At the last general election, I built a tiny website and campaigning tool called I’ll Vote Green If You Do. It attracted quite a bit of attention and coverage, including The Guardian (here and here), Cory Doctorow (here), and even Breitbart (here).
I built it in 2 hours or so (I was on a train and bored) to show how it’s not how pretty something is, or how sophisticated the thinking behind it – all it takes is a simple, coherent, positive message, and an incentive to share (and a belief that it might actually make a difference). If I were to do this again, I would make many, many changes, but the one I built signed up 30k people or so in a couple of weeks, got the attention of plenty of media and eventually The Green Party itself…
Focus
The focus of what I did before was not tactical, however, it was about working out the psychological/behavioural triggers that encourage the viral spread of concepts in a pool of otherwise lukewarm prospects. Having now spent 6 years building digital fundraising programmes for nonprofits, I’ve codified a bunch of that knowledge into how to generate a lot of noise for a campaign without spending any money on broadcast/push media.
The tool I built for the last election had a very simple sign up for (name, postcode, email), which then mapped the postcode to a constituency, registered your intention to vote green, and then gave you social sharing tools coupled with tracked links which you could send out on social, to friends, etc. Because those links were tracked, you knew when someone else signed up (as did the site) as a result of your promotion, and you got an email to tell you this – your referred person then got their own links, and the cycle repeated.
The Problem This Time
To some extent, it’s the same as last time! Only harder. The problem that progressives are facing at this election is messaging. There is none. There are fragmented opinions expressed chaotically, and most of the attempts to unite the progressives are either:
- vague and unspecific with negative undertones – e.g. More United, Progressive Alliance – “Let’s build a new politics together” etc
- straight up negative – e.g “Stop the Tories”
Vague messaging doesn’t work because it’s not a story that can be retold. Try explaining to someone what “Let’s build a new politics together” means, without saying “What we have is broken and has been for f***ing ever”. All of the messaging gets lost in the context, because it’s a backwards-justified negatively-based argument. You cannot shoot for the moon if there is no moon. What we have here is a bunch of people calling for change without telling us where this change is going. Whilst that might have worked in a broadcast-era world, what makes opinion spread in a world where social influence rules is a story that can be internalized (which for most people means visualized, which requires something in the future, not the past) and retold (which requires positivity if any action is required).
Examples from Fundraising
An example from fundraising – an advert of a starving child will make you donate, but you will not take a photo of that advert and send it to your friends to get them to donate, because it’s negative, even if you were personally triggered to action. However, a street musician playing some beautiful music in the street on an instrument you don’t know will also make you donate, and you’ll take a photo or a video and send to your friends along with your location to share the experience. Whilst this is a simple example which is a bit straw-man-like, it’s how stuff spreads now – and it matters hugely, because spheres of social influence have overtaken spheres of institutional influence in most peoples’ lives (for reference, think of the influences of the bubbles of Facebook on both the Brexit and Trump votes).
So What Now?
What we actually need now is a vision of the future defined in its own terms, not in terms of how much better it is than now. “Imagine a fairer society” – NO! Instead – Imagine a FAIR society. And to make this stick, what is needed are the stories that exemplify and emotionally connect people to it.
It doesn’t particularly matter what this cause we – as progressives – find and unite behind. It could be equality, environment, education, or a whole host of other things. It just matters that we find it.
My view is that progressive politics needs to unify around a simple, positive cause. My bet is on education as the central point of a progressive manifesto. This post won’t reach those writing the policy for the variously and pointlessly infighting progressive factions, I’m sure.
But if you know them, no harm pointing them at it.
