Advertising and public relations serve to communicate ideas and convince the audience of something. Politicians are among the most prolific advertising spenders during election campaigns and can have enormous public relations machines. This is especially true of Presidential candidates, who must first run for their party's nomination and then must run for President. We know that Hillary Clinton went from frontrunner to loser in the race for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 2008. There are lessons to be learned about the different factors that contribute to selling an idea, in this case Clinton as President, to different audiences. This case study will evaluate Clinton's campaign leading up to the Democratic primary using the ROSTE model. The ROSTE model focuses on research, objectives, strategies, tactics and evaluation.
Resources
The Hillary Clinton campaign at the time of the case was a large organization. It featured both extensive advertising and public relations, backed by substantial funding that was more than her competitors had access to. There were two target audiences during this part of the campaign. The first was the voters in the Democratic primary, as this represents the first step towards becoming President. The author (Stetz) does not appear to have made the distinction between the two audiences, but Clinton would fail at the first stage, so any effort to cultivate the broader audience of American voters was ultimately wasted effort. Her spending, advertising and public relations in 2007 was aimed at primary voters initially, because they are a distinct audience from general election voters (Murray, 2008).
Many different techniques are used to help understand the target market during such campaigns. Extensive polling is done to attempt to understand the approximate rates of popularity among candidates. Focus groups and interviews are conducted to gather qualitative data about the opinions voters have about the candidates, with the objective of identifying patterns in the data that can be helped to shape the message and the way that the candidate is presented to the audience. Social media can also provide information about the people supporting each candidate, so that the candidate is better aware of the strengths and weaknesses of his/her audience. Thus, extensive use of both qualitative and quantitative research is used, both from primary and from secondary sources.
The research appears to be valid and reliable. The more organized forms of research such as focus groups and polling would have been very reliable. Gawiser and Witt (2012) outline the criteria for what is considered a reliable poll, and in general most in-house polling done by political parties meets these criteria. The information used in the Clinton campaign would have come mainly from in-house sources, though there were many public polls run by media organizations that would have also provided data. The Clinton campaign would have been aware of these polls, but might not have had full access to the inputs of these polls. The polling done in-house would have been suited to the task, because it would have accurately gauged target audience reaction to the marketing campaign in which Clinton was engaged, in particular responses to her policy ideas and with respect to her personal popularity.
Objectives
To secure the Democratic Presidential Nomination
To project Clinton favorably as a Presidential candidate
To establish Clinton's policy credentials for the job of President
To establish Clinton's personal credibility and popularity
To differentiate Clinton from the other leading candidates (Obama, Edwards)
These objectives are essentially the same as the other candidates would have had. Clinton had an experienced team on hand, but the weakness of having this set of objectives is that it lacks a coherent underlying message. Clinton needed a stronger framing of her own personal contributions to the role of President, rather...
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