Business Today

Politicall­y Correct

Why political campaigns do better than brand campaigns on social media.

- By DEVIKA SINGH @dsingh_devika

Why political campaigns do better than brand campaigns on social media

Be it #Selfiewith­Modi or #MufflerMan, political campaigns on social media have always managed to stir up a storm. The latter started as a mudslingin­g campaign against Arvind Kejriwal, and was turned into a meme by Aam Aadmi Party’s social media team to announce his ‘return’ to end corruption. This was in November 2014, before the impending re-election next year, his abrupt exit as the Chief Minister of Delhi after a 49-day stint still afresh in people’s minds.

Twitter was abuzz with pictures of #MufflerMan dressed as Spider Man, Bat Man, and Super Man, with the trademark scarf and broom in tow. It became the top political hashtag on Twitter in 2014. AAP managed a sweeping victory. And social media, too, emerged as a winning platform for political campaigns. Much more than brands could hope for.

It helps that politics is the most talked about topic on social media. That BJP’S Facebook account has over 10 million followers, Congress’s over four million and

AAP’S nearly three million is proof. Hashtag wars between political parties set the trend on Twitter almost every day. WhatsApp, too, is flooded with political memes. However, brands, despite the investment­s they make, have not been able to harness the power of social media to a great extent. What gives?

According to experts, politics has an emotional connect with the audience, which a brand evidently lacks. “The brand is trying to sell you a product or a service, but a political campaign connects on an emotional level. So the kind of traction you get is always much more,” says Hareesh Tibrewala, Joint CEO of Mirum India.

A political campaign also has more hands on deck in the form of ‘volunteers’. Consider AAP’S three-tier social media team, for instance. Ankit Lal, the party’s IT head, who headed its social media team from 2013 to 2015, informs that a core team of 30 is responsibl­e for strategisi­ng. “The next layer, a team of 200 volunteers, supports the core team and executes the strategy, while the last layer of 5,000 volunteers ensures that the message is disseminat­ed far and wide.”

Brands, too, need to build such a cohort of advocates, says Tibrewala. “The power of social media is in identifyin­g people who really believe in the brand, create an army advocates, and keep engaging with them,” he adds.

Lal chides brands for “not having any vision at all”, and merely looking at short-term benefits. “Brands see people not as audience but as customers, and fail to humanise stories. Only when people are attached to a brand emotionall­y, will they talk about it as passionate­ly as they do about politics,” he says.

Another aspect that brands can learn from political campaigns is responding in real time – leveraging the moment and engaging with the audience. Topical, tactful advertisin­g can grab the audience’s attention far better than direct marketing methods. In fact, some of the most effective marketing campaigns on social media are either engagement-driven or revolve around a real-time event.

Ahmed Naqvi, CEO & Co-founder of digital marketing agency Gozoop, has been involved in the campaign for a major political party for the upcoming Uttar Pradesh elections. He says that there is a world of difference between a political campaign and a brand campaign. “Political campaigns are more action-packed. It changes with the pulse of the audience. So you have to craft the campaign on a very real-time basis.”

Naqvi believes that apart from being on their toes and focusing on the moment, marketers need to encourage user generated content, and have an opinion or a stand on matters, like political parties, to forge a connect with their audience on social media.

Perhaps, it’s time brands stopped playing it safe. ~

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