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September 20th, 2009 by Wadds

“Has-been” politicos lead way on Twitter

photo-11The UK political parties have a long way to go to incorporate social media into their communication planning according to Alastair Campbell.

“Myself and John Prescott are two of the most followed people on Twitter in UK politics. Yet we’re both bloody has-beens,” said Campbell.

Campbell (@campbellclaret) has 9,200 followers whereas Prescott (@JohnPrescott) has 6,700.

Campbell uses Twitter to promote his blog and said that it is an incredibly effective means of connecting with people. He claimed that politicians are trapped in old media and are yet to fully capitialise on the potential of social media.

“When I was working with Tony in the mid-90s if we led the BBC News and had a splash in The Sun and The Times we used to say that we’d dominated the agenda. It’s no longer true. It helps of course but there are lots of other channels to get your head round,” said Campbell.

“The parties haven’t cracked [social media] yet,” he said.

Campbell addressed an invited group of communication professionals at a dinner at The Capital Restaurant in London hosted by Durrants on Thursday evening. He is best known for his role as former British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s spokesman, press secretary and director of communications and strategy.

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September 20th, 2009 by Wadds

Command and control communication planning gives way to authentic campaigning, says Alastair Campbell

photo-7According to Alastair Campbell it is no longer possible to control a media agenda and the style of communication planning that characterised his tenure in Downing Street no longer works.

Campbell is best known for his role as former British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s spokesman, press secretary and director of communications and strategy.

“We are no longer in control. The challenge of communications in a modern organisation is a scary prospect,” he said.

Campbell addressed an invited group of communication professionals at a dinner at The Capital Restaurant in London hosted by Durrants on Thursday evening.

Campbell said that we had entered the era of the permanent campaigning citing five themes that demanded a fundament shift in communication style to what he called authentic campaigning.

  1. Citizens and consumers
    Private sector standards and efficiencies are expected of the public sector and public sector values are expected of the private sector. This shift has made it much harder to operate in both the private and public sector.
  2. Rise of the democratic corporation
    Stakeholders are no longer clearly defined. The Internet provides a window through which to scrutinise organisations minute-minute. This has completely changed corporate democracy.
  3. Participatory media environment
    Print can’t deal with 24 hour news culture and its web-based response is leading to financial ruin. Newspapers are still important and still set the agenda for broadcasters, but social media is cutting through particularly with big stories such as China and Iran.
  4. Culture of negativity
    Negativity drives the media. In 1974 for every one negative story there were three positive but by 2003 Campbell claimed the ratio had switch to 18 negative for every one positive. It’s a tough environment in which to operate.
  5. Information is infinity
    A strong clear message pushed to one or two sources is no longer good enough for successful communications. We operate in an era of infinite sources and infinite channels.

Campbell said that the role of a communication professional operating in this modern environment was tough. “You need a strategy to build a picture over time and messages must be seamless across all channels. It must all speak to the same message.”

“[Communication planning] is what most organisations get wrong. You must clearly define your objective, develop a strategy and only then develop tactical expressions. But your strategy must be fluid and adaptable to crisis situations,” said Campbell.

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