The Marketing Revolution in Politics: What Recent U.S. Presidential Campaigns Can Teach Us About Effective Marketing by Bruce I. Newman (Hardback, 2016)
In 2008, Barack Obama's presidential campaign used an invative combination of social media, big data, and micro-targeting to win the White House. In 2012, the campaign did it again, further honing those marketing tools and demonstrating that political marketing is on the cutting edge when it comes to effective branding, advertising, and relationship-building. The challenges facing a presidential campaign may be unique to the political arena, but the creative solutions are t. The Marketing Revolution in Politics shows how recent US presidential campaigns have adopted the latest marketing techniques and how organizations in the for-profit and n-profit sectors can benefit from their example. Distilling the marketing practices of successful political campaigns down into seven key lessons, Bruce I. Newman shows how organizations of any size can apply the same invative, creative, and cost-effective marketing tactics as today's presidential hopefuls. A compelling study of marketing in the make-or-break world of American politics, this book should be a must-read for managers, students of marketing and political marketing, and anyone interested in learning more about how presidential campaigns operate. Winner of the 2016 International Book Award in the Business: Marketing & Advertising category.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Rotman/UTP Publishing, University of Toronto Press
ISBN-10
144264799x
ISBN-13
9781442647992
eBay Product ID (ePID)
223441141
Product Key Features
Author
Bruce I. Newman
Format
Hardback
Language
English
Subject
Sales & Marketing
Type
Textbook
Additional Product Features
Place of Publication
Toronto
Series Title
Rotman-UTP Publishing
Content Note
2 Figures
Author Biography
Bruce I. Newman is professor of marketing and a Wicklander Fellow in Business Ethics in the Kellstadt Graduate School of Business at DePaul University and founding editor-in-chief of the Journal of Political Marketing.