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by James Forr
, Op-Ed Contributor,
December 13, 2024

In 2018, I went off to Washington to meet the
wonderful wizard of Democratic voter research. Any research agency that aspired to help the party needed this man’s approval and blessing.
Our work explores people’s
unconscious minds and reveals psychological insights that polls and focus groups cannot. Many corporate marketing departments embrace this type of research. Most Democrats recoil from it.
Five minutes into the meeting, it was clear it was going nowhere. My host crossed his arms, glowered and glared, and then interrupted to grandly proclaim: “We know everything
necessary to defeat Donald Trump for good.”
Ahem…
Democrats play the wrong game. They think elections are policy debates. In reality, they are marketing challenges. Therefore, campaigns should be led
by marketing people, not the usual Democratic cadre of activists, public policy PhDs, and career political operatives who think they know everything.
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For many on the
left, “marketing” is a synonym for “sleaze.” It’s their loss because marketing professionals could sharpen Democrats’ tactics in three critical ways.
Constant communication
Most marketing students have read about Johnson & Johnson’s masterful handling of the Tylenol cyanide scare in 1982. It
remains the exemplar of how to communicate in a crisis. The key: transparency, transparency, transparency.
Joe Biden did the opposite. He assumed office in a moment of national
crisis, but failed to set expectations, failed to inform the country about his administration’s progress, and failed to remind people of how the trouble started in the first place.
Ronald Reagan inherited a similar economic mess in 1981, but explained what was to come, never stopped crowing about what was going well, and never stopped flaying his Democratic predecessor
for all that was wrong.
Statistically, Biden’s economic record is not far removed from Reagan’s, but unlike Reagan, he gets no credit because as Republicans hammered their talking
points day after day, the president was invisible.
Meaningful messaging
In the heady first days of Kamala Harris’s campaign, she wrapped all her policy ideas in the language of “freedom,” which is the linchpin American value. It was a clear, emotionally relevant message.
But it didn’t
last. “Freedom” soon surrendered to “When we fight, we win” and “A new way forward.”
Losing Democratic candidates love “fighting”
metaphors -- Michael Dukakis in the tank, John Kerry reporting for duty, Hillary Clinton’s “Fight Song.”
A call to arms is a poor fit for the Democratic brand and a terrible
message for swing voters, who by definition, don’t have a side and therefore aren’t looking for anyone to fight against.
Notably, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton
seldom used fighting metaphors. Instead, they promoted hope and giving the everyday person a fair shake -- universal sentiments no American could argue with.
As for “A new way
forward,” many swing voters remember the Trump years as being just fine and see Biden as a disaster. They want to go back to what was, not forward with more of the same. Harris’s team
never acknowledged that.
On his Substack, influential Democratic strategist Simon Rosenberg argued that freedom, fighting, and going forward all mean the same thing. Incorrect.
Apple’s tagline was “Think Different,” not “Think Differently.” Trump never said “Make America Great,” he said “Make America Great Again.” Words
matter, and marketers are aware of how subtle language choices can have an outsized impact on messaging effectiveness.
Robust research
The
left’s research landscape is a wasteland of polls, which have limited value, and focus groups, which have almost none. They offer easy answers to shallow questions.
Some
poll or focus group surely suggested it would be clever for Harris to campaign with Liz Cheney. But at a given moment, up to 40% of Americans don’t even know who the vice president is. Why
would they care about the daughter of the guy who was vice president 16 years ago?
But that is what a campaign does when it only understands voters at a surface level. The same
with thinking Bad Bunny’s late endorsement would sway Latinos or that elderly
football stars could influence Black men in their 20s simply because young men like sports.
What was needed was an emotionally compelling message from Harris herself. But her
team didn’t know voters well enough to know what to say, how to say it, or perhaps even that it needed to be said.
Democrats look to research for answers. The best marketers
look to research for understanding -- specifically, about what makes people tick: their hopes and dreams, their beliefs and biases, and the stories they tell themselves about themselves.
Effective communication is born from those kinds of deep insights. Polls and focus groups don’t get you there. In-depth qualitative research rooted in psychology does.
A real “new way forward”
In the summer of 1984, the Reagan campaign hired two consumer researchers and a consumer psychologist to create a map that illustrated how key issues linked to voters’ emotions and values.
Led by Richard
Wirthlin, who had been named “Adman of the Year” by Advertising Age a few years earlier, the team used the map as a strategic playing field to bolster voters’ emotional
connection with Reagan and undermine their perceptions of Democrat Walter Mondale. Two epic political ads, “Morning in
America” and “Bear in the Woods” were a direct outcome of this research.
It is difficult to
imagine today’s Democrats handing marketing experts this much power. They would find it too weird and corporate. Yet it is exactly what they need to do.
Selling a candidate is
no different than selling socks, soap, or soda. Whether Democrats move right, left, up, down, or inside out makes no difference if they can’t market themselves in a way that attracts
voters’ attention, arouses their emotions, and makes them care.