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The Political Marketing Moment

The Political Marketing Moment . Politics Now in Canada and the USA . What It Is: Political Marketing . Market orientation Product development Branding/position/segmentation Voter as consumer . Why Political Marketing ? .

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The Political Marketing Moment

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  1. The Political Marketing Moment Politics Now in Canada and the USA

  2. What It Is: Political Marketing • Market orientation • Product development • Branding/position/segmentation • Voter as consumer

  3. Why Political Marketing ? • Explains the way in which parties and other political entities behave • In response to social and technological change. • It fits the consumerist values we have • It fits the lifestyles people have

  4. And • It is easier to figure out how to reach the right people and what those people are concerned about than it has been • Reaching the right people is the trick • The current moment is one of niche narrowcasting, lifestyle communities and discussions within segments

  5. To Be Clear • Advertising is a key part of marketing but not all of it. • Marketing includes the overall strategy to design and sell the product. • Including paid and earned media but a lot more.

  6. Meaning • The product or offering is the party’s candidates, manifesto and emotions • The position is the space that the product holds in the customer’s mind • The brand is the visual and emotive representation of the product to the audience

  7. Providing an Incentive • For political entities to market themselves and their wares much as do other entities. • In this, they reflect the society, the technology and the politics in which they exist as much as they shape that. • This is a global phenomenon, not just happening in North America or the United States. See for Example Lees-Marshment 2011. • Consultants and partisans learn from each other on a cross-national basis

  8. Examples • John Howard’s “Aussie Battlers” used in Canada by the Conservative Party to describe some of its audiences • The third way used in the USA, Canada and the UK by Clinton, Chretien and Blair respectively. • “Hope and Change” became very popular globally after 2008. • The Commonsense Revolution has been launched in multiple places around the globe.

  9. Thus • Understanding the audience and the marketplace become vital to building an effective political marketing campaign. • A great deal of emphasis on polls and focus groups. • To determine effective visuals, language, narrative and policy priorities • And what works with which audiences.

  10. Because • Much more noise than in the past . Reaching the right audience is more difficult than it once was. • Many more channels. The proliferation of new distribution channels makes hitting the right targets more difficult than in the past. • Citizens have longer commutes and work hours than once was the case. • I can opt out of the political nation and join Leafs nation or build my world around family/work more easily than in the past. Less social connection

  11. Social Disconnection • The party as a membership organization is in trouble across North America • More independents pay less attention means that marketing in general and branding in particular increase in importance • They are key tools to build voter awareness of candidates and platforms • CDN parties always have a marketing imperative that their US counterparts don’t: they have to sell memberships.

  12. And • The dominant values of the age are consumerist. • The public expects packages, promotion and significant choice in everything else. • When did consumerism become our values ? Gradually, during the last century. • As Nimijean has argued, the politics of the age are neo-liberal meaning that fights are over means not ends. • Brand battles sharpen distinctions and generate interest.

  13. One Way To Think of All This • An ongoing conversation between an organization and its audience targets that includes a campaign and beyond. • Loyalty isn’t build all at once. It can take a while of showing people why what was promised works as advertised, that those promises made were kept and that taking a next step would be a good thing to do. • The idea of a campaign is to have a plan about that conversation

  14. That Includes • Products • Personality • Positioning • Brand • Communications Plan • Audience Targets

  15. Product Definition • Politics is about definition in a couple of ways • Define yourself • Define your opponent

  16. Personality • Both in terms of the party leader and • In terms of the brand

  17. Party Leader/Face • Inextricably linked with the brand in Canada. • This is the same in the USA when a party occupies the White House but is more nebulous for the opposition party.

  18. Personality • Can also sell the leader as being like average people • Both CDN and USA political parties sometimes do this and they sometimes sell other personal traits about the leader like attending an Ivy League University or being a business owner. • Or sell values such as empathy or strength.

  19. Meaning • Campaigns talk about themselves • Campaigns talk about their opponents • Opponents talk about themselves • Opponents talk about their rivals. • In the USA, this strategic grid has four spaces and in Canada it can have four but also up to ten.

  20. The Political Equivalent • Of educating the consumer about what the offering is on a given party’s side • Versus the offerings of rivals. • One difference is that the battle is more existential than over market share a lot of the time in politics but • In a multi-party system like Canada’s, it can be over market share as well.

  21. Positioning • What space do you want occupy in the mind of the consumer ? • Generally, somewhere nearer the center is better in politics but the marketing challenge is • The center can shift and political types can’t shift with it all the time if they want to retain overall authenticity. • Authenticity – the perception of being what one says one is in marketing.

  22. The Brand • The total user experience with the product according to Zyman • The image, slogan, music and values supporting a product. • The brand needs to fit the product’s features and benefits but also resonate with its target audience.

  23. In The USA • USA Republicans have used the Reagan/Conservative brand since 1980 as one • Plus the Lincoln heritage has merged with the Reagan/Conservative one • And the elephant is still around • As is an emphasis on tradition

  24. Reagan Heritage

  25. The Elephant

  26. Tea Party Flag

  27. All of which • More or less work together to build a narrative that is visually and emotively coherent • Put the Republican Party in a specific place in the mind of the prospect • Provide a specific set of emotions and understandings to the audience targets

  28. The Democrats • The Dems are much more muddied. Sometimes it is Obama, sometimes it has been the Congressional leadership but it isn’t consistent and this is why their messaging isn’t consistent.

  29. Either

  30. Or The Kicking Donkey

  31. The First One • Clearly ties to Obama • But also looks like a target as one wag put it and • What happens if Obama loses ?

  32. The Second One • Ties to the Democrats’ heritage. • They’re called the Donkeys • The donkey logo has serious equity • Changing to the newer logo visually throws all this away but it clarifies that the D’s are the party of Obama

  33. And • There are still individual Obama logos selling him not the party • This is far less coherent narratively and visually than what the Republicans have done but they’ve also been doing it for longer • Thus, the muddling of the Democratic Brand continues

  34. The 2012 Version

  35. Canadian Parties • Use the logo as a key part of the brand • And are aware that they are doing so.

  36. Conservative

  37. Electoral Promise/Positioning

  38. New Democrats

  39. Liberal

  40. Colors • Absolutely own their colors consciously. • This is different from the USA in which the media imposes more color discipline than do the parties. • Fonts can also send messages but the fonts have changed over time here.

  41. Visuals • A picture really is worth a thousand words • The visuals associated with a brand can be the key vehicle through which its contents get distributed.

  42. Example I

  43. Example II

  44. Example III

  45. Example IV

  46. Slogans • Can be a key conduit to transfer the brand value proposition • Two Canadian examples: “Forward Together” Ontario Liberals and “Here For Canada” Conservative Party of Canada • Two US: “ Change We Can Believe In” and “Together We Can”

  47. Key US/Canada Difference • Canadian Parties are more limited in the heat they can put in their brand/ads • They cover this in other parts of the ads • US parties can be much hotter visually and in the verbiage than can their Canadian counterparts because

  48. Emotions • As Westin has shown in the US case, much of the way people experience politics is emotional not analytically. • The emotions that similar ideological parties work with around the globe seem the same. • Thus, the emotions that a party can work with in a specific setting are limited by what the audience will respond to.

  49. Audiences • Things that might work well in a federal election might not work so well in a provincial one because the audience demography is different. • In the era of niche narrowcasting, the emotions that might activate one group could outrage another.

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