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InternetNews March 16, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
The Wired War Room The wired war room is now a requirement in politics, and campaigns can't afford to be merely aware of the Internet anymore. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and his campaign found out why. |
PC Magazine April 4, 2007 Aaron Dalton |
The Digital Road to the White House Running a successful presidential campaign in 2008 means harnessing the power of Web 2.0 and avoiding a YouTube gaffe. |
InternetNews November 3, 2006 Nicholas Carlson |
Political Web 2.0 in 2006 This year, candidates found their way on to YouTube, Google, and Facebook. But has it changed the way politics work? |
HBS Working Knowledge January 28, 2015 Dina Gerdeman |
Ground Game, Air Wars, and Other Marketing Lessons From Presidential Elections In the last few presidential elections, personal selling -- not mass advertising -- has tipped the difference for Democrats. But that's not always the case. |
Information Today October 1, 2012 Paula J. Hane |
Pew Research Center Provides Research and Data on Campaign 2012 This year, the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press has a special website devoted to Campaign 2012. |
Information Today February 2008 Michael Baumann |
The Wired Bunch: Ranking the E-Candidates Ratings of the 13 remaining major party candidates on how well they're using the web to campaign and how each of them might affect the internet from the White House. |
InternetNews November 26, 2007 Kenneth Corbin |
ABC News Picks Facebook As Its Running Mate With its new partnership with ABC News, Facebook is going big time. |
InternetNews September 5, 2008 Kenneth Corbin |
Obama up in Web Spend; McCain Surges in Video New analysis profiles two candidates' online ad campaigns, finding Obama more invested in the Web, though McCain might be reaching the voters who count. |
InternetNews April 10, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Online Political Ads Play Catch-Up to Social Media Experts see paid political advertising on the Web as an important niche, but still not much more. |
BusinessWeek April 30, 2007 Javers & Dunham |
Candidates' Stupid Accounting Tricks Political campaigns, like corporations, sometimes play games with their financial reports. |
InternetNews April 11, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
Obama's Grassroots Sprout at Starbucks What does an online presidential campaign look like when supporters meet offline? |
InternetNews February 5, 2008 Kenneth Corbin |
Tracking The Virtual Primary Donkeys and elephants and laptops, oh my! The presidential election takes center stage on the Internet today. |
Search Engine Watch October 16, 2007 Greg Jarboe |
Search About to Upset the Political Applecart Search engines have not eclipsed newspapers and television as the primary source of political information yet. But that day is not far off. Here are some usage stats. |
Entrepreneur August 2007 Joshua Kurlantzick |
The Race Is On What might the presidential candidates do for you? The primaries are approaching and all the leading candidates will be attempting to woo small businesses, but with different approaches. |
Reason July 2008 David Weigel |
Permanent rEVOLution By the end of the 2008 elections, as many as 40 self-proclaimed Ron Paul Republicans will have run for national office. They want to carve out a permanent place in Republican politics, regardless of whether the party wants them to be there. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 17, 2008 John A. Quelch |
If Marketing Experts Ran Elections Concepts that politicians can learn from consumer marketing. |
Inc. January 2008 Clay Risen |
Political Animals This year, several campaigns are relying on entrepreneurs to play key roles, from campaign manager to battleground-state fundraiser. What do the entrepreneurs bring to these campaigns, and what do they get out of the brush with big-time politics? Here's a look at eight business owners in the arena. |
Fast Company December 1, 2007 Robert Scoble |
Stars, Stripes, and Social Media What you can learn from the presidential candidates and their Web strategies. |
BusinessWeek August 27, 2009 Jon Fine |
Harry and Louise on Steroids Why issue and advocacy advertising has become such a growth business |
Reason March 2008 David Weigel |
Whatever Happened to Tax Cuts? In the GOP, free markets are losing to Huckanomics. |
InternetNews April 19, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
On The SaaS Trail of CampaignForce Salesforce.com's CRM application is for the political candidate who has everything except access to campaign donor information. |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2011 |
The Permanent Campaign The product launch has been transformed from a concentrated, all-out military assault to the subtle, persuasive art of electioneering. |
Fast Company Mark Sullivan |
This New Site May Finally Make The Smartphone A Must-Have Tool For Voting Change Politics helps voters "engage directly with the candidates in the lead-up to the election, and shift influence in elections from parties and paid ads, to individuals' trusted personal networks," according to the group's blog. |
The Motley Fool January 17, 2008 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Ron Paul vs. PayPal PayPal freezes the online account of a pro-Ron Paul fund-raising group. |
BusinessWeek March 17, 2011 Jonathan D. Salant |
The Republican Money Primary Begins Republican Presidential hopefuls haven't declared their candidacies, but the competition for top fundraisers, known as bundlers, has begun. |
Reason February 2009 David Weigel |
Where Did It All Go Wrong? A thrilling and dispiriting year for libertarian politics |
Information Today December 3, 2007 Laura Gordon-Murnane |
Tech Tools for Voters Election 2008 has unleashed a whole new tool chest for the voting public to engage, discuss, and interact with presidential candidates and members of Congress |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
Rand Paul Got Stung By YouTube's Copyright Algorithm Not long after announcing his candidacy for 2016, the Republican senator was hit with a DMCA takedown notice. |
InternetNews March 16, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Google Gets Political The impact of the Internet on political campaigns has increased with each election cycle. Google plans to be a part of that leap and face all issues, good and bad, that might arise when you mix politics and Internet technologies. |
Reason May 2007 David Weigel |
More Money, No Problem The death of taxpayer-financed campaigns: Taking the money out of campaigns is supposed to clean up politics; the fact that 2008 might become the first $1 billon presidential campaign is considered a sign of a broken democracy. |
CIO June 1, 2004 Elana Varon |
IT on the Campaign Trail The 2004 presidential race may well hinge on which party most effectively exploits data mining tools to get out the vote. |
InternetNews November 2, 2004 Roy Mark |
Net Politics '04: Proving Pundits Wrong Americans go to the polls today as the Internet flexes its greatest influence yet over the public debate. |
PC Magazine November 19, 2007 |
Where Voters Are Clicking A good indicator of voter interest in the presidential candidates is the number of unique visitors the campaign sites receive. |
On Wall Street September 1, 2012 Elizabeth Wine |
Predicting the Presidential Election with the Rise in the S&P 500 With a few months to go in the presidential campaign, pundits are poring over every scrap of new economic data-notably, unemployment-for a clue as to whether President Barack Obama will be reelected. But the best predictor, many say, is the stock market. |
InternetNews September 26, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
Left, Right Link Up for Openness in Debates Liberal and conservative activist groups find common ground, requesting debate footage be made available online and letting people ask questions of the candidates. |
InternetNews January 17, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
Voter Visits to The Web Double The number of Americans using the Internet as their main source of political news doubled since the last mid-term election. But did the move online change the way politics work? |
Reason February 2008 Brian Doherty |
Scenes from the Ron Paul Revolution The rise of an eclectic anti-state movement. |
Search Engine Watch January 2, 2008 Herndon Hasty |
SEO for President The sites of major candidates and minor players on both sides of the aisle show glaring holes in search strategy. |
HBS Working Knowledge May 21, 2008 John Quelch |
Going Negative in Political Advertising Negative ads ask us to vote against someone rather than for someone, an approach that sometimes works in political advertising. |
Reason April 2008 David Weigel |
Evolution of a rEVOLution Now that chances of a Ron Paul nomination are over, what will become of his small army of libertarian activists? |
On Wall Street October 1, 2011 Kevin Wack |
Big Banks Shift Campaign Cash Away from Obama In 2012 So far in the 2012 race, the six largest U.S. banks have switched sides in a dramatic way since 2008, giving far more money to GOP hopeful Mitt Romney than they are to the sitting president. |
Reason November 2007 Jacob Sullum |
Spliff Split Candidates on marijuana: The U.S. House of Representatives once again rejected a measure aimed at stopping the DEA's interference with the therapeutic use of cannabis in the 12 states where it's legal. |
The Motley Fool April 25, 2007 Alyce Lomax |
MySpace's White House Bid The social-networking site takes on a political reality show. Whether wanna-be political candidates can establish the same "can't-miss-an-episode" fever that a program like American Idol enjoys should be quite an enlightening experiment. |
Search Engine Watch April 17, 2008 Liana Evans |
Barack Obama is Rocking the Youth Vote Search and online marketing are playing a significant role in energizing the youth vote. But the way each candidate is using social media is very different. |
IndustryWeek May 16, 2012 David Blanchard |
Tax Code Reform is a Lost Cause for 2012 Washington's policymakers will be focusing on re-election, not tax legislation, for the rest of the year. |
Salon.com June 5, 2000 Andy Sullivan |
Ralph "The Body" Nader? Jesse Ventura's ad man talks about how he would sell his next prospective client -- the Green Party presidential candidate. |
Reason May 2006 Kerry Howley |
Soundbite: In Defense of Attack Ads When he was editor in chief of Campaigns and Elections, David Mark watched vicious attack ads take down many aspiring pols. In this interview, Mark talks about how negativity is a distinctly positive feature of U.S. elections. |
Reason November 2006 David Mark |
Attack Ads Are Good for You! In praise of negative campaigning. |
InternetNews May 4, 2007 Roy Mark |
The YouTube Presidential Debates? Should networks own exclusive rights to debate video? A new online alliance says absolutely not. |
Search Engine Watch June 7, 2010 Bas van den Beld |
Search & Social Media in the Dutch Elections, Part 2: YouTube Holland's political candidates have embraced YouTube this election, but are they using it well to have real discussions with voters, or are they treating it like old media? |