
The 2008 American presidential election was the first real social media election. This was because:
- Websites were conceived and designed to foster community interaction
- Social media channels were intensively used to reach voters and mobilise them
- These channels were watched/used by a large user base
- Professionals of the social media industry were deeply involved in the campaign
After the election of Barack Obama, everyone in the UK thought social media would have the same impact in the UK in 2010. And everyone, me included, has been wrong.
We have not seen any strong social media initiatives coming from any of the candidates so far, whereas and we are less than a month away from the election. The stats of both parties on social media are incredibly low: less than 40,000 fans on the Facebook fan page of the Conservatives, less than 18,000 for the Labour party. For a country in which more than 24 million people are on Facebook, this is nothing.
Two main things have prevented the rise of social media in this election:
- The political parties are using social media as other brands do in traditional media: to bombard users with messages. Sorry guys, but social media doesn’t work like that.
- Social media works extremely well when it is connected to strong emotions (love, passion, etc). It worked for Barack Obama because he positioned himself as the candidate of change. People wanted this, and he looked, tasted and smelt just like change.
Unfortunately the two main candidates are miles away from representing change: Gordon Brown has been so close to the power for so long that the youngest voters were five years old when he became chancellor. David Cameron has been leader of the Tories for five years. It is hard for both of them to appear as a fresh new candidate, which might explain why the average UK citizen is so disillusioned by this election.
I look forward to watching the debate on Thursday evening as I have always been impressed by how tough British politics can be, and my guess is that the debate will be no exception. But this time, I secretly hope it will warm up this campaign and that new social media strategies which could raise user’s interest will be launched soon.


You think Facebook users just want information from brands on Facebook? Well, think again!
As a Frenchman and cheese evangelizer (why not, some people call themselves social media gu
