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I worked on a few political campaigns throughout my senior year of high school and all of college. I even worked as an intern at the Massachusetts State House for the State Treasurer. And while I gained some
great experience and met some really wonderful people, I realized this wasn't really what I wanted to do. As far as campaigning goes I realized, this is getting me nowhere. I had licked enough envelopes and held enough signs. And working at the State House was certainly cool, but I just wasn't getting that feeling of "this is what I want to do all the time". So what was it about politics that had initially gotten me so hooked and passionate? That these politicians may have had the best intentions, but they were just not good at getting their message out to the voters. They needed to go high tech, they needed to speak more to my generation. On long car rides between home and school, or in the shower I would find myself thinking about if I was in a political debate, how would I counter what the opponent is saying? Or about a commercial I saw on TV earlier and how it was boring or annoying and could have been done better. It wasn't until I began graduate school that I put the pieces together, and realized I wanted to do PR and marketing.
While my degrees and experience may not be exactly what marketing employers are looking for, I feel like they are not totally disjointed. It's not as if I had a degree in theoretical physics and decided I wanted to fly planes for a living. No, I believe politics and marketing are actually closely related. Both rely on data about the public. And depending on the specifics of the campaign, you'll need data about certain parts of the public. Both also require you to be able to create a professional message that ideally is not controversial, but still attention grabbing. Although no publicity is bad publicity (unless it gets you fired!) And both fields require constant innovation in public outreach mediums and strategies. Always be looking out for the next big thing, and how to take advantage of it. Right now, the big thing is social media. And just like the phone replaced snail mail, and e-mail replaced the phone, and social media replaced e-mail, something someday will replace social media as the best way to contact the public.
So here I am! Taking a social media marketing and communications class! Feel free to ask me questions or leave comments
and I'll do my best to answer them! Happy reading all!
Your comment about marketing and politics couldn't be any truer. The one who wins in politics isn't necessarily the one who makes the best promises, or has the best track record. The one who wins is the politician who markets themselves well. Good marketing can take the attention off the negative and redirect it to the positive.
ReplyDeleteLucius Cambell @ Skild