Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Outspent Tories In 2015 Vote, Outflanked Rivals With Digital Outreach

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jun, 2016 11:44 AM
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau's Liberal party spent just over $43 million to win last fall's federal election — $1.2 million more than Stephen Harper's Conservatives.
     
    That the third party outspent the governing party — which changed election rules and called an extended campaign in an apparent bid to give the deep-pocketed Conservatives a financial edge over its competitors — surprised even Liberals.
     
    But Liberals say they believe it's how the two main parties spent their money, not how much, that made the difference between winning and losing.
     
    The Liberals spent more than four times as much as the Tories on digital advertising and digital voter contact.
     
    But they spent less than one-fifth of what the Conservatives spent on voter contact calling services — a tool the Tories used to great effect in previous campaigns but which Liberal strategists say is now an "archaic" and ineffective way of reaching voters.
     
    The eye-popping spending by the various parties during the marathon 78-day campaign is disclosed in campaign financial reports filed with Elections Canada.
     
    "When we heard we had a 78-day campaign ... and we knew the budgets the Conservatives were working with, we had to ask ourselves, 'How are we going to innovate; how are we going to do this so that we can do things quicker, cheaper, easier, better?'" said Tom Pitfield, the Liberals' chief digital strategist for the campaign.
     
    "And digital had the greatest ROI (return on investment) ... We focused on it as a strategic advantage."
     
    The financial reports show the Liberals and Conservatives spent similar amounts on traditional television and radio ads: $18.9 million and $17.3 million respectively. Those ads were the single biggest expenditure for both campaigns.
     
    But the Liberals also spent $8.8 million on "other" advertising, what Pitfield said was mostly digital advertising and digital voter contact. The Conservatives spent just less than $2 million on other advertising.
     
     
    The Tories, meanwhile, shelled out $5.1 million on call centres whereas the Liberals spent just $436,000.
     
    "To contact someone offline ... is an extremely inefficient way of trying to reach people," said Pitfield.
     
    "I think it's largely ineffective. Different campaigners think different things, but my view is it's archaic."
     
    Pitfield reckons the Liberals reached 18 million Canadians — more than half the population —  through their online campaign, using Facebook, Google and YouTube not just to advertise but to engage voters in a two-way conversation, figure out their motivations and identify the issues that engaged them the most.
     
    By contrast, he said, "I think the Conservatives focused on ... the old way of doing campaigns," conducting focus groups to find messages that would resonate and then "carpet-bombing" the airwaves and telephone lines.
     
    The problem with that traditional approach is that 25 per cent of Canadians now have only cellphones and 42 per cent of them don't watch television, he added.
     
    "So, if you're not on digital, you're pretty much marginalizing a quarter to a third of your vote."
     
    The digital campaign was particularly helpful in reaching young voters, who turned out in record numbers last fall and are thought to have ensured Trudeau's majority victory. But the youth were also instrumental in helping the Liberals reach a wider audience.
     
     
    "If you want to reach people, the best way to do it is to reach out to young people because they really do share content," Pitfield said.
     
    "They'll go and tell their mother or their brother or their sister, you know, 'Check this out, you've really got to see this.'"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Record-Setting Wooden Building To Be Erected In UBC

    Record-Setting Wooden Building To Be Erected In UBC
    The construction of a record-setting 53-metre high tower building, using mostly wooden material, is under way on the campus of the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada's Vancouver city.

    Record-Setting Wooden Building To Be Erected In UBC

    Canada 'Border Security' TV Show Canned After Federal Watchdog Finds Privacy Violation

    Canada 'Border Security' TV Show Canned After Federal Watchdog Finds Privacy Violation
    OTTAWA — Canada's border agency is pulling the plug on the controversial reality TV program "Border Security" after the federal privacy commissioner found the agency violated the rights of a construction worker filmed during a raid in Vancouver.

    Canada 'Border Security' TV Show Canned After Federal Watchdog Finds Privacy Violation

    Mistakes Cost Canada Again As Japan Grabs 26-22 Victory In Men's Rugby

    Mistakes Cost Canada Again As Japan Grabs 26-22 Victory In Men's Rugby
    VANCOUVER — Mark Anscombe saw some of the same issues that plagued his predecessor bubble to the surface in his debut as head coach of the Canadian men's rugby team.

    Mistakes Cost Canada Again As Japan Grabs 26-22 Victory In Men's Rugby

    Drugs For Physician-Assisted Death: What Will They Cost And Who Will Pay?

    Drugs For Physician-Assisted Death: What Will They Cost And Who Will Pay?
    With medically assisted death now legal in Canada, doctors need access to specific drugs that will painlessly and humanely terminate a suffering patient's life.

    Drugs For Physician-Assisted Death: What Will They Cost And Who Will Pay?

    Spotlight Of Olympic Games Blinds MPs To Questions On Sexual Harassment

    Spotlight Of Olympic Games Blinds MPs To Questions On Sexual Harassment
    Women first accused Canadian Olympic Committee president Marcel Aubut of sexual harassment last October and he was forced to resign, although he has not faced any charges.

    Spotlight Of Olympic Games Blinds MPs To Questions On Sexual Harassment

    B.C. Advocate Says Diabetic Teen Case Shows Welfare System Failing At-risk Kids

    B.C. Advocate Says Diabetic Teen Case Shows Welfare System Failing At-risk Kids
    CALGARY — British Columbia's child advocate says the death of a diabetic teen in Alberta demonstrates gaping cracks in interprovincial child welfare  that put kids at risk.

    B.C. Advocate Says Diabetic Teen Case Shows Welfare System Failing At-risk Kids