Fred08.com: An Outside Insider's View
By Michael Turk, 01/24/2008 - 5:12pm

A lot has been written about the Thompson campaign in the past two days. I have read a bunch of post-mortems all focused on what went wrong, but I thought I would spend a little time telling you what went right. For people interested in online politics and the way candidates use the web, the Thompson campaign is a great case study in what can go well, and go badly in our world.

On May 22nd, I was sitting at Inova Fairfax hospital as my wife was rehydrated. A vicious stomach flu was circulating through the house and had brought my wife and son down. As we sat there that evening, I received an e-mail on my Blackberry from the brother of a friend of the Thompson's. A few days earlier, they had seen an article in the Washington Post wherein I chastised my party for not using the Internet effectively.

I had been sweating the fallout from that article for two days. I was not exactly loved by the RNC for my critical assessment of their online operation. That article, which was about 180 degrees removed from the series of conversations I had with the reporter, was not going to help.

The Thompson team, however, agreed with my assessment that campaigns could use the Internet differently and wanted me to come out to "The House" to chat about it. We agreed to meet the next day despite what would become a full-blown case of the flu. The Thompson team, it seems, had circulated that same flu about a week earlier and none of them were afraid of catching it again.

On May 23rd, I met with Team Fred and after a three hour discussion of new and innovative ways you could use the Internet to supplement a traditional campaign, I left with an assignment - build a Presidential website in the height of a media storm, that would withstand a huge rush of traffic the moment it launched, and do it all in 10 days.

The Launch

On June 5, 2007, we launched ImWithFred.com. The site was originally envisioned as a simple splash page that would gather low hanging fruit - early donors and supporters looking to sign up. A requirement that all forms be pre-populated so visitors would not have to fill in information more than once threw in a wrinkle and we ended up building personalization into a splash page - not something most people would do. We also ended up building tools that would allow viral recruitment for both donors and volunteers.

Now these tools were hardly new or innovative, but the combination of designing the data architecture, doing the graphic design work, cutting up the site, coding it all, and allowing time to test for bugs in 10 days (over Memorial Day weekend, no less) was about the craziest thing I have ever tried. The data architecture alone had to support huge traffic, and getting the servers provisioned, hardened and tested would eat into our ability to deploy a test environment. Doing all of this over the holiday made me very popular with the development team.

Speaking of the team, I have to give credit to Dan Hopkins, Blaise Hazelwood, Todd Zeigler, Ken Smith, Brian Lyle and the gang that pulled this together. They did an outstanding job getting the site launched under those conditions and rarely complained (to me at least).

On Hannity and Colmes, Fred announced his website url and the flood came in. We took a lot of heat for the thin site, but we didn't have time for much else. Had we had a month to design, build and test, we could have done more. Given the time we had, and the limitations of working under the "Testing the Waters" rules, I thought we did fine. We attracted over 100,000 unique visitors, raised over a quarter million dollars, and added nearly 30,000 names to our list in the first 24 hours.

On June 12, we rolled out the Fred File, added Fred's bio, and added tools to spread the word through traditional media by contacting talk radio and newspapers. I was traveling back from a meeting in Colorado that night on a flight that was seriously delayed. I ended up doing the go-live countdown from a seat just inside the arrival gate at Dulles airport on their wi-fi connection. We made the rollout about 30 minutes ahead of Fred's appearance on Leno that night.

The blog was a hit almost instantly and led me to believe the path we had chosen was right. Fred's commentaries were getting a lot of comments and I saw the beginning of an online community I've never seen around a GOP candidate's online operation. What's more, nobody wrote a single word about what supporters were saying online. Nobody accused us of endorsing the random beliefs espoused by the occasional nut, and nobody on the campaign had to answer a single press call (that I am aware of) about the blog or anything said on it.

ImWithFred.com Version 2.0 - The New McKinley

Described inappropriately as ImWithFred.com 2.0 by some creative types, the actual site was finished the week of July 9th. We had been asked to shoot for having the live site ready the first week of July (timed to be released with the announcement). The site was delayed by a week. The announcement was delayed by two months.

Originally I saw the campaign's Internet operation as the modern day equivalent of McKinley in 1896. As Fred took his message to the people, they could, at the same moment, come and visit him sitting on the front porch of this virtual house. FDT could simultaneously campaign in Iowa and around the world, by carrying the coffee shop conversations online - posting about questions he was asked at a rally, or continuing to develop regular, and lengthy posts about the issues we face.

While the pundits will discuss and debate exactly where the campaign went wrong, the one thing I believe they misunderstand is the way the Internet could have, and should have, shaped this campaign. That misunderstanding contributed to the "Fred is lazy" storyline early on.

The campaign still had to do the things necessary to win - talking to, registering, IDing, and mobilizing voters. Nobody questioned that. That the campaign strategy was written off as "relying entirely on the Internet" was simply not accurate.

The idea, from my perspective, was to harness the power of the Net to build a robust community that would become an integral part of the ground game. The Bush-Cheney campaign had begun the process of enabling volunteer action online. It pioneered activism tools that allowed voters to create and run phone bank and canvass operations from their home. It allowed people to participate on their own terms, rather than forcing them to attend a Saturday morning walk.

I saw this campaign as the natural evolution of that effort, but it would go further in the one arena where BC04 fell short. The Bush campaign was innovative in allowing people to participate in the mechanics of the campaign, but it never developed the community that could interact, inspire, and spur each other into action. I felt in 2004, and still feel today, that is the missing pieces required to fully realize the benefit of these applications.

The Thompson web operation would be different. With Jon Henke, Howard Mortman and William Beutler constantly opening new channels through local, state and national blogs, and the campaign site providing a vehicle for those attracted to participate in the campaign, we could reach the tipping point where engaged people are empowered to contribute in ways never attempted by the GOP.

Buy In

When I first met with Linda Rozett, Mark Corallo and Ed McFadden, I was distrustful. I unfairly stereotyped them as traditional communications people. It has been my experience in dealing with campaign Communications staff that they have developed a sort of impenetrable cocoon around themselves. Any thought that runs contrary to the way they did things on their first campaign is somehow filtered out as a bad idea. I would describe it as a mild form of mental illness. It's a cognitive dissonance of the first order and it seems to afflict nearly all of them.

Mark, Ed and Linda didn't fit that mold. They understood that we needed to be part of the dialog on blogs and online forums like Townhall, but they also understood the need to drive traffic to our own property and to develop a community. The chatter about Fred online, the traffic to the site, and the money coming in led me to believe the theory was right and we could introduce a paradigm shift.

I knew from my RNC days and the Bush days that buy-in for a radically different approach would be critical. I was pleased to see that everyone in the campaign from Fred and Jeri through Linda, Mark and Ed was onboard. It really did make a difference.

The Little Red Truck

Unfortunately, the staff turnover that began in the late summer had an almost immediate effect on the Internet operation.

As the Communications team focused on traditional media tactics, their attention increasingly turned away from the Internet. The commentaries became less frequent, online initiatives were no longer part of the equation.

In October, we began discussions of an end of quarter fundraising drive featuring a real-time disclosure of our success. The concept was shot down over concerns that it would place too much emphasis on money. As we moved through November, we began to hear rumblings of Fredsgiving Day - a third party money bomb effort scheduled the day before Thanksgiving.

It was unclear whether the campaign would support the effort. There were concerns (voiced by many online) that the timing was off - nobody would pay attention the day before the holiday. In the event the campaign decided to jump in, we went ahead and built the little red truck to track contributions that day. It was never deployed.

It was late in December when the little red truck finally saw the sunlight. Over the next three weeks, that little red pickup helped the campaign raise 1.25 million dollars. Had it been unveiled sooner, who knows what might have happened.

Lessons Learned

I share all of this anecdotally in the hopes of illustrating something for GOP campaigns (and more broadly for campaigns in general). I'm afraid that the withdrawal of Fred Thompson will lead people to conclude that the model was wrong. I really don't feel it was.

As I said, I think the Thompson Internet operation, in the early days, and in the final days, was really second to none. Political campaign professionals should study the Thompson effort not as a case study in what went badly, but as an example of what was going very well, and could have been extraordinary had it not been for the media's obsessive demand for 'the tried and true tactics of the 1980s'.

As an example of the strength of Thompson's online effort, look at the Thompson campaign blog and you'll see something remarkable for GOP candidates - comments. And not just a few comments, but hundreds and even thousands of comments.

Rudy's blog doesn't allow comments. Romney's gets a few per post. Ron Paul just recently launched a blog (despite the fact that blog software is largely free). He currently gets between a handful and a few dozen comments.

I don't think this indicates a lack of supporter enthusiasm as much as it indicates that the campaigns have created a blog with nothing to say on sites that are so scrubbed of interesting content they're alsmost sterile. Most of the posts are rehashed press releases, rehashed campaign e-mails, or occasionally a video so overscripted it becomes almost completely unwatchable.

Most campaigns think of comments as a way for people to respond to the post. Almost nobody on the GOP side sees this as a way for their supporters to network, to share ideas, or to brainstorm ways to help the campaign.

Most Republicans fear the rogue comment that will be used to tarnish their campaign. What they fail to realize is in a vibrant community that rogue comment is always surrounded by dozens of voices or more shouting them down. If anything, they typically dispel arguments that your base is crazy.

For the rabidly partisan Democrats reading this, please don't mischaracterize this post as "Republican Internet guru just discovers blogs and comments." That is not at all the point. The point is something much larger that I have been shouting at my party for several years now - they need to trust and engage the people. Since the people are online, they need to engage people online. There are just as many Democtrats who need to learn this lesson (cough, cough, Hillary, cough, cough).

They need to build online operations so they invite people to the discussion rather than turning them off of it. Get candidates to write, in their own words, frequent posts. Understand that a ground game is critical, but it must be viewed in terms of ROI. A thoughtful, honest post from a candidate may be discussed and passed around by thousands of people online. It takes little time to write if it's sincere and not obsessive studied and focus grouped.

If your candidate honestly doesn't have time to write, have staff carry a video camera and a MacBook to post from the road. Forgo the hair, the makeup, and the lighting. You're on a bus 50 miles from Waterloo. Nobody is going to believe that your makeup is perfect and so is the lighting. Be real. We don't expect perfection, but we do expect honesty.

My last piece of advice is this... In your interview process, ask your Communications Director to name his five favorite blogs. If they can't, ask them for a suggestion on how best to target communications to specific demographic segments using banner ads. If they can't answer either of those questions, don't hire them. They don't get what's going on in the world around them.

Fred08...and communication channels

If your candidate honestly doesn't have time to write, have staff carry a video camera and a MacBook to post from the road. Forgo the hair, the makeup, and the lighting. You're on a bus 50 miles from Waterloo. Nobody is going to believe that your makeup is perfect and so is the lighting. Be real. We don't expect perfection, but we do expect honesty.

Amazing article in the light of my own, completely ignored efforts, to get much of what you advocate incorporated into campaigns.

The simple video blogging technique above could be a huge asset.

I'm on the other side of the aisle but we share much of the same vision. I should bring up GIS multi-layered datamapping and datamining as new techniques that could be used in innovative ways to expand and assist funding a campaign.

Good to have you back in top form

I think that the most lasting legacy of the early Fred Thompson campaign was to broaden the horizon of what it means to be the "Internet candidate."

At the end of the day, it's NOT about embracing blogs, podcasts, video, Twitter, and user generated content. Done right, those are simply the tactics that flow from having a candidate who gets it at a basic, gut level.

The Internet candidate is the one who embodies the authenticity, accessibility, and responsiveness of the medium not just in what he or she does online, but in what he or she does offline.

Before he announced, Thompson effectively channeled the frustration many grassroots conservatives felt. He actually engaged people. His team seemed to understand that the strategic landscape had changed: that by getting the bloggers, you gained a powerful foothold among the media and opinion leaders that read the blogs, which then translates to better media coverage and poll numbers.

The Internet wasn't just a cool tool at the periphery of the campaign, but a central element of the campaign's strategy. From the top down, everyone seemed to get this -- not just the Internet team.

For reasons you can speak to better than I, the strategy flipped to a more conventional one in mid-campaign.

I don't know if any candidate will "win" because of the Internet this year. But it's pretty certain that those campaigns who either turned away from it or failed to embrace from the outset will be the first to lose.

This isn't about a direct cause and effect (e.g. candidate loses because they fail to harness the net). It's that campaign people who don't think aggressively and outside the box about online stuff won't think aggressively and outside the box about offline stuff either.

Outside the box

That's exactly right.

My wife once worked as the Finance Director for a campaign and the campaign manager sounded like Michelle from American Pie. "This one time, on Randy Tate's campaign..."

She held out that one campaign as the epitome of all campaigns and insisted on trying to relive it on every campaign thereafter. There was no out of the box thinking. There was only the attempt to relive some glory day like an aging high school athlete.

Those who don't evolve die off.

Role of the Web Strategist

Michael -

Great article - interesting thoughts. You talk a lot about the internal focus on the campaign website, etc. What about external focus, like making the candidate available for blogs, etc? Shouldn't that also be a focus of the campaign web strategist?

Also, you end your post with questions for the comunications director. Do you agree with the idea that the role of the campaign web strategist has grown to the point that it should not be buried within the comm shop, and that the right person should participate in senior leadership decision-making?

I go into this in more detail in my post. Thanks for sharing your thoughts!

More of my musings...

The Web Strategist

So the short answer, which I decided not to bury at the bottom of the long answer, is I agree. The Internet should not be buried in Comms. But I think due to the size, cost and complexity of large campaigns, it's likely the entire structure will be forced to change. Keep reading for further explanation, or avert your eyes now...

My belief is the "web strategist" will always exist in the same way the "media strategist" exists now, but either the role of the Communications Director or the campaign structure must change. (Keep in mind, I'm talking primarily about Presidential campaigns in this instance.)

I think campaigns need to look at themselves as corporations rather than political entities. The campaign manager for a modern Presidential campaign is essentially the CEO of a 300-500 million dollar corporation. They have to spend between 18 months and 30 months building a huge business in preparation for a massive fire sale. It's unlike any job in the world. Nobody else builds $300 million enterprise just to drive it out of business in one day.

So just as the modern CEO needs to be versed in investor relations, marketing, sales, brand development and advertisement, manufacturing, distribution and everything else, I think the modern Presidential campaign manager needs a comprehensive skill set. They need to understand microtargeting, voter ID tactics, fundraising tactics, and traditional advertising, but they increasingly need to understand web traffic drivers, banner advertising, blog outreach, etc. They can no longer afford to outsource the Internet to someone buried three levels deep in the organization.

I definitely believe you need to divorce Communications and the web entirely, but I'm no longer a big fan of making it a stand alone division. I think, instead, you need to view it in the business world context.

In the business world, the role of the Net has many masters. The IT department may be responsible for supporting the hardware and software necessary to run it, the marketing and sales departments are more likely responsible for building awareness of it, and running it, and the Communications shop (read that as traditional media and investor relations) has a channel on which to place their press releases, but those are not the major thrust.

Look at the websites for just about any consumer product in America and you probably won't find a press release on the front page of any of them - press releases are boring and nobody reads them. Instead, you'll see all of the marketing language and promotions they have developed.

Campaigns, however, see these as one and the same for some reason. They seem to think that the press release is the same as a marketing campaign despite the fact they are clearly aimed at two different audiences, namely the media versus the general public.

The web operation, political, and polling/strategy/advertising should be a seamless operation because together they form what is essentially your sales and marketing team. They are responsible for understanding the customer, developing the brand, marketing the candidate and ultimately closing the sale.

Just as I would never put the same team in charge of media/investor relations and sales/advertising (they're completely different skill sets), I think major campaigns do themselves a disservice by jamming communications with reporters and communications with the general public into one place.

With Fred's campaign, I specifically built the site with no vehicle for putting press releases on the home page. We had a blog feed and we had a feed of news articles from around the country but none of our "headlines" were deep-linked to stale press content. If the media wanted to find content, they had a nice big link in the nav that said "news room". Other than that, the front page content was for the voter, not the Washington Post.

(Of course, having said that, I may have contributed to them not liking us. They actually had to do some work when they came to our site.)

Why banner ads?

Interesting that the question to ask the Comm. Dir is on banner advertising. Why not search (Google/Yahoo) advertising? Is it your finding that banner ads are more effective and have better ROI than search ads?

Banner Ads

While I was trying to make a larger point about there being a largely untapped front on which you can engage (online communications and advertising), I'd actually still answer "yes".

Buying Fred's name or variations of it was effective, but issue terms (even immigration, on which Fred was very strong), other candidate names, generic party terms, etc., was useless. They generated a limited number of clicks, but no conversions - costing us money without bringing anything to the table.

Search ads are, in essence, that out of work friend that shows up at your house, drinks your beer, and never kicks in gas money or a six pack. If they were hysterically funny and also attracted hot women, you could forgive them.

In that way, if you're using them to drive traffic, great. If you're buying them to drive donations, sign ups, or other quantifiable outcomes, I found they were largely a waste.

Integrating the net

Political consulting can be an amazingly conservative business. In a winner-take-all environment, it's not surprising the campaign operatives are more comfortable using the tools and techniques that have worked for them in the past, rather than going through the extra work that would be involved in trying something new. As the blogmaster of John Kerry's 04 campaign, I found Mike Turk's reflections on his tenure with Fred Thompson's campaign raises issues which I encountered, and which have not gone away.

Senior campaign consultants just don't know what to do with a disruptive technology like the net. Is it IT? Is it communications? What about volunteer recruitment? And fundraising? Does anyone sitting at the campaign strategy table have enough understanding to at least ask the right questions of people who are not in the room?

The thing I liked the most about Mike's recommendations is his emphasis on building community. Of the various functions which campaign managers think about, building community is likely to be at the bottom of the list, if it's on the list at all. But the most powerful aspect of the Kerry experience for me was participating in the emergence of just such a community. And every single one of those people, in addition to the time they spent online, ended up working hard for their local Kerry operations.

Kicking and screaming, the campaign operatives of yore are slowly being dragged into the 21st century, but the process is not pretty if you're the staffer on the inside fighting upstream.

On the other hand, as Ron Paul's supporters have shown us, it's now possible for voters to use the net to do an end run around all of the bureaucratic obstacles that can greet efforts to innovate inside a campaign's leadership team.

Have a good rest Mike. You deserve it.



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