McCainSpace: Too Little Too Late August 28, 2008

Posted by Todd Zeigler in Politics, Web 2.0

mccainspace2

A few days ago the John McCain campaign launched a new version of their social networking tool, McCainSpace.  Having written about McCainSpace critically before, I figured I’d share some quick thoughts on the tool:

(1) The new version is built using a white label social networking product called KickApps, and features your typical suite of socnet tools: user generated blogs, videos and photos, groups, user profiles, friends, etc.  Kickapps is a nice tool and McCainSpace is professionally done.  However, this is clearly an out of the box solution with generic tools that could be used to power a community of dog lovers or wine aficionados, for example.  There is really nothing about this social network that has anything to do with taking action and winning elections.

The secret of the success of Barack Obama’s social network is that at its heart it is really a social action center.  When you login to My.BarackObama, you are pushed to make phone calls to undecided voters, knock on doors and raise money for the campaign, not to produce content.  Sure, that functionality exists on the Barack Obama website but it isn’t the main point.  The main point of My.BarackObama is to help Obama get elected.  The same cannot be said for the much more nebulous McCainSpace.

Check out these screengrabs of the Obama and McCain tools to see the difference in emphasis.

(2) Even if you disagree with me and like the actual tool set of McCainSpace, I think it is too late in the game to be launching something like this.  Mike Turk summed it up pretty well during a conversation we had with Wesley Donehue on Twitter about the tool:

“Why, oh why? What possessed them to launch a new SocNet with 70 days left? No time to market and they should be beyond that stage.”

Exactly.  Communities take time to build.  This same exact tool launched a year ago might have made a real impact.  This late in the game it seems like too little too late to me.

(3) The McCain campaign’s commitment to their new toy seems pretty weak.  I found out about the new site via an email from the campaign.  However, when I go to the main website and click on the links to  McCainSpace, I’m taken to the old, extremely limited version of the tool people like William Beutler and Mike Turk have been rightly criticizing for the last year.    So there appear to be two versions of McCainSpace running concurrently.I can’t even find a link to the new McCainSpace on www.johmccain.com and there doesn’t appear to be any real integration between the new tool and the campaign website.  Given this, I think the new McCainSpace may  just be a case of the campaign throwing spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks, as opposed to a well thought out initiative like My.BarackObama.

What do you think?

Update: Since I wrote my post, the McCain team has updated their site to integrate McCainSpace in a much more cohesive manner.

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  1. Vote -1 Vote +1e.politics: online advocacy tools & tactics » Quick Hits — September 2, 2008 - September 2nd, 2008 at 12:10 pm

Comments

  1. Vote -1 Vote +1Colin Delany - August 28th, 2008 at 9:46 am

    Todd–

    I agree with you completely on the timing question, since the time to launch something like this is long before an election. We’re already getting close to the harvest, and they’re just planting the crops? Wouldn’t there be better things to invest in this late in the game?

  2. Vote -1 Vote +1Michael Chin - August 28th, 2008 at 10:14 am

    Hi Todd — Let me start by saying that I work at KickApps and because of that, it doesn’t make sense for me to go point-by-point on this right now(whether I agree or disagree). However, I do think you’ve raised some interesting points here.

    The thing for me isn’t about whether it’s too late or too little. Afterall, when is it ever too late for a conversation? The point for me is that these two social networks could well be the most important uses of social media that we’ve seen to date. It’s important for this country’s voters and for the social media industry.

    Politicians have given online communities, conversations and the ‘multilogue’ a seat at the table with TV, radio and print. Tell me that’s not a milestone. The masters of message control and media management, on both sides, have realized they need to facilitate real conversations. And not just in limited ways on MySpace or Facebook.

    Anyway, political leanings aside, I realized this week that our industry is growing up. We’re not just about hooking up, poking each other or tagging pics of our pet dogs anymore. :-)

  3. Vote -1 Vote +1Wesley Donehue - August 28th, 2008 at 10:37 am

    Michael – what is the purpose of social media in politics if the end result isn’t votes?

    I understand the importance of messaging and the new site does a great job of getting that job done. I commend the entire McCain team on the revamped communications tools.

    However, there are no tools for voter contact to match Obama’s door-to-door and phone activities.

    I’d give the new site an A for New Media, but an F for Netroots.

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The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research, analysis and conversation on web-based communications and its increasingly powerful role in the economy, politics and society. TBR content is created, posted and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.



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