The Second Cup: Sure To Make You Laugh

Posted by Meghann Olshefski
Fri, 2009-12-04 10:29

It's Friday, and we all need some humor.

Check out this hilarious web cartoon on How a Web Design Goes Straight to Hell.

Winning in 2010: Online Fundraising and Mobilization

What Dean and Kerry’s experience suggested in 2004, Barack Obama proved beyond a doubt in 2008: an army of motivated online donor/volunteers can be a truly decisive force in politics. And with the wide availability of software designed to allow campaigns to tap the enthusiasm (and the wallets) of supporters both within their districts and around the country (see Chapter Two), 2010 should see an explosion of online fundraising at the state and local levels.

Twitter Unveils a New Mobile Interface

For as long as we can remember Twitter has left application development to enterprising third-party developers. In recent months, however, the company has pushed out a number of additions to the platform, and today they’re unveiling a preview of the spiffy new mobile site that rivals Twitter.com in design and function.

You can try out the new mobile version of Twitter, which works best on Webkit browsers, by visiting http://mobile.twitter.com/ on your mobile device. Since it’s a preview, the new mobile interface will not replace the m.twitter.com experience for the time being, but you can look for that switch to happen in the coming months.

 

The Second Stage Of A Campaign Blog Strategy

Posted by James Durbin
Mon, 2007-06-11 11:48

The first kind of Campaign Blog was the Candidate Issue blog. The purpose is to clearly communicate the ideas and the personality of your candidate.

The second kind of campaign challenger blog is the incumbent blog. Using a series of Google and Technorati alerts, as well as search engines like BlogPulse, the campaign searches for information the candidate delivers.

You want photos, video, and text of the incumbent speaking. You want votes the incumbent makes. You want articles they write. The goal is not to be negative, but to provide a reservoir of information for people to make their own decisions about the incumbent.

Why would you spotlight another candidate? Two reasons. First - if you create the best reservoi of information online, you will capture the eyeballs of reporters, political bloggers, and curious citizens who want to know more about your race. Using ads, and later on, contrasting your candidate blog with the incumbent blog, you can show why your candidate deserves to unseat the incumbent. You also create a reserve of stored images and video that can be used for online campaign ads. Many people speak out of both sides of their mouth, or attempt to placate audiences. When they do, you will have a place that you can go to to compare and contrast the incumbent's own words. There's no telling what will work, but by storing the information, you'll have easy access to it.

If your opponent stumbles, you'll be there to chronicle it.

Now be aware, this is not a negative blog. The writer will not be trying to catch the incumbent, or change the photos, or argue against what is said in the text. This is a storehouse of information that you can use elsewhere.

And if you start it early enough - you'll own a significant chunk of the incumbent's online profile. It is very important that you have a high PageRank site with multiple incoming links. Owning someone's else's image online is a powerful tool you'll be able to use later in the campaign.