Obama's `Gigantic' Database May Make Him Party's Power Broker
By Christopher Stern
April 28 (Bloomberg) -- Barack Obama's supporters are giving
him more than just record amounts of cash. They also are
providing personal information that may make his donor list the
most powerful tool in U.S. politics.
Even if the Democratic presidential candidate doesn't
succeed in his White House bid, this data will make Obama a
power broker in the party for years to come. For the interest
groups or Democratic candidates he chooses to sell it to, it
would provide a gold mine of information and access to potential
donors.
Almost 2 million people have entered personal information
on Obama pages on social-networking Web sites such as Facebook,
MySpace and his campaign's mybarackobama.com, offering home
addresses, phone numbers, their views on specific issues and the
names of friends. The data have allowed Obama, 46, to raise more
than $200 million, fill sports arenas with supporters across the
nation and motivate millions more with custom-tailored messages.
``It's gigantic,'' said Laura Quinn, chief executive
officer of Catalist, a company that maintains a database of 280
million Americans. The list is as ``transformational'' as the
advent of political advertising, she said.
Volunteering Information
The Illinois senator's biggest innovation is in persuading
people to enter personal information directly on his campaign's
Web site, according to Bill McIntyre, executive vice president
of Grassroots Enterprise Inc., a Washington-based Internet
marketing firm that advises campaigns.
McIntyre, a Republican and former chief national spokesman
for the National Rifle Association, said the data entered by
800,000 names on mybarakobama.com may be worth as much as $200
million.
While in the past, campaigns have cross-referenced lists of
registered voters against other records such as credit-card
purchases or magazine subscriptions to find potential
supporters, Obama's information is more accurate and precise
because it relies on data that donors provide themselves.
``When people give information online, they are going to be
more truthful and more credible because they are in the privacy
of their own environment,'' said McIntyre.
Republican Effort
It's the kind of detailed information that Republican
operatives such as Karl Rove, who directed President George W.
Bush's campaigns, excelled at gathering through expensive
microtargeting techniques that combine data from several
sources. The Democrats responded with Catalist, a similar list-
building effort organized by top Clinton campaign adviser Harold
Ickes that sells its data to ``progressive'' causes and
candidates, according to its Web site.
Obama's success stems from a decision early in his campaign
to embrace the concept of social networking, allowing him to
leap ahead of his Democratic rival, Senator Hillary Clinton of
New York, or the presumptive Republican nominee, Senator John
McCain of Arizona. For example, Obama now has 790,000 Facebook
``friends,'' compared with 150,000 for Clinton, 60, and 117,000
for McCain, 71.
Mybarackobama.com, the first social network specifically
devoted to a political campaign, is modeled on Facebook. Chris
Hughes, a 24-year-old Facebook co-founder, has been a fulltime
Obama campaign worker for more than a year and helped develop
the candidate's site.
Part of Campaign
When supporters join mybarackobama.com, they become part of
the campaign, gaining access to phone bank lists, local events
and the ability to contact like-minded people or recruit new
ones.
Mybarackobama.com is also a sophisticated data network that
allows the campaign to home in on detailed information such as
whether a supporter is more concerned about civil liberties,
foreign policy, education or energy policy.
People who provide their information on line may not
realize that the data they are posting at mybarackobama.com may
have a long afterlife and find its way to other campaigns in
future election cycles.
According to the Obama campaign's online privacy statement,
it reserves the right to ``make personal information available
to organizations with similar political viewpoints and
objectives, in furtherance of our own political objectives.''
Fair-Market Value
Federal election laws require campaigns to charge for the
use of their data. The campaign must either sell the information
or record the transaction as an in-kind contribution at fair-
market value.
Obama campaign spokesman Tommy Vietor declined to comment
on the value or possible future uses of the data.
Even as Obama's interactive databases prove to be efficient
ways to energize volunteers, their ability to raise large
amounts of money may outlast the current campaign, said Tad
Devine, an independent media consultant.
``That's really what we are talking about here,'' said
Devine, a former strategist for Democrat John Kerry's 2004
presidential bid. ``We are talking about a fundraising network
that will far surpass the dominance that the Republicans held in
the '80s and even in to the '90s.''
Obama's list of 1.4 million donors may be an especially
strong fundraising tool in the future, Devine said.
``This is something where if this guy sends out a letter
saying send some money to someone, suddenly a House candidate
can have a half million dollars in a day,'' said Devine. ``That
may be what the House candidate was hoping to raise in a
quarter.''
This ability to produce results ensures Obama will play a
prominent role in the future.
``Win or lose, it's his list,'' McIntyre said.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Christopher Stern in Washington at
cstern3@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: April 28, 2008 00:01 EDT