributed was Shepard Fairey's Obama poster “hope” used in this paper cover) and songs such as “Yes, we can” by wil.i.am of Black-Eyed Peas (viewed 14.2 million times on YouTube) and Dave Stewart’s (with guest celebrities) “American Prayer”v. Combined with this was, Obama’s intimate, informal and personal manner exhibited throughout his interactions on Facebook, MySpace and Twitter, the candidate attempted to express “I am one of you”. Looking at he BarackObama.com website (with 2 million+ profiles), design and content highlighted the progressive and smart message of the candidate. The movement-like way that Obama was presented, clearly resonated with a large number of young people because he talked about things that truly mattered to them. This was something new and matched the values of the target audience. This was often compared with McCain’s “more of the same” policies. It was memorable because it was simple, consistently on message and took clear moral stands on policy changes that were relevant to young voters.
“The Media is the Message” Innovation Is the media plan tailored to the target audience? In other words, how does the media plan help the brand to effectively and frequently reach the target audience?
Probably the thing that the Obama campaign was most well known for was its strategic use of integrated media and specifically their use of social media on the Internet. The campaign team hired Chris Hughes, one of the founders of Facebook, to provide insight and strategy on how best to use social networking. By tapping social media, the campaign was first able to raise
through small donations (in July 2008 alone) $51 million, with 65,000 donors contributing. This allowed him to turn down public funding say, "public financing of presidential elections as it exists today is broken, and we face opponents who've become masters at gaming this broken systemvi." Second and probably more importantly by using Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, 12 other social networking sites and his own site (totaling 5 million supporters on social networking sites), he was able to rally the troops, engage people in conversations around issues that mattered to them and eventually attract people to volunteer to canvas for the campaign and rally others for the campaign. At the same time, more than 1 billion emails were sent with 7000 different messages targeted to specific audiences. This sort of community style activism, learned from his experience organizing community activism in inner city Chicago in the 90s, provided word-ofmouth marketing that helped bring the younger audience out to vote. And by his choice of media itself, he was able to send the message that he was hip, tech-savvy and relevant to increase his popularity with young people. Obama’s campaign was further strengthened by McCain’s comparatively limited use of the Internet. Furthermore, he used mainstream media in innovative ways as well, as can be seen by the October 29th Obama campaign's 30-minute infomercial "American Stories, American Solutions" that was simulcast on NBC, CBS, Fox, Univision, MSNBC and more focusing on a wide range of issues including health care and taxation. Of course the candidate’s debate strategy and style is also key to success in the polls. The three debates progressively became a smear campaign against Obama in the part of the Republican Party, McCain and Palin. To Obama’s credit he kept a cool head and stuck to his strategy of being a smart talker. This was key as in previous elections Bush smeared Gore’s character that could have easily been as harmful to the Obama brand. viiOver time the polls showed that Obama’s consistent message and brand while McCain increasingly looked bitter and out of touch. In addition, to combat the Republican smear campaign, the Obama team set up “Fight the Smears” website (http://fightthesmears.com/) to counter mistruths such as Obama
isn’t Christian but Muslim, or another that he actually wasn’t an American citizen. Again this intelligent use of media to protect the candidate’s image was key to his strategy. In this way, media was carefully chosen to bring his message to the right people and through his choice of media sent a poignant message that he was one of us and that together we could change things.
Eyes on the Prize Has the campaign achieved marketplace success? Has it achieved the goals? In order to answer this part you may want to use data released by the brand or discussions in the press regarding the campaign’s effectiveness.
The simplest way to check this is to look at the Final Electoral Map (see Exhibit 1) that showed a final count of 365 (Obama) to 173 (McCain)viii. Between October 29 and November 2 shows an average 7.3% lead for Obama over Senator McCain. Looking at the demographics, an impressive 43% of whites voted for Obama, 66% of Hispanic votes, 99% of black votes and 55% of the total female votes went to Obama. He clearly overcame racism among voters enough to gain the majority vote. Looking at the younger votes, 66% of under-30s voted for Obama, and 55% of young white voters voted for him. Overall all this shows that his campaign effectively attracted a high number of first-time voters, 71% who voted Democrat this election.ix Another indication of his relevancy to the target audience was 2.4 million friends on Facebook compared to McCain’s 620,000 which is a 380% more supportersx. From my own point of view, as a person who is loyal to such brands as Apple and Whole Foods, the Obama campaign accomplished through a tightly controlled brand of smart, liberal talking and a media strategy of building an authentic persona though social media, what most companies can only dream of. My vote went to Barack Obama and even now as his popularity is slipping with American’s mistrust of universal health, I believe the man and his party are capable of change many in my generation desire. Clearly leadership of a country goes beyond conventional advertising, however the Obama campaign deserves the nomination for best integrated marketing communications campaign in 2008.
Appendix Exhibit 1:
Exhibit 2.
Citations i
From Brand Strategy Insider Survey: http://www.brandingstrategyinsider.com/2009/08/the-president-barack-
obama-brand.html ii
Marketer of 2008, http://adage.com/article?article_id=131757
iii
Wikipedia: Obama Logo, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obama_logo
iv
Joss Stone, http://www.popcrunch.com/joss-stone-barack-obama-campaign-song/
v
Dave Stewart, “American Prayer�, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVi4rUzf-0Q
vi
Wikipedia: Obama Campaign,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barack_Obama_presidential_campaign,_2008#Presidential_debates vii
Obama's Can't-Lose Debate Strategy, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joseph-romm/obamas-cant-lose-debate-
s_b_128828.html viii ix
Election Polls, http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/maps/obama_vs_mccain/
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1083335/Breakdown-demographics-reveals-black-voters-
swept-Obama-White-House.html x
How Obama Won with Social Media, http://www.slideshare.net/james.burnes/how-obama-won-using-digital-
and-social-media-presentation