Due to the first round of Presidential Candidate pre-primary debates occuring recently, I decided to have a poke around and see what the State of the SERPs is like for the major 2008 Presidential hopefuls. I was surprised to find that, despite Howard Dean's major success with online fundraising in 2004, and the vast popularity of political blogs and web-centric PACs like MoveOn.org, many of the 2008 Candidates are committing huge SEO blunders.
I know SEO is a fairly young industry and not everyone is hip to optimization techniques, but considering the reach and importance of the internet to young, vocal, passionate voters, writers and opinion leaders, one would think the masterminds behind these multi-million dollar marketing schemes campaigns would know of and appreciate the importance of search marketing.
Take the mind-boggling case of John McCain, a likely GOP front-runner: McCain's active campaign site currently ranks #68 at Google for "john mccain" and just as abysmally for other terms and iterations of his name. How could this be? Well, behind his senate.gov profile page (which he can't use for campaigning) and his Wikipedia entry, we find www.straighttalkamerica.com, Mr. McCain's campaign site from the 2000 primary.
As you'll notice, the Title Tag directs us to go to his new site, but, since it doesn't rank, we can't click through to it from the same SERP. If we go to his old site, we're not 301'd, but rather instructed to click through to his new site. If ever (EVER!) there was a case for 301-ing a domain, this is it. Granted, McCain's new site has its own problems, most glaring is that every single page uses the same title and meta description tags, and navigation is primarily via drop-down java script menus. As such, most of his pages are likely ending up in the Supplemental Index making his internal links worthless. Let me also point out that even the search "john mccain 2008" puts his new site #3 behind www.stopjohnmccain2008.com and his Wikipedia page. He does, however, have AdWords for his new site on the SERPs for every imaginable incarnation of his name.
On the flip side of this equation is Barack Obama's site which is a redesign of his domain from his 2004 Senate bid. Nicely designed and fairly well optimized, he is the only candidate that ranks for such lofty keywords as "ending iraq war" (#10 on Google) and "2008 election" (#11) [Update: as of this morning, 5/10, Google is showing Dennis Kucinich at #8 for "ending iraq war"]. However, for these and other campaign specific keywords such as "candidate," "2008 election," "united states presidential election," and "democratic candidates" or "republican candidates," none of the current contenders are even in the top 50 at Google. Two notable exceptions are Hillary Clinton and Dennis Kucinich (possibly carrying links and domain strength from his '04 run) who both rank in the top 15 for the term "president".
Fine, it's early, maybe people are still looking for candidates by name only. After all, dark horse candidate Ron Paul (R) and Mike Gravel (D) have gotten tons of attention on the social media sites lately. Unfortunately, the data just doesn't back it up. Despite 12 stories on Digg featuring Ron Paul in the headline, each receiving more than 1000 diggs, since he announced his candidacy on March 12, 2007--Mike Gravel's been featured in nine 1000+ digg stories since announcing on March 9th--the search queries for his name pale in comparison to the big players who, oddly enough, get almost no love from Digg (Obama's headlined in only two 1000+ digg stories since March 9th, same with Clinton).
While "Hillary Clinton" and "Barack Obama" get significant daily numbers as search terms (Clinton currently getting about 50% more volume than Obama), the rest of the candidates don't get much love at all. John Edwards gets about 1/3rd of Clinton's search volume, as does McCain. Even social media darlings Paul and Gravel are averaging only a relative handful of name searches daily. As far as traffic goes, things are pretty much the same, with the exception of a distinct inversion between Obama and Clinton. The chart below shows the relative search volumes for the names of the major candidates (data from Keyword Discovery) as well as their relative Alexa Traffic Rank (3 mos. avg.) to their official campaign sites.
Granted, the search numbers aren't huge for the more general, campaign-related terms, but in most cases they're more popular than candidate names and have a much longer tail.
So what's it come down to? It seems the vast majority of candidates have little to no idea of the importance of keyword research, keyword targeting or even basic, on-page SEO practices. I strongly believe that the Internet is going to play a huge role in the 2008 election. I also believe, after examining the current offerings by the major players, that the candidate that attacks the SERPs now, and positions themselves to rank for campaign-related and issue-related keywords will have a huge advantage in disseminating their beliefs and dominating the conversation.
UPDATE: Jonah Stein has published a great follow-up to this article, Political Search Marketing: Electronic Grass Roots, over at Alchemist Media. He offers an excellent analysis of how political campaigns and operatives could and should use the power of SEO/SEM to market their campaigns, marshal grassroots support and inform voters. Perhaps more importantly, he discusses how the campaigns, the engines, and the public need to be vigilant to avoid the potential for unscrupulous use that could make the internet the most effective catapult for political mudslinging and disinformation.
Whether DNC or RNC, Political Candidates need SEO
Branding
The author's views are entirely his or her own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.
it's always interesting how youtube gives some people like Barack Obama straight links but not Hillary
(link is in the nav banner)
Wow! Amazing catch Michael.
At first I thought perhaps this was some bias rearing its ugly head but, upon further inspection, it's just bad SEO (yet again) by some campaigns.
All of the candidates get their own channels through YouTube's You Choose '08 area. They design theirown banners for the top of their channel and some just make the mistake of not linking out from them (Clinton, McCain, Richardson, etc).
Others, such as Obama, Edwards, Romney and Giuliani (who tend to be more savvy with their campaign sites too) do link out to themselves. One particularly good header belongs to Dennis Kucinich. He has clickable issue-related links in the header that take you to YouTube videos of him presenting his stance on the topics. While I'd like the main body of the banner to go through to his site, he does have a linkon the right hand side.
I volunteered to help out Bill Richardson's campaign 4 months ago, zero response from them. Even went into detail on basic things they need to do (unique titles, perhaps?). I noticed how poorly they ranked while trying searching for his stances on a few different topics (taxes, guns, healthcare, etc).
I guess they're too busy trying to raise money to focus on much else, which is sad.
They did just launched some pretty decent Youtube ads, though:
https://www.youtube.com/profile?user=Richardson4President
Can't really compare with Obama's channel though. 2.8 million channel views for Barack, 32k for Richardson. Oh well, guess my candidate has zero chance of winning. Maybe someone will pick him as VP.
I hear ya. I'm a Richardson fan too, but he is getting zero media exposure. I don't think it helped that he came off as ineloquent in the first round of primary debates. A total shame because he's normally very well-spoken and engageing.
Unless Edwards can do something magical, it's gonna be a fight between Obama and Clinton.
An excellent overview of the situation, Scott. I was also impressed by coverage from a few other folks on the SEO side of politics:
I expect there will be a lot of discussion around this issue over the next 18 months.
It's interesting that, in the short time since the first two articles you list were posted, McCain's rankings haven't improved for his own name. In fact, they've tanked.
Goodness sakes, in a contest for the most important position of leadership in the world, you'd think that the most brilliant internet marketers would be called in. The good news is...for those of us who are trying to stay ahead of the wave, we're in front of a whole lot of folks.
My favorite part of this post (besides all the acronyms) is the idea that the internet is really a level playing field for all the candidates...just like in e-commerce, the smaller players can have as great an online presence (or even moreso) than the bigger players.
Many of us have admitted that one of our weakest areas is offline marketing. We just all looooove the interweb so much, we assume everyone else does too. So, just as Howard Dean proved, the internet is just one piece of the puzzle. It's not the whole battle. But it is an accessible puzzle piece. (I know Wikipedia is a bit of a joke, but I adore the fact that there is an article just about this).
But this next election won't probably be the one where the full power of the internet comes into play...maybe the next one.
Since a few people have mentioned it, I wonder what people consider to equate to the internet being an important, powerful force in electoral politics?
The Internet serves as a major source for people to learn about candidates?
The Internet becomes a primary fundraising source?
Websites become major outlets for news and information about the election?
Debates are broadcast and available online?
Citizens cast their official ballots online?
Well folks, all but the last one are already true. Just because politics (unlike SEO) is also covered in mainstream media doesn't mean the impact of online politics isn't tremendous.
Unfortunately, I think this "maybe next season" line of thinking is the very reason so many of the campaigns have piss-poor SEO/SEM...they don't know how to do online marketing, so they stick their heads in the sand and only pay it lip service.
True, it's almost like a vicious circle. The candidates aren't doing enough SEO, so people aren't using their sites as resources the way they could be, which means the candidates might dismiss their sites as a "small" part of their campaign and not do any SEO...and around and around.
I do think people are still using the internet as a resource though. The candidates are just missing out on their opportunity to shape the conversation by ignoring good SEO/SEM practices. Instead, the DailyKos' and DrudgeReports of the 'net dominate the conversation.
90% of the Swiftboat Veterans horseshit in '04 was propogated online...nobody can honestly say that "story" didn't have a huge impact.
... but wait for the one campaign that SEOs the crap out of itself and enjoys the enormous benefit of its good rankings, solid traffic and impressive website. All it will take is one candidate to rock the online element to its full extent and then everyone will be doing it.
One of these campaigns has to take notice of what SEO folks are saying pretty soon... I mean, surely McCain's people must be sitting around saying, "Why don't I see our site when I type John McCain into Google?"
You'd think they'd do some research in order to find an answer...
Exactly what I was thinking. All it takes is one to profit and then rest will take notice. If it wasn't for the money Howard Dean raised last election they might not be online now.
Is it possible that McCain himself is not a big internet user and has surrounded himself with like minded people. I get the feeling it might be a relative unknown who first takes advantage of seo. That person will need to take advantage of it because they aren't doing well in mainstream channels.
I think that SEO for candidates should definately be directed towards the issue, not the election. We're finding that voters are issue-driven and will probably spend more time learning and searching for that, instead of a specific candidate. I'm glad to see Obama and Kucinich rank for 'ending iraq war' but what about 'pro choice' or 'abortion' or 'illegal immigration'?
I bit the bullet
I think that not just SEO wise, but the entire internet presence of both candidates is poor. Completely missing out on opportunities. The one who has the best and strongest presence seems to be Meghan McCain. She does not seem to target the most useful terms or any specific terms for that matter, but she manages to capture a wide audience helping her dad become "more human" in the eyes of the average person.
I heard about this story today listening to yesterday's Daily Search Cast. Danny noted that John McCain's MySpace page was ranking higher than his own page (well, a ton higher). That might have something to do with the little "hack" that was done to him and the number of inbound links that resulted:
https://mike.newsvine.com/_news/2007/03/26/633799-hacking-john-mccain
Scott, this is a great post. I would think in particular that adwords for competitors names, or creating well SEO-ed pages on one's own site that talk about how your views compare to those of your competitors would be a no-brainer.
Couldn't agree more.
@All: I have several questions here and hope to get answers from you guys. Okay here it is:
1. Why should politicians use their name in the search term?
2. Why is it important to rank for the politicians geotargeted area?
When I saw this in my feed reader this morning I didn't know if I'd been scooped or copied. Turns out neither! Funny that everyone is tackling this now.
As you mentioned in your post, Obama and Clinton are both in the lead for links, which is why I was so shocked that they'd had so little success on Digg (which I'm using as a representative indicator of the social media sites).
Both candidates are so prevalent in the media that I guess I "feel" like I see stuff on Digg about them all the time, I guess I'm mistaken.
I was sure there'd been more Obama stories on Digg than this. Although I'm sure there will be in the months to come.
Really great observations, it reminds me of when I first got into SEO and the way I would get business is make a website about my desired subject, make it rank on the top page for a desired keyword phrase and then call the people in that business and say, "Hey, I have top rankings here, would you like that? or would you prefer your competition have that top spot?"
Someone with time and some resources could make out on this with the political field. If you went to a campaign and said I have a top ranking site for your keywords, there would be sick dollars to be made.
Hmmm, Clinton 2012?
Or negotiate with the power to control what 'google says' about a candidate. There'd have to be some lobbyists interested in that. Perhaps only those with darker hats (d'you get white hat lobbyists?).
whitehat lobbyists... giggle
I don't think the lobbyist spectrum runs from white to black, it runs from black to Jack Abramoff.
It will be interesting to see if the Internet will play a huge factor in the upcoming elections. I'd like to think so, but that's because I'm so tapped in. I forget that there are millions of Americans (like, say, all of my extended family members) who are barely Internet-literate. These are the same people who didn't see Snakes on a Plane, even though the Internet frenzy made it seem like everyone and their mom would run to see it. (I know that's not the best example, but I couldn't help but think of it.)
I'm pretty sure we'd all agree that the internet, particularly the linkerati, have a much more profound impact on the mainstream media than they did even four years ago.
As such, my feeling is that online campaign activity will have a significant ripple-effect even to people who aren't "wired" and get most of their political information (I hesitat to call it that) from more mainstream news and opinion sources.
Snakes on a plane? That's what you could come up with?
Actually I knew exactly what you meant, and it was a good example. But some unseen force compels me to respond to snakes on a plane references.
The fact that a significant portion of the population is Internet-illiterate actually makes the Internet's role in the election process more frightening.
The majority of people don't even know what SEO is and they think Google somehow just knows what the most important results for their searches are.
A lot of people will put down a site like "stopjohnmccain2008"'s good ranking down to one of a few things. One reaction will be that they'll accuse Google of having a liberal bias. Two, they'll not question the result at all and will assume that the site ranks where it does just because.
We know what a little SEO can do to SERPs. Imagine the strides you could make with "middle America" if you controlled some of the top spots for important 08 keywords. Yes, that's exciting for our industry, but it's scary to think about how easy it'll be to sway people's votes through search.
I totally hear ya, Jane. With great power comes great responsibility...
(I can't believe I quoted a Spiderman line. By the way, SEOmoz readers, please don't go see Spiderman 3. It's awful. Instead, spend those three hours reading more SEOmoz posts. It'll be time better spent. Trust me.)
I've heard "the internet will play a huge role in this election" for the past 2 elections. I wish it really did, but mostly it comes down to the people who don't use the internet who sway the election. Not that us on the internet can't change that.
Yeah, that's what I was getting at in my earlier comment. I keep wondering if this will be the year, and then it isn't...
The really scary thing is what happens when those people get on the internet. That'll be the center of a perfect storm.
Even if you don't think it sways hearts and minds, the internet has, since '04, become the most influential tool in grassroots campaign fundraising. And believe me, anyone who's worked on a campaign will tell you that those small, online donations really matter; not just to the campaign's coffers, but in getting individuals motivated and personally attached to a campaign. There is a tremendous impact in the devotion and vocalization an individual has for a candidate once they've put their money behind him, even if it's only $5.00.
Sure traditional campaigning and news outlets still have a huge impact, but the internet has certainly played an ever growing role in American politics over the last 10 years and it will continue to do so.
I think the internet will have an affect on this election, but I get the feeling it's going to be the next one where it really makes a difference. I would imagine age will play a role in who gets influenced by candidates and where with younger people paying more attention to the web as would be expected.
What I'm really interested in seeing is if the MySpace primaries get enough coverage to affect the Iwoa and New Hampshire primiaries. I'm thinking they might to a subset of voters.
The young (and important) 18-25 voters have all grown up online already.
That's true. I don't like to generalize, but younger voters have historically not come out in strong numbers. The baby boomers still dominate the population and I would suspect that as age increases relying on the internet for political news lessens.
I know I get all or at least most of my news online and I'm long past 25. My dad on the other hand probably gets none of his news online.
It'll be interesting to see the demogrpahics on who votes for who. Young and old often skew differently anyway, but this election I can see younger voters going for candidates who do put more into the internet with older voters going for someone who put more effort into traditional means.
Nice post, definitely some work needed on all the campaigns. Surely they have hired someone to do SEO for them though! Did they start too late or is it too early?
I compared some various SEO factors for the major candidates back in March, looking at things like:
Age of Domain
Length of Domain Registration
Backlinks
Technorati Links
.edu Links
Alexa Rank
Indexed Pages
Supplemental Pages
Name Search
Rankings for Common Phrases
Pay-Per-Click
How do the Presidential Candidates Rate for SEO?
Update: Looks like Rand and I were commenting at the same time, and he included my post in his several links. Thanks!
I know at least one candidate has shopped for and probably obtained SEO services. I won't say which one, but he ain't doin' all that great.
I wouldn't be too surprised if some of the political candidates are just learning the new-fangled buzzword of "SEO", and are thusly running out and finding out how easy it is to hire themselves an SEO expert or two. Eventually, they'll also find out how less easy it is to identify and hire a good and knowledgeable SEO expert, especially when "SEO" is still just a magical buzzword to the hirer...
I keep wondering when candidates will figure out how easy it would be to get some AdWords links to show for searches on their opponents name. I just searched Google for "hillary clinton" and there are three ads on the right side of the search results; youtube, a company selling buttons, and a get out the vote site.
This is a really interesting topic that I think campaigns will indeed start getting smarter about as time goes on (from my experience they tend to be at least 5 years behind the technology curve).
I've been following campaign technology related to the 2008 elections some on The Law and Politics Blog (https://blog.politicslaw.org)
A couple of months ago I did a search for "Hillary Clinton" or something similar, clicked an adwords ad from her official campaign, and ended up at a 404... so to say they aren't to web savvy might be an understatement.
Great post Scott! So in previous days candidates use to spend their money and time offline to attract voters. In the coming days, online (Internet) will be the place for them to make a Vote appeal. We will see how the nominees will compete in Search Engine with SEO/SEM. Looks interesting and I feel this is the right time for all the SEO companies to show their ability… and right time to make money.
Really excellent post - combining two of my major obesessions in politics & the internet (if only you could have shoe horned in some stuff about 70s funk, this would have been my favourite post ever!)
We have our own little election going on right now over here in the 51st state (or is that Canada?!) and some initial digging suggests that there's not a great deal more expertise over here. I'm planning to post about this, but as we have some political clients, I may need to be careful!
Damnit! I knew I should've called the post PsychoalphadiscobetabioaquaOptimization ;)