Monday, June 06, 2005

Targeting vs Spamming

I had to read an article for another class by Jacob Weisberg titled 'A Banner Year' (http://slate.msn.com/id/68180/)but ironically the information in the article was beneficial for today's posting. The article spoke of the Internet impact on the 2000 Presidential Election. The argument posed by the article is that are we going to far in using the Internet to get political viewpoints across. The argument is that just because a voter selects to get information from a political candidate doesn't mean they want to be bombarded by unsolicited emails from other sources that the campaigns might give way too.

Campaigns argue this improves on the technique of targeting and its allows for a message to be so precise to their audience that it is the most effective way of engaging the voter. Others are stating that this method is a form of permission-based marketing and that these people want to be solicited.

But others argue that this is a privacy issue and that in the future this could lead to infraction upon a subscribers right i.e. the possibility of spamming. Thus far nothing like this has happened but the argument that I read was based on a lot of what ifs and this could happen even though it hasn't happened yet.

Communications

Over this past weekend while hanging out with various classmates I was simply baffled on how at midnight on a Saturday night he was having a blackberry conversation with his boss. I'm like you have got to be kidding. He's like no it seems that now I never ever stop working. For my friend this is a bad thing, but for political campaigns this is a great thing. That means that there is little turnaround time. So a Congressional member or Candidate can make their views known or even respond to a comment within minutes of breaking news. There is also no way that this trend is going to slow down in fact it seems to becoming common place. So politically the best job for all us who are job hunting seems to be communications. It seems to be the most valued skill that employers are looking for, at least political employers that is. The use of the Internet is only going to enhance this capability by centralizing a communication center or port for campaigns or congressional members by deeming their websites as their main point of communications.