July 17th, 2009 by Wadds

Red Narrative’s Luke Bozier on the Labour party, the Afghan election, LabourList and the next UK General Election

I caught up with Luke Bozier this week. He’s the managing director of Red Narrative, the agency that is advising Dr Ashraf Ghani, a leading contender to replace President Karzai in August’s presidential election in Afghanistan, on social media strategy.

It’s a long post. But I make no apologies. Bozier’s frontline views on the Labour party, the Afghan election, LabourList and the forthcoming UK General Election are well worth reading.

Thanks to Mark Hanson for the introduction.

Q. The Red Narrative brand implies a left of centre leaning. What’s your background?

I’ve been a Labour member for just under three years. I previously worked at Labour HQ, advising Tony Blair and the wider party on strategic online communication, and since then for other centre-left politicians here and abroad.

I believe in the [Labour] party’s values, of society looking after everybody, and I want my work to help socially-minded politicians around the world to be able to communicate effectively.

Q. There are two prongs to your strategy for Dr Ashraf Ghani: raising awareness and raising funds? Can you describe how it will be delivered?

A. Raising awareness by running the best website of the whole election. Our content is updated daily, is available in English and the two local Afghan languages. We issue regular press releases via an email group of journalists. We also have a large list of email subscribers, mainly Afghans from around the world and in the country. On top of this, we send regular messages to our Facebook groups, and use Twitter to spread the word.

Donations are solicited through the website, and have so far been very successful (in the tens of thousands of US dollars). Anyone with a credit or debit card can log on to the site and make a donation in just a few minutes.

Q. How will you measure success of your campaign for Dr Ashraf Ghani beyond a successful election win?

A. I hope Dr Ashraf Ghani will win the election and if so the group of supporters we have created online can then be channelled into raising awareness of issues inside Afghanistan, and encouraged to take action themselves. Often when people leave their home country it’s hard to stay connected to the national political scene – we hope that through the Internet, and with this campaign, we have inspired the younger Afghans abroad to take an interest in the politics of their country at this turning point in their history.

Equally, whoever is running Afghanistan after August, they need to be kept honest; the Internet is perfect for this. I hope that the people that have been inspired by the Dr Ashraf Ghani campaign feel that they can organise online to promote political developments in the country and ensure that the government is as transparent and efficient as possible.

Q. How does Red Narrative win clients and can tell us about a campaign that you are proud of?

A. I personally meet a lot of politicians and people working for politicians and people running for office. With the success of the Obama campaign last year, the vast majority of people either seeking or already in public office now recognise that the Internet and new media are crucial parts of any communication or campaign strategy, so to some extent my work is already done.

Red Narrative is also pro-active in lobbying certain politicians or groups of politicians to consider carrying out specific projects which are of benefit to them, and then we work with them if they are interested.

A campaign I’m proud of – tough question. I’ve worked on so many interesting projects, from the first online consultation, to web-based inter-cultural dialogue programmes, to putting Tony Blair on YouTube and now helping Afghanistan to run modern campaigns in the post-Taliban era. I’ve also done a lot of domestic work with little-known politicians who are working hard for the people in their constituencies.

I wouldn’t want to single out one campaign, but the Dr Ashraf Ghani for President campaign is certainly the most though-provoking, and the one which could have the largest potential impact on a nation and society.

Q. What’s your view of  the LabourList project?

A. Initially I was sceptical, and Derek Draper is a divisive figure. But before he left, and to his credit, he succeeded in getting the whole Labour community to recognise it as a viable outlet and place for internal dialogue. Politicians and activists from across the board have written on a plethora of subjects there, and it’s something to applaud. Alex Smith is doing a great job in keeping it going, and there are some interesting developments since he took over, such as the partnership with the Huffington Post.

However, LabourList’s big drawback is that it is just an internal talking post. I know Derek initially saw it as something wider, something that would engage “millions” of non-political British folk. I don’t think it’s the platform for that, and it’s sad that Labour as the governing party hasn’t yet come up with that kind of national political forum. But as a Labour platform, I think it’s great.

Q. What impact do you expect social media to have on the 2010 UK election?

A. I’m sure there will be a tangible impact, but not as profound as I would like. Unfortunately the political system in Great Britain is not one which will facilitate a ground-breaking, election-winning online/social media campaign such as the Obama campaign. Our system doesn’t allow insurgent candidates to come out of nowhere and take the stage, which means that the Internet’s ability to rally hundreds of thousands of people around an “underdog” candidate are redundant here. That’s not to say that parties shouldn’t take it seriously, and I hope Labour puts social media and e-campaigning more central to its strategy and structure as an organisation.

I think the space where the biggest potential for social media to impact the election is on its coverage and analysis. The blogosphere (and Twittersphere) will be alive from the second Gordon calls the election (in fact, I would like to see him announce it in an innovative way – maybe he could send a Twitter message to the Queen: “@QEII Your Majesty, I am now advising you to dissolve Parliament and call a general election. Cheers, your Prime Minister #ge2010″ – only 120 chars!).

There’s still a good chance that Parliament will be hung, which will provide fodder to the bloggers and Twits to create online drama. I’m sure we will see Tweets and blogs coming from result announcements all across the country, some of which will be dramatic, in the same way as the Michael Portillo 1997 loss was dramatic; this time they will be captured and uploaded to YouTube and Twitter.

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June 16th, 2009 by Wadds

Digital Britain: bolder approach required

Commentators have been quick to dismiss today’s Broadband Britain white paper, but there’s a lot to like such as commitments on anti-piracy, video game classification and clear dates for analogue radio switch off.

But these are all ancillary to the main issue of the delivery of universal broadband. And to be fair this is where most people have been directing their fury.

The white paper proposes that all households will have access to a basic 2Mbps level of broadband by 2012 by reassigning a £200 million digital TV switchover war chest for network investment.

To upgrade networks beyond 2Mbps Broadband Britain proposes a £6 a month tax on fixed phone lines. The phone line levy will raise an estimated £150 million per annum. It’s a fraction of the cost required to build a UK-wide fibre to the home network that would deliver so called Next Generation Network (NGN) capability.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said that the report would pave the way to making Britain’s digital infrastructure world class. I don’t think it is – in Japan and South Korea households already have access to 100Mbps broadband.

A much bolder approach is required.


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May 12th, 2009 by Wadds

Telegraph shows content is king

Good content will always attract eyeballs whether online or offline which is why there will always be a role in the media for people that have the ability to generate editorial content.

In the wake of the MP’s expense debacle, daily sales of The Telegraph have risen by a reported 90,000 from April’s average readership of 810,000 per day and the paper has seen its brand pushed far and wide across the media as journalists second source the story.

The challenge for The Telegraph is that this level of interest could only ever be sustained by an ongoing stream of similarly high profile content.

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May 9th, 2009 by Wadds

Saving for a rainy day: FTSE Confidence Project shows 10% profit in four months

I started the £1k FTSE 100 Confidence Project in January as a personal show of confidence in the UK equity market. I was fed up with the doom and gloom and was convinced that the equity market had priced in bad news. I invested £1,000 in a FTSE 100 ISA tracker from the Halifax and commited to reporting its performance on my blog.

The market fell further to a low of 3,800 but has since climbed to 4,400 (FTSE 100 close 4,462 – 8 May). My £1,000 investment has grown to almost £1,105. Ten per cent growth is a cracking return in less than four months. I’m going to pull out the profit and save it for a rainy day. It could be a false dawn after all.

We’re seeing all the signs of a long, snakey and W-shaped recession. Bad news continues to arrive daily. UK manufacturing was hit further yesterday with news that Corus is likely to close its Teesside steelmaking plant with the loss of 2,000 jobs.

The recession was driven by a collapse in the credit markets. But there can be no doubt that the economy is recalibrating. A key report from the US Treasury this week showed that the US banking sector was slowly getting back on its feet and the Bank of England’s quantitative easing strategy appears to be having the desired impact in the UK.

Chancellor Alistair Darling’s strategy of increasing public spending to bolster the economy is a blunt instrument but its working. He’s unlikely to get any thanks of course because at some point spending will have to be cut back dramatically or taxes increased.

Increased public spending has to be funded through debt because we didn’t build up reserves during the years of growth. Prime Minister Gordon Brown wasn’t as prudent as he likes to claim. We didn’t put anything away for a rainy day.

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