
Branding the Candidate
Marketing Strategies to Win Your Vote
Praeger Publishers Inc
Published on 15. July 2011
Book
Hardback
228 pages
978-0-313-39404-1 (ISBN)
Description
American voters will be empowered by this revealing, behind-the-scene expose of the marketing strategies and tactics political candidates use to win their hearts, minds, donations, and votes.
Branding the Candidate: Marketing Strategies to Win Your Vote was written to empower voters to become sharper, more informed political consumers. It does that by taking a close look at political marketing strategies, especially those used by the Obama presidential campaign, which took marketing to a new level of sophistication.
Specifically, the book discusses the creation of the Obama brand; how the Obama campaign used database-driven, political microtargeting and high-tech digital media to reach various market segments; and the campaign's development and implementation of new political fundraising techniques. The book also discusses how a candidate who is created as a "brand" must cope with the challenges of "brand management" once in power. Finally, the authors counsel voters on how to arm themselves against the branding and marketing techniques that will be employed by candidates in the 2012 election, and they reflect on what the widespread extension of these techniques to the political process means for American democracy.
Branding the Candidate: Marketing Strategies to Win Your Vote was written to empower voters to become sharper, more informed political consumers. It does that by taking a close look at political marketing strategies, especially those used by the Obama presidential campaign, which took marketing to a new level of sophistication.
Specifically, the book discusses the creation of the Obama brand; how the Obama campaign used database-driven, political microtargeting and high-tech digital media to reach various market segments; and the campaign's development and implementation of new political fundraising techniques. The book also discusses how a candidate who is created as a "brand" must cope with the challenges of "brand management" once in power. Finally, the authors counsel voters on how to arm themselves against the branding and marketing techniques that will be employed by candidates in the 2012 election, and they reflect on what the widespread extension of these techniques to the political process means for American democracy.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
511 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-313-39404-1 (9780313394041)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
07/2011
1st Edition
Praeger Publishers Inc
€47.99
Available for download
Persons
Lisa Spiller, PhD, is professor of marketing at Christopher Newport University, Newport News, VA.
Jeff Bergner, PhD, has served as staff director of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and as assistant secretary of state.
Jeff Bergner, PhD, has served as staff director of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and as assistant secretary of state.
Author
Foreword
Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
Content
Series Foreword
Foreword by Don E. Schultz
Acknowledgments
Introduction: In the Beginning
1 Promises, Promises
2 It's All Brand "New"
3 The Candidate as Chameleon
4 Speak Softly and Carry a Multimedia Strategy
5 Show Me the Money
6 The Dog Catches the Ambulance: Governing
7 Crystal Ball Political Marketing
Epilogue: Looking Back?...?Looking Forward
Notes
Suggested Readings
Index
Foreword by Don E. Schultz
Acknowledgments
Introduction: In the Beginning
1 Promises, Promises
2 It's All Brand "New"
3 The Candidate as Chameleon
4 Speak Softly and Carry a Multimedia Strategy
5 Show Me the Money
6 The Dog Catches the Ambulance: Governing
7 Crystal Ball Political Marketing
Epilogue: Looking Back?...?Looking Forward
Notes
Suggested Readings
Index