Political advertising needs to take a page from the evolving world of consumer advertising: Find personal ways to reach voters that are relevant to their lives. That was the consensus of a panel of
senior ad executives, campaign strategists and Internet marketers yesterday in a program hosted by New York's Advertising Club.
Moderated through wisecracks and unconventional
wisdom by online diva Arianna Huffington of The Huffington Post, the panel--titled "Politically Correct: Getting It Right On The Campaign Trail"--was a fair and balanced mix of experts from the
left and right, including former BBDO chairman Phil Dusenberry; The Kaplan Thaler Group's CEO Linda Kaplan Thaler; vice president of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, Michael Turk;
John Hlinko, vice president of marketing and creative engagement at Grassroots Enterprise; and consultant Bernard Whitman, president, Whitman Insight Strategies.
Unlike those who run political
parties, the five panelists agreed far more than they disagreed. All despaired over the poor quality of political advertising, the power of fear to win votes, the difficulty of building a candidate's
brand in a short time, and the lowest-common-denominator banality of negative ads.
advertisement
advertisement
"Political advertising is run by political hacks," Dusenberry said, who disparaged New Jersey Senate candidate
Tom Keane, Jr.'s campaign. "They dictate the advertising. And that's why the advertising sucks."
Thaler noted a glaring irony: Politicians can claim anything they want about an opponent--and no
one raises an eyebrow. But "if I were to make a claim against Wonder Bread, I could go to jail."
A majority of the session was devoted to complaints about how marketing is demeaning democracy, but
it also offered suggestions about how to change the pattern.
Whitman said, "We in the political class assume we can put out a message, and voters will come to us. Actually, we need to figure out
how to plug into their lives."
Turk, who had the most experience and success in new media political marketing as eCampaign director for Bush-Cheney 2004, gave concrete examples of how "technology
can now move campaigns." He pointed to the GOP's success with micro-targeting voters, based on the brand of liquor they drink, the car they drive, or the cable channel they watch.
Hlinko agreed
with the expanding power of online political marketing, but downplayed the value of social-networking sites. All agreed that more time, money and attention should be spent on new media at the expense
of the old.
"Online versus traditional advertising--stop wasting time on this debate because both are going to survive," Huffington said. "It's like that old argument of Ginger versus Mary Anne.
I say, let's have a three-way."