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Social Media, Politics and Elections DR STEPHEN DANN @ STEPHENDANN | [email protected]

Social media, politics and elections

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Social Media, Politics and ElectionsDR STEPHEN DANN

@STEPHENDANN | [email protected]

SummaryOnline political engagement has been a mixed bag for Australian politics. Whilst individuals take to Twitter to ask questions of their local members, politicians seem to be less enthused about direct access democracy.

Discussion of how Twitter can be used for politics, both from the elected and the electorate, and the nature of conversation online will be covered in this presentation.

This is aimed at helping teachers identify how they can discuss the moral issues and unanticipated consequences of opening yourself to direct engagement on social media in their classroom when considering political interaction and the direction our society is taking.

2. Know the content and how to teach it

2.1 Content and teaching strategies of the teaching area

2.2 Content selection and organisation

2.6 Information and Communication Technology (ICT)

Index

BackgroundOUTLINE THE VALUE

The presentation will take participants through the role social media has played in the political arena.

It focuses on recent Australian elections and engagement through the social media platforms.

This presentation will be focused on engaging teachers of politics, ICT, and legal studies. However, it will have relevance for all teachers. It will help participants gain an understanding of how Social Media have come to influence social agendas and political movements.

Understanding of this will help teachers engage in the social media sphere and use it in their teaching.

RELEVANT RESEARCH

The presentation is based on existing published research by the presenter on political marketing, social media analysis, and incorporates work currently being undertaken examining the use of Twitter in the QLD state election.

◦ Dann, Stephen. "Twitter content classification." First Monday 15.12 (2010).

◦ Hughes, Andrew, and Stephen Dann. "Political marketing and stakeholder engagement." Marketing Theory 9.2 (2009): 243-256.

◦ Dann, Stephen, and Andrew Hughes. "Australian Political Marketing after Kevin07: Lessons from the 2007 federal election." Monash Business Review4.1 (2008): 34-37.

Index

House Rules@stephendann for questions

Livetweeting is fine:

Conference Hashtag - #colconf10

Index

Play by PlaySocial Media Landscape

Twitter

Political Marketing

Politics and Political Twitter

The Takeaway

Index

Social Media LandscapeSOCI A L M EDI A LA N DSCAPE | T WI T T ER | POL I T ICAL M A R K ET I N G

|POL I T ICS A ND POL I T ICAL T WI T T ER | T HE TA K EAWAY

Index

If this then that (ifttt.com/channels)FOR A MORE REASONABLE VIEW OF WHAT ’S OUT THERE

Index

Top social media platforms in AustraliaJune 2014:

◦ Facebook – 13,200,000 users.

◦ YouTube – 12,750,000 UAVs.

◦ Tumblr – 4,900,000.

◦ LinkedIn – 3,700,000.

◦ Twitter - 2,500,000 active Australian users.

◦ Instagram - 1,600,000 active Australian users.

◦ Snapchat - 1,070,000 active Australian users.◦ Source: http://www.marketingmag.com.au/news/most-popular-social-media-platforms-in-australia-june-2014-54544/

Index

TwitterTwitter is an online social networking and microblogging service that enables users to send and read short 140-character text messages, called "tweets."

Index

The nature of the tweet140 characters

◦ One off individual messages

◦ Sequential stories

◦ Dialogue / Monologue / Improv Theatre

◦ Comedy with metaphysical undertones

◦ Photos

◦ Videos

◦ Links to the outside internet

Index

TwitterWHAT TO SAY WHEN YOU’VE ACTUALLY GOT A LOT OF REALLY VALID THINGS TO SAY…

Index

Social Media Landscape | Twitter | Political Marketing|Politics and Political Twitter | The Takeaway

The following section is based onDann, S (2010) Twitter Content Classification

Dann S. (2015) Benchmarking microblog performance: Twitter Content Classification Framework in Burkhalter, Janée N. and Natalie T. Wood (Eds.). Maximizing commerce and marketing strategies through micro blogging. Hershey, PA: IGI Global. In press.

Dann S. (2015) Twitter Data Acquisition and Analysis in Burkhalter, Janée N. and Natalie T. Wood (Eds.). Maximizing commerce and marketing strategies through micro blogging. Hershey, PA: IGI Global. In press.

Hemsley, B., Dann, S., Palmer, S., Allan, M., & Balandin, S. (2015, submitted). "“We definitely need an audience”: Experiences of Twitter, Twitter Networks, and tweet content in adults with severe communication disabilities who use augmentative and alternative communication (AAC). Invited manuscript, Disability & Rehabilitation Special Issue ‘Social Media and Communication Disability

Index

The content styles

Conversation

•Talk to other users

News

•And now the weather

Pass Along

•Here’s one we prepared elsewhere

Social Presence

• I am here

Broadcast

•There are many opinions and experiences but this one is mine

Index

ConversationalWhat?

◦ Using the @ symbol to address another

Why?◦ Recognise and engage with the people who are talking to you

Nearest Metaphor◦ Conversations, Q&A

Then what?◦ conversations can create connections (or disconnections)

Also…◦ Not all @messages need to be dignified with a response

Index

ConversationalIdentified by a @statement to address another user

Response◦ Any tweets which commence or finish with another user’s name and which

do not meet the requirements of the referral category

Referral◦ @responses containing URLs or recommendation of other Twitter users.

(Excludes RT @user)

Rhetorical Presence◦ Activities involving other Twitter users, or tweets that describe the presence

of other Twitter users.

Index

NewsWhat?

◦ Journalism by the people, for that person’s followers

Why?◦ We all have stories to tell

Nearest Metaphor◦ The Channel Nine Commentary box meets Statler and Waldorf

Then what?◦ Eyewitness coverage leads to conversations and kudos

Also…◦ If you’ve posted about the conference on #colconf10, you’re soaking in it.

Index

NewsIdentifiable newsworthy content

Journalism◦ Coverage of live events including factual, descriptive recounts or opinion and social commentary

Real-Time Event◦ Live discussion of an identifiable event such as a conference, live television or live event collected with or

without a consistent #hashtag.

Press Release◦ Identifiable announcement of a forthcoming event without URLs to an external source such as timetable

announcements, schedules and session start times

Sport◦ Identifiable results of sporting events or discussions of sporting performances

Transport◦ Traffic, transport, flight, road or rail related announcements including accidents and delays

Weather◦ Report of prevailing weather conditions inclusive of extreme weather events and natural disasters

Index

Pass AlongWhat?

◦ Retweets from within twitter, and links from outside

Why?◦ Sharing is caring

Nearest Metaphor◦ “Did you see this article in the newspaper?”

◦ So anyway, they said “…”

Then what?◦ We assume that you want everyone else following you to know about this

idea / piece of media / tweet

Also…◦ “Retweet is not endorsement” still shares that content

Index

Pass alongTweets as curation of content

Annotated Media◦ Tweets that are captions for media hosted on Twitter

Curation ◦ Posting of third party content for followers via the Twitter URL (t.co) or other

URL.

Offline source ◦ Tweet that contains a reference in APA, Oxford or Harvard format, or a statement

in inverted commas to denote a quotation from a third party, speaker or source material

Retweets ◦ Partial or full reproduction of another tweet marked with “RT”, “retweet”, “MT”

or “modified tweet”

Index

Social PresenceWhat?

◦ Just letting people know you still have the account

Why?◦ Human bonding.

Nearest Metaphor◦ That wave you give a colleague to acknowledge you’re both in the same

corridor

Then what?◦ Anything you feel like, you’re back on the grid

Also…◦ Covers pocket tweets and cat-on-keyboard events

Index

Social PresenceMessages of connected presence

Ceremonial Greetings◦ Tweets where the community is addressed indirectly as a whole with the greeting

or statements of gratitude

Fourth wall ◦ Textual equivalent of comments made directly to the camera for an imagined

audience

Self-referential commentary◦ Tweets directed by the author to themselves through “Note to self” “FYI” or “Just

for the record” and function as thought bubble style comments

Unclassifiable ◦ Catch-all category for cat-on-keyboard input and unclassifiable strings of text

Index

Broadcast What?

◦ First person narration of the day

Why?◦ Express yourself

Nearest Metaphor◦ Holding court around the bbq

Then what?◦ See if anyone wants to continue the chat

Also…◦ Social media platforms make for great soapboxes

Index

Broadcast Tweets that express the account holder's experiences

Action ◦ The diary of daily life tweets which answer “What are you doing?”

Reflective ◦ Statements that address cognitive or emotive responses that answer “What am I

thinking?” or “What am I feeling?”

Experience ◦ Tweets that relay the physical experience as an answer to “What am I

experiencing?” – includes location, physical sensations, temporal experience and interaction

Statement ◦ Observation of life, stated opinions and streams of consciousness “What do I

want the world to know?” and “What are my thoughts on a specific topic?”

Index

Thinking about TwitterWhat do you want to do?

◦ Connect with people?◦ [Reply, Social Presence]

◦ Tell your story?◦ News, Broadcast

◦ Share something interesting?◦ Pass Along

Index

Politics

Index

SOCIAL MEDIA LANDSCAPE | TWITTER | POLITICAL MARKETING |POLITICS AND POLITICAL TWITTER |

THE TAKEAWAY

Political Marketing

Index

This section is based onDann, S and Hughes, A (2012) Political Marketing Redefined: exploring the consequences of stakeholders on the marketing mix and political consumption, Advances in Consumer Research,

Hughes, A & Dann, S 2011, 'Influences and impacts of personal brand and political brand bi-directional', Academy of Marketing Conference 2011, University of Liverpool, UK.

Hughes, A and Dann, S. “Australian political marketing: substance backed by style ” in Lees-Marshment, J, (2009) Global Political Marketing, Taylor-Francis Routledge.

Dann S, and Hughes A, (2008) Australian Political Marketing after Kevin07: Lessons from the 2007 Federal Election, Monash Business Review, 4 (1) April 2008, DOI: 10.2104/mbr08010

Hughes, A Dann, S and Neale, L (2008) “Exploring the application of Personal Brands and Opinion Leadership in Political Marketing”, Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy Conference, Sydney, 1-3 December 2008

Hughes, A and Dann, S (2008) “Customers, consumers, partners, society and the political party: Stakeholders in Australian Political Marketing”, Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy Conference, Sydney, 1-3 December 2008

Dann, S. (2008) Political marketing and voter relationship marketing, Australasian Political Science Association 2008 Conference, School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland, 6 – 9 July 2008

Dann, S. Harris, P, Mort, G. Fry, M.L. and Binney W (2007) Reigniting the Fire : A contemporary research agenda for social, political and non profit marketing, Journal of Public Affairs, 7 pp291-304 DOI: 10.1002/pa.269

Index

Political Marketing defineda set of activities, processes or political institutions used by political parties, candidates and individuals to create, communicate, deliver and exchange promises of value between voter-consumers, political party stakeholders and society at large

Index

Criticisms of the approachShort-termism in policy

Distractions for legislators

A cycle of promise and disappointment which will lead to cynicism amongstvoters

Value is defined subjectively from the market’s viewpoint

Politicians will cease to lead but will follow opinion polls

Image will become more important than substance

Index

WeaknessesNegative advertising

emphasis on undermining credibility of alternative party

focus on “swinging voters” at the expense of “heartland voters”

Assumptions of Loyalty and The Duopoly

Index

The political market place

Index

Australian Youth & PoliticsInternational Social Survey Program (ISSP)

◦ 42% of young people (aged 18-29) find voting an important civic duty compared to 84% for people aged 60+

◦ Young people have lower levels of party identification compared to people aged 60+

But! Youth are more likely:◦ To sign a petition (47%) than old people (35%). ◦ To boycotted a product (40%) than old people (24%). ◦ Attend a demonstration (6%) than old people (2%). ◦ participated in online political activity (16% to 6%)◦ visited a political organisations website (40% to 13%).

Is it a negative response to politics or the political parties?

33 Index

ACT: Politics and TwitterName Party Electorate Term in office Handle URL

Andrew Barr ALP Molonglo 2006–present ABarrMLA https://twitter.com/ABarrMLA

Yvette Berry ALP Ginninderra 2012–present YvetteSBerry https://twitter.com/YvetteSBerry

Chris Bourke ALP Ginninderra 2011–present chrisbourke https://twitter.com/chrisbourke

Joy Burch ALP Brindabella 2008–present JoyBurchMLA https://twitter.com/JoyBurchMLA

Alistair Coe Liberal Ginninderra 2008–present alistair_coe https://twitter.com/alistair_coe

Simon Corbell ALP Molonglo 1996–present SimonCorbell https://twitter.com/SimonCorbell

Steve Doszpot Liberal Brindabella 2008–present DoszpotMLA https://twitter.com/DoszpotMLA

Vicki Dunne Liberal Ginninderra 2001–present VickiDunneMLA https://twitter.com/VickiDunneMLA

Katy Gallagher ALP Molonglo 2001–present KatyG_ACT https://twitter.com/KatyG_ACT

Mick Gentleman ALP Brindabella 2004–2008, 2012–present GENTLEMANMick https://twitter.com/GENTLEMANMick

Jeremy Hanson Liberal Molonglo 2008–present JeremyHansonMLA https://twitter.com/JeremyHansonMLA

Giulia Jones Liberal Molonglo 2012–present GiuliaJonesMLA https://twitter.com/GiuliaJonesMLA

Nicole Lawder [1] Liberal Brindabella 2013–present nicolelawder https://twitter.com/nicolelawder

Mary Porter ALP Ginninderra 2004–present MaryPorterMLA https://twitter.com/MaryPorterMLA

Shane Rattenbury Green Molonglo 2008–present ShaneRattenbury https://twitter.com/ShaneRattenbury

Zed Seselja [1] Liberal Brindabella 2004-2013 ZedSeselja https://twitter.com/ZedSeselja

Brendan Smyth Liberal Brindabella 1998–present BrendanSmythMLA https://twitter.com/BrendanSmythMLA

Andrew Wall Liberal Brindabella 2012–present AWallMLA https://twitter.com/AWallMLA

Index

ACT Links Listhttps://twitter.com/ABarrMLA

https://twitter.com/YvetteSBerry

https://twitter.com/chrisbourke

https://twitter.com/JoyBurchMLA

https://twitter.com/alistair_coe

https://twitter.com/SimonCorbell

https://twitter.com/DoszpotMLA

https://twitter.com/VickiDunneMLA

https://twitter.com/KatyG_ACT

https://twitter.com/GENTLEMANMick

https://twitter.com/JeremyHansonMLA

https://twitter.com/GiuliaJonesMLA

https://twitter.com/nicolelawder

https://twitter.com/MaryPorterMLA

https://twitter.com/ShaneRattenbury

https://twitter.com/ZedSeselja

https://twitter.com/BrendanSmythMLA

https://twitter.com/AWallMLAIndex

Political Twitter#AUSPOL

Index

Social Media Landscape | Twitter | Political Marketing|Politics and Political Twitter | The Takeaway

#auspol#auspol, #qldpol, and #wapol: Twitter and the new Australian political commentariatTim Highfield, Axel Bruns, and Stephen Harrington | Mapping Online Publics

◦ http://timhighfield.net/?page_id=339

Index

The WA Senate ReelectionSocial media use in Australia by political parties

◦ Suddenly, Senate Re-Election

The second most fun data collection event ever◦ 77 candidates

◦ 31 Twitter handles

◦ 27 active(ish) Twitter users

◦ 20 weeks of data

◦ 1 very sad state of affairs.

Index

The MethodContent Analysis

Public Timelines

Secondary Data

20 week capture period◦ 10 weeks prior to the election

◦ 10 weeks post election

The Plan◦ benchmark set of behaviours

◦ Divide into 5 week blocks

◦ Code into Content Classification

◦ Find differences◦ Elected/Not Elected

◦ Election Period / Reality

◦ Block 1 and Block 4

◦ Write nifty paper

◦ Tell a great story

Index

WA Twitter Data (20 weeks)

Frequency Percent Valid Percent Cumulative Percent

Pass along 3928 54.6 54.6 54.6

Conversational 2773 38.5 38.5 93.1

News 274 3.8 3.8 96.9

Broadcast 190 2.6 2.6 99.5

Social Presence 34 0.5 0.5 100

Total 7199 100 100

27 Candidates. 20 weeks.

Index

Election Day Tweeting

Conversationa

l News Pass along Status

Pirate Party 8 3 9 0

Unnamed Ticket 7 2 60 1

The Greens (WA) 6 4 12 0

#Sustainable Population Party 4 0 8 0

The Nationals 4 2 12 1

Australian Labor Party 3 1 12 0

Liberal 1 0 1 1

Socialist Alliance 1 0 2 0

Voluntary Euthanasia Party 0 0 3 0

Total 34 12 119 3

Index

Context #2: QLD ElectionIn which our presenter breaks the data collection equipment…

◦ Only the sitting members, not all candidates

◦ 65 Twitter handles

◦ 50 active(ish) Twitter users

◦ 4 weeks of data

◦ 1 paradox of social media.

Index

The Paradox

Index

Context #3: ACT MLAThe Canberra Connection

◦ 18 Twitter handles

◦ 17 active(ish) Twitter users

◦ 1 week of data

◦ 1 sense of hope

Index

Basic DataName Handle Tweets Following Followers Favorites Lists Brand_hdr Brand_pht Brand_pro

Party name

Andrew Barr ABarrMLA 10900 1891 6851 356 7 0 0 0 0

Alistair Coe alistair_coe 1041 1160 2158 58 0 0 0 0 0

Andrew Wall AWallMLA 158 263 483 0 0 0 0 1 1

Brendan Smyth BrendanSmythMLA 34 127 652 0 0 0 0 1 1

Chris Bourke chrisbourke 4137 408 1675 15 0 0 0 0 0

Steve Doszpot DoszpotMLA 269 821 801 2 0 0 0 1 1

Mick Gentleman GENTLEMANMick 1088 622 1002 52 0 1 0 1 1

Giulia Jones GiuliaJonesMLA 0 10 6 0 0 0 0 0 0

Jeremy Hanson JeremyHansonMLA 939 561 1680 337 4 0 0 0 0

Joy Burch JoyBurchMLA 1655 405 2751 1 4 0 1 0 1

Katy Gallagher KatyG_ACT 6068 935 13400 202 0 0 0 0 0

Mary Porter MaryPorterMLA 783 133 912 23 0 0 0 0 0

Nicole Lawder [1] nicolelawder 5045 666 1011 151 0 0 0 0 0

Shane Rattenbury ShaneRattenbury 2275 1243 3411 47 1 0 0 1 1

Simon Corbell SimonCorbell 3160 1028 3887 30 2 0 0 0 0

Vicki Dunne VickiDunneMLA 215 162 678 4 0 0 0 1 1

Yvette Berry YvetteSBerry 5097 735 1264 449 7 0 0 1 1

Zed Seselja [1] ZedSeselja 1500 586 2632 41 0 0 0 1 1

Brand_hdr: Does the party name appear in the Twitter header photo? Brand_pht: Does the party name appear in the Twitter profile photo?

Brand_prof: Is the name of the party mentioned in the Twitter bio?Party Name: Is the name of the party mentioned at all?

Index

Humans…

Index

Humans…

Index

How can Twitter be used?Character opportunities

◦ provision of insight into the candidate,

◦ information for the followers

◦ direct engagement with an audience.

Message opportunities◦ Promise management

◦ Embodying the party values

Index

Take away sectionSOCIAL MEDIA LANDSCAPE | TWITTER | POLITICAL MARKETING |POLITICS AND POLITICAL TWITTER |

THE TAKEAWAY

Index

Post eventRunning a basic tweet analysis

◦ How to get data

◦ What to do with it

Political messages◦ Stakeholder Analysis

Index

Running a basic tweet analysis

Index

How to get the dataOption 1: http://twdocs.com/

◦ There are prices involved

Option 2:◦ If you use Chrome, install “Kwitty”

◦ There is a help function for exporting tweets

◦ How to export/backup tweets?

◦ 1. Click "Export" in a user tab.

◦ 2. Wait the exporting progress to 100%.

◦ 3. Save the exported page as (all content) a single local file.

Index

Kwitty

Index

How to CaptureLoad Kwitty

Search for the desired user

Click Export

Copy the page into Excel

Index

KwittyHow to export/backup tweets?

1. Click "Export" in a user tab.

2. Wait the exporting progress to 100%.

3. Save the exported page as (all content) a single local file.

Index

Now what?From the data

◦ Take the column of text and put it into a tag cloud

◦ Sort by tweet content and count the @replies, retweets, original tweets and links◦ What is the main type of message?

◦ When do the tweets get published?

◦ Is there a difference between tweets by phone or tweets by computer?

Index

Meta DataTweet Date Via

Coming up @1.30pm in MCC theatre 6 Intro to Finance presentation. Learn more about the study pathway you might take when you join #ANUCBE

1:20:09 PM, 8-30, 2014 Hootsuite

Index

Meta DataMonday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday

Twitter for iPhone 364 360 402 483 279 324 355

Web 289 395 397 271 359 252 252

Twitter for Android 154 227 224 136 186 153 135

Twitter for iPad 28 21 23 39 24 22 26

Instagram on iOS 7 10 6 16 15 23 22

Index

Tag Clouds

Index

Stakeholder Analysis

Index

The Message MantraWhy this message?

◦ …at this time?

◦ …from this person?

What response should they expect?

Which stakeholder are they addressing?

Index

StakeholdersStakeholder Target group Type Source of influence

Alternative Political Providers

Party stakeholders

Switch Legitimacy or Urgency

Electoral commission society Active Power and Legitimacy/Urgency

Industry Lobby Groups Party stakeholders

Active Legitimacy / Urgency plus varying Power

Issue Competitors Party stakeholders

Switch Power or Legitimacy or Urgency

Media society Active Power and Urgency and/or Legitimacy

Party Donors Party stakeholder

Active Power / Legitimacy

Index

StakeholdersStakeholder Target group Type Source of influenceAlternative Political Providers Party stakeholders Switch Legitimacy or Urgency

Electoral commission society Active Power and Legitimacy/UrgencyGovernment (parliament) society Passive Power and Legitimacy Government (public service) society Passive Legitimacy

Industry Lobby Groups Party stakeholders Active Legitimacy / Urgency plus varying Power

Issue Competitors Party stakeholders Switch Power or Legitimacy or Urgency

Media society Active Power and Urgency and/or LegitimacyParty Donors Party stakeholder Active Power / Legitimacy

Party members and supporters Party stakeholder Active Power and Legitimacy

Political candidates Party stakeholders Active Legitimacy and Urgency and/or Power

Political opponents Party stakeholder Active Urgency

Private lobbyists Party stakeholders Active Legitimacy and varying Power and Urgency

Social pressure lobby groups Party stakeholders Switch Varying levels of Legitimacy and / or Urgency and / or Power

Society / citizens / community society Passive Legitimacy

Splinter Interest Groups society Switch Power / UrgencyVoters (between elections) Voter-consumer Switch Legitimacy

Voters (election time) Voter-consumer Switch Power and/or Urgency and/or Legitimacy

Index

Questions?@STEPHENDANN | [email protected]

Index