Social Media: A Day In The Life
During a recent election, I was fortunate to manage the social media for two candidates, and do outside consulting for a third. It was a great fit for me because with ten years of political experience, I knew the audience, the language and the candidates well enough to speak in their voices. Also, I'm funny, which, according to the latest OFA Social Media Summit, is a powerful part of an effective social media campaign.
I was busier than a one-legged man in a butt kicking contest, and I loved every second of it! I thought it would be neat to pull back the proverbial curtain and show you what goes into political social media. Here is what a typical Saturday looked like for me.
Saturday, August 2015
10:30am
Drive to Candidate 1 event
11:00am
Stay with Candidate 1 at event
Live-tweet, take pictures, post on Instagram and Facebook
Talk to other candidates, candidates' staff, share pictures, etc.
1:00pm
Part ways with Candidate 1
Gas station lunch!
Change out of Candidate 1 t-shirt and into Candidate 2 t-shirt
1:30pm
Drive to Candidate 2's house
2:00pm
Drive Candidate 2 to speaking event
2:15pm
Stay with Candidate 2 at event
Live-tweet, take pictures, post on Facebook
2:30pm
*Canvass district with Candidate 2
Live-tweet, take pictures, post on Facebook
Drive around to find campaign volunteers and take pictures of them canvassing
*canvass means walking the neighborhoods of the voting district, knocking on doors and talking to voters
5:00pm
Drive Candidate 2 to his house
Pet Candidate 2's dog
Drive home
Lament the absence of drive-thru daiquiri shops
5:30pm
Upload the day's pictures to Dropbox
Create photo collage, write 'daily wrap-up' and post on both candidates' Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages
6:00pm
Monitor and respond to activity on both candidates' Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages
6:30pm
Collapse on couch and refuse to do anything you told your husband you'd do that night. And... scene.
A lot goes into making a day like this work. The most important thing is finding out who decides the candidate's schedule and making that person like you and share information with you. The same goes for the handler. Higher level candidates have handlers - people who drive them to their events and stay with them. You need that handler to like you and communicate with you. Schedules change, people run late, and you need a dedicated person you can call and get an ETA.
You also need to be organized. I had three other clients in addition to these two candidates, so I had to work smart during the week to make sure I could dedicate all day Saturday to these campaigns.
Lastly, and most important, you need all the chargers. I have a car charger for myself and a fancy multi-plugin portable charger for my candidates' phones. Attending events and live-tweeting is great and obviously needed, but being able to charge your client's dead, five year old iPhone is what gets you a high-five at the end of the day.
P.S. I wrote a post on How To Get Involved In Local and State Politics.
P.P.S. How to work with me.