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Posts Tagged ‘obama on twitter’

 

 

Meet Barack Obama, the most followed person in the world — on Twitter.  As of today, the US presidential candidate has 103,234 followers.  Despite his tremendous popularity, Obama’s campaign doesn’t use the service very aggressively with only 236 updates (tweets).

Most of his updates have been notifications of where Obama is speaking and a link to watch the events live.  I would have thought that the Obama campaign would be more engaged on Twitter with so many followers, employing some creative micro blogging techniques. They could be providing links to favoring blogs, re-inforcing the negative advertisements about opponents, or playing off of his popular persona.  Rather, the Obama campaign is taking the safe route right now.  Personally, I’d love to see something more risky, controversial and engaging.  Come on, it’s more than 100,000 followers waiting for his insights.

The second most followed person on Twitter is Robert Scoble, a popular tech blogger from the Bay area.  He has 36,553 followers and a whopping 14,682 tweets.

Barack Obama’s US presidential election opponent, John McCain, has 3,657 followers (not sure if this is run by McCain’s campaign group, although it appears that way).  He has 21 tweets.

 

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MeetKendall and MeetJohnSong have conducted a poll following each of the three 2008 presidential debates, as well as the lone vice presidential debate.  Both of us are very engaged in these elections, with one supporting Senator MCain and the other supporting Senator Obama.  Yet, our polls consistently favored the Democratic candidates:

First Presidential debate:  Obama (71%), McCain (29%)

Vice Presidential debate:  Biden (69%), Palin (31%)

Second Presidential debate: Obama (79%), McCain (21%)

Third Presidential debate:  Obama (80%), McCain (17%)

Although other polls also declared Obama the winner in each of the presidential debates, the margins were narrower than our polls.  The same was true with the vice presidential debate where our poll showed a wider margin for Biden than other polls.  One interesting point was that the Vice Presidential poll attracted far more voters (395) than the presidential debates polls (179 in the first and less in the following debates).  The vice presidential debate definitely had more of a “circus” feel to it with Sarah Palin being so unknown to the public.

The analysis is that completely web-based (unscientific) polls tended to disproportionally favor Barack Obama over John McCain.  Right now, Obama is followed by 99,922 people on twitter, by far the most of anyone.   John McCain (not sure if it is in fact the McCain campaign team running this twitter) has only 3,236.  I think this says a lot about the demographics of each candidate’s supporters.  Twitter is in the “early adoption” phase for online social media enthusiasts.

Thank you all for your participations.  These candidates are two extraordinary people, and one of them will soon  be the new leader of the world soon during extraordinary times.

Below are poll results from the final presidential debate.

  Barack Obama John McCain
CNN/Opinion Research Corp

58%

31%

Among men

54%

35%

Among women

62%

28%

     
CBS Undecided Voters

53%

22%

     
MeetKendall/MeetJohnSong (unscientific)

80%

17%

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