Observations from the Israeli online political campaigns

A brief observation1 of the online internet campaigns for the top Israeli political parties one month before the 10 February general elections reveals some interesting analysis.

With a large population using broadband internet, all parties realise the importance of a good website to spread their campaign message. Most, if not all, of the sites include what can be considered the basics nowadays meaning blogs, videos, pictures and generally good modern looking graphical sites. The survey carried out looked at each website in terms of languages available, blogging capabilities, videos, sign up forms, online donations, extra widgets and links to other online social networks. The survey also looked at the social network links of the parties or leader to see the number of hits, subscribers and popularity. The sites scanned included Facebook, Flickr, Youtube, Linkedin, MarkerCafe, Tapuz and MySpace.

Simplistically, the results of the survey reflected the current polls.2 Too many other variables play apart in the campaign to conclude this, but the point to emphasis is the power and importance of what online tools and a solid online campaign strategy can do to enhance the overall campaign.

Here are some of the interesting results (conducted 9 January, month before general elections): Facebook (group supporters): Livni 311; Barak, 416; Netanyahu 1,781; Meretz 998 Flickr (photos posted): Livni 315; Barak 35; Netanyahu 375, Israel Beiteinu 28 Youtube (channel views, videos, subscribers): Livni 15702,35,84; Barak 5500,44,28; Meretz 342,-,2

Ask Israeli political questions on Youtube

Ask Israeli politicians questions on YouTube

The winner by far: Netanyahu and Likud’s website (see earlier post: Obama-Netanyahu Spot the Difference) is clearly a step above the rest, although costly it is the best by far in terms of design and technology. The Likud leader has made excessive use of the social networks, including Twitter (micro-blogging) which some politicians were hesitant in using and even has a Myspace page with over 12,000 views (that is 12,000 more than other politician). The party’s online effort can be seen in the results although the online community system that Netanyahu offers is not far from active. The question remains, as to whether it is campaign focused or there will be a post-election plan to continue the website and online community process.

Reoccurring problems: Many of the sites only surfaced a few weeks before election campaigning. Kadima is an example of a site that was running throughout the year but without any upgrade before the election is limited in functionality and user interaction compared to the others. The Labour party did not even have a website until a month ago. The sites that are running now are specifically focused on the campaigns (granted) but lack any other further materials or content related to parties that have a deep rooted history in the country. A total lack of content is a glaring concern and most of the sites are purely just created for the campaign. Are they cutting cost, lack the resources, with holding information strategically or just badly organised and thought out? It won’t be surprising if some of these sites cease to function and operate after the February 10 voting day.

Another glaring issue noticed, related to the previous paragraph of lack of content and information is that many of the sites are only displayed in Hebrew, some with a bit of English, some with a focus on Russian and most without Arabic. Kadima’s site even has a comment from an overseas supporter requesting information in English. Regarding, elections campaign maybe this does not help the party, the overseas supporter does not vote, but there is no harm with creating some global overseas support base for your politics. Why can’t a few pages be translated for the tens of thousands of potential voters who do not have Hebrew as there mother tongue?

Online donations is another interesting subject. The waters have not been tested, and little is known or reseaeched of the potential for online donations and new method of fundraising. A few sites try it through third party merchants but by no means is it a focus and pushed on the sites.

Overall verdict: Netanyahu-Likud’s site far outranks any of the oppositions although at a large financial cost. Kadima’s site is average lacking a few of the modern technology but at least has been operating for an extended period before the campaign season. Labour was lacking a site until a few weeks ago, and it continues to grow and add features, but a little too late. Shas is using the open source code and content management of Drupal (respect for innovation and creativity) and were the only site that hinted at understanding the power of the internet community by allowing users to vote on banners and slogans that they will use in the campaign. This is the point that most of the sites have missed.

As much as Netanyahu’s site has tried to create an online community it has not taken off. The others have not even tried to build some sort of active online community to mobilise, plan and get users involved in the campaign. There is no empowerment of the supporter, change from the ground up, grass roots initiatives through the internet, it’s just more of the same. The time will come when the public will demand more interaction, participation, transparency and representation, in the meantime the parties are still holding onto that power, even online.

  1. Research carried out on January 9, 2009 one month before the general elections. Parties surveyed included Kadima, Likud, Labour, Meretz, Israel Beiteinu, Shas, Tzipi Livni, Ehud Barak, Benjammin Netanyahu. The sites continue to improve and add new technologies. Those that had the technologies and ideas first, remain in the advantage.
  2. Current Israeli Opinion Polls from 18 January (Seats out of 120): Likud 29 Kadima 26 Labour 14 Yisrael Beiteinu 14

Add comment January 23rd, 2009

CNN, Facebook, YouTube - Join forces for Obama inauguration

Obama Inauguration live on YoutubeSo the latest mix of media and social networking is the joining of forces between Facebook, YouTube and CNN to bring you the US Presidential Inauguration live on Tuesday. You will be able to watch the ceremony on your computer while logged into Facebook and be able to chat to your friends and share this historic occasion. 48,000 fans so far, expect a few hundred thousand. Hold thumbs for no technical hitches. Looks good, might try it.

Add comment January 18th, 2009

Organizing for America Movement - Will it continue the momentum?

A few days before Barack Obama is inaugurated as the 44th President of the United States, the president-elect announced the formation of the grass roots movement Organizing for America. All those interested in social media and online communities are watching closely as the successful online campaign of Obama is transformed  into something new.

Will it have the same impact? Will contributors be as motivated and passionate as they were during the campaign? Will 10 million emails the campaign holds be able to influence the direction of the next President?

It will take time to tackle the critical issues Obama is faced with. Economy, Iraq, Oil, Environment will not be solved overnight, but how will those in the grassroots movement connected together with the tools of the internet accept this delay? In today’s online world, time and patience is not a virtue, people want to see instatn results.

Add comment January 18th, 2009

Some Tips for Online Marketing

Many companies are asking themselves whether or not to launch their presence online. What are the cost-benefit factors? Is it the right decision to make? How many leads/sales/views will it bring in?

Once the decision has been made and the online marketing strategy created, think about some of these tips when presenting online:

  • Two Way Game: With Web 2.0 technology, users or consumers want to interact and respond. They are not interested in promotional jargon from the CEO. Consumers want to hear the company ongoings, product development updates and offer their support and feedback. It’s time for some interaction!
  • Maximizing Feedback: If a good two way game is set up is in place, companies can utilize this to improve product development, even get users involved in the work usually assigned to developers. Why can’t users do quality checks, review product lists, offer additional feature advise or test usability?  It’s time to maximize this potential.
  • Offer Incentives for Users: The previous point is easier said than done, but a good incentive scheme could solve this. Offer cash rewards, free products, meetings with CEOs other creative ideas in order to give that user a sense of belonging and attachment to the company.

Although this post took a business approach, the same can be said for online political campaigning. Just substitute CEO with politician or company with non-profit and product with campaign message. Individuals or Organisations aim to mobilise their users, learn from them, give them what they want and empower them by allowing them to make decisions and see results of their work in a campaign.

Add comment January 9th, 2009

Online Fundraising: Half a billion dollars. It’s possible

For any skeptics out there here are some facts and figures that prove the power of online campaigning and fundraising. It is also an example of how to become the President of the United States of America.

The Obama campaign managed:

  • Half a billion dollars online in its 21-month campaign
  • 3 million donors made a total of 6.5 million donations online
  • 6.5 million donations, 6 million were in increments of $100 or less
  • Average online donation $80
  • Email lists of over 13 million addresses
  • 7,000 different emails sent to specific email lists
  • 1 million signed up to text messaging program
  • Supporters on average received five to 20 text messages per month
  • 2 million profiles created on MyBo social network site
  • 200,000 offline events held
  • 400,000 blog post entries created
  • Maintained a profile on 15 other social networks, gathering 5 million “friends”

Taken from Washington Post Article:

Obama Raised Half a Billion Online By Jose Antonio Vargas

Add comment January 2nd, 2009

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