Obama Releases iPhone App, but Why? [UPDATED]
By Michael Whitney, 10/02/2008 - 1:06pm

Today the Obama campaign announced it released the Obama '08 iPhone app, a free application for your iPhone or iPod Touch. The app is pitched as a "a great volunteering tool that lets you make a difference any time you want by talking to people you already know."

The main feature of the tool is that it organizes your contacts by state in order of electoral priority. You can then call through your social network based on how important they are to Obama winning. While I believe the app will look at any address information associated with your friends, it organizes your contacts into states based on their ZIP area codes if no address information exists.

Also included in the app are news feeds, local events (hooked into your GPS), and a directory of where Obama stands on the issues. Of course, you can also donate with the application.

It's a slick application, but is it useful 33 days from the election? The campaign seems to think it's a GOTV tool that will generate "thousands of personal contacts" up to the election.

I think the idea of an application that organizes your most personal social network - the one trapped in your phone - is a solid concept. For people with a large address book who want to call through their friends, it could be useful.

But why not connect the iPhone app with the campaign's other voter contact tools? You could tap into the GPS and find people within 50 miles of your location who you could call.

Overall, this iPhone application is a well-executed technology project that will have minimal impact in how voters are organized for November 4.

And as a contributor to and supporter of Obama, I'm disappointed campaign resources were put into this niche technology project instead of into boots on the ground.

UPDATE: I've received a flurry of tweets that this application was actually an all-volunteer effort that was later adopted by the Obama campaign.

This definitely changes my perception, and makes me feel better that the campaign didn't decide to dump money into development right before the election.

It makes me happy that 1.) volunteers created this slick application on their own, and 2.) that the Obama campaign embraced the application as their own.

So - congratulations to the volunteer developers, and kudos to the campaign for embracing volunteer efforts. I'm looking forward to seeing this kind of collaboration continue.

What do you mean why?

A few reasons:

1. Because he can.

2. He has the resources.

3. He has a record of online results that shows the bean counters that every dollar he puts into his online effort proves fruitful.

4. He'll jump to the top of every news story about tech + politics which is quite a bit -- owning the lede -- because he's now taken the game about 20x further than John McCain.

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David All
http://davidallgroup.com
http://techRepublican.com
http://slatecard.com
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Outreach to the creative class

I view this more as a work of outreach rather than of field organizing. Specifically, the campaign is targeting those hip iPhone users who (1) Have some money to donate even in this economic climate and (2) Have probably not yet been hardcore volunteers.

The call-your-contact-list tool is kind of a gateway drug to traditional phonebanking. It's easier to start out by calling people you know, and then by November you can be making GOTV calls to strangers across the country.

The iPhone app also exploits the creative class's "bright, shiny thing" syndrome, where we love to play with new, cool stuff. If that gains them some extra donations and extra visits to their local field offices, then it was well worth it.

even if this had cost them $$

It would have been so worth it perception-wise. Seemingly little things like this go into the hopper of what people perceive about a campaign and the candidate behind it. Field is exactly the same way: the CW is that you can only get 3-5% out of even an awesome field campaign, but the perception cost to not having a field presence is much higher.

And as you point out, this is really the first app to effectively unlock the contact-list social network and put it to some use. That's not a trivial milestone.



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