Pros and Cons of Candidate Communication Mediums

by The Campaign Workshop

logo

What candidate communication is right for you?

Candidate campaigns have a number of options when it comes to their communications mediums. Which communication medium a campaign chooses depends largely on their strategic objectives, targets, and, of course, budget. Below is a very general overview of the most common modern candidate campaign communication mediums and their pros and cons.

Direct mail

Direct mail is a tried and true method of reaching voters. One of the chief advantages of direct mail is that it is scalable to a variety of budgets. With modern data targeting techniques, direct mail is also a very precise medium. You can often send mail to the specific type of voters that you would like target.

One con of direct mail is the fact that it does not inherently come with a captive audience. This means you have to work to get your piece to stand out from all the other mail coming to an address. Further, while there are ways to track engagement (BRM cards, phone call follow-ups, etc.), direct mail does not offer the metrics and reporting that, say, digital advertising has.

Radio

Standard terrestrial radio is another fairly traditional method of candidate communication. A few of the pros of radio are that fact that it can play to a captive audience (those at work, in their car, etc.) and it is reasonably priced (both in production and for the cost of airtime).

One notable con of traditional radio is that there is no real ability to target whom receives your ad, as it is distributed as far and wide as the signal will travel. Also, there are no means of tracking conversions, so you will rarely be able to accurately determine whether your radio campaign was effective.

Print Ads

Like radio and direct mail, print ads have long been a part of the candidate communication scene. Print ads share many of the same traits as radio, in that they have the benefit of potentially reaching a wide audience (depending on the publication).

Like radio, however, one of the significant cons of print advertising is the fact that they offer little in the way of tracking conversions or potential message testing.

Television

Television is another very common communication medium for candidate campaigns. There are a few pretty clear pros: it has the opportunity to play to a captive audience, offers the opportunity to engage people with both sight and sound, and can play to a large sized audience.

The cons of television are just as clear. TV media markets are often quite large and television currently offers only limited targeting technology. Thus, it’s possible that at least some of the people who see your ad will be outside your district, which is a waste of money. Television also tends to be the most expensive of all the major candidate communication mediums.

Digital Ads

Finally, digital advertising, while much newer than the previous mediums, is now an often-used candidate communication medium. There are many pros to digital advertising. It is perhaps the most scalable medium in terms of budget, as one can spend almost any amount on a digital campaign. It also offers very precise levels of targeting sophistication and very detailed reporting and metrics to demonstrate an ads effectiveness, often in real-time.

Cons include the fact that digital ads will sometimes have limited copy space and thus offer limited opportunity within the ad itself to expand on issues and topics. Another potential con is the fact that some users may have become accustomed to ignoring digital ads, making it all that more important that your ads are unique and stand out.