groundswell is the latest hot marketing book in the high-tech community (and I believe in a lot of the rest of the business community).
The book is Forrester Research's look at what Web 2.0 means for business. What's fascinating for everyone here is it's look at how people use Web 2.0 for their political information.
For those wondering what Web 2.0 is, the technical answer is social technologies like blogs (that's us!) social networks (like MySpace), YouTube, twitter, forums, wikis, etc.
But the best way to look at it is in terms of the relationship between companies, their customers, future customers, and others. What Web 2.0 does is turn it in to a 2-way conversation. This is radically new to business.
In the past a business owned a 1-way conversation about it's product. Marketing put together programs and those all went from company to the market. Even info from the customer was tightly controlled by the company - the company would select the questions for a survey.
So how does this impact politics? Well Forrester brings up the recent example of what happened on Obama's site after he reversed himself on FISA. The largest group now on MyBarackObama is the one opposed to that switch. He's learned the downside of that 2-way communication.
But it's more than 2-way communication, it's many-way communication. If it was just everyone able to talk back to the company or politician then it's not that big a change. But what we have now is N-way communication where everyone is communicating with everyone.
When done well, it is an incredibly powerful mechanism. And Obama has just scratched the surface with his effort, but it's still worlds beyond McCain. We'll see significant advances in this over the next 10 - 20 years every election.
Is this important? Yes. It's going to decide elections. And Democrats have an advantage here.
Ok, what are we looking at? This shows how active voters are in 6 categories of social activities on the web. If one of those bars was at 100% it would mean every voter in the country was involved in that activity.
The white bar is the average for adults in the U.S. for that activity across all interests from eBay to celebrity gossip to yes, politics.
Look first at the bottom "Inactives." The inverse of that number is the percentage of people using web 2.0 for politics. So 60% of Democrats and over 50% of Republican and independents fall into one or more of the 5 preceeding categories.
Note: Independents in the Forrester numbers are people who actually vote a split ticket, it is not based on registration. So independents here are the ones who decide the election in the close races.
Ok, so we Dems are more active. And you see this in all 5 basic activities where Democrats have an edge. This means more posts, more comments, and even more people lurking. Content is king in web 2.0. And viewing is a close second.
What is even more interesting however is that over 50% of independents are using web 2.0 for part or all of their political news. Keep in mind web 2.0 is not reading candidate websites, news media websites, etc. None of that (outside of forums, blogs, etc) falls in this category.
Over 50% of Independents are using blogs, YouTube, forums, etc. for their political information. 10% of them are pulling in RSS feeds (Collectors), etc to get a stream of info. This is why Allen's "Macaca moment" killed him - a tremendous number of voters are interacting with this stuff.
To shift to local news, what does this mean for this blog? Well, it's not great for interactivity (so come on people - comment!). But it is a good source of local politcal news so it provides well for Collectors and Spectators. And this shows in the site stats which are totally driven by the election calender.
So we're a small part of the web 2.0 political community here in Boulder. But we probably get a significant percentage of the 60% of local voters coming here occasionally. It doesn't mean what I write convinces them - but hey, at least they're reading it. I'm happy with that.
To everyone reading this - thank you. (And please leave a comment occasionally.)