To successfully assist your candidates in measuring voter opinion and developing effectual messages in order to successfully communicate with voters in the most impactful manner.
Integrating Social Media into Public Involvement Strategies - Transportation ...Steve Radick
My Integrating Social Media into Public Involvement Strategies session presentation from the Transportation Research Board's Annual Meeting from 1/10/10.
An introduction-level guide on social listening. This class will take you through the a) three elements of social listening; b) the four "action checklist" items to find out what sort of action to take after a social listening activity; and c) what it takes to make social listening work for you and your business.
Please share on Twitter, LinkedIn, and/or Facebook if you found it useful! Free to use, with attribution for non-commercial purposes, no derivatives permitted.
Integrating Social Media into Public Involvement Strategies - Transportation ...Steve Radick
My Integrating Social Media into Public Involvement Strategies session presentation from the Transportation Research Board's Annual Meeting from 1/10/10.
An introduction-level guide on social listening. This class will take you through the a) three elements of social listening; b) the four "action checklist" items to find out what sort of action to take after a social listening activity; and c) what it takes to make social listening work for you and your business.
Please share on Twitter, LinkedIn, and/or Facebook if you found it useful! Free to use, with attribution for non-commercial purposes, no derivatives permitted.
White Paper from Campaign Sciences, helping to explain how we help our clients win. Campaign Sciences is the only Analytics firm exclusively serving conservative Republican candidates and organizations
What do you mean by advocacy? Discuss the importance and types of advocacy. ...Md. Sajjat Hossain
What do you mean by advocacy? Discuss the importance and types of
advocacy. Write the steps of an advocacy plan. What are the tools of
advocacy?
Introduction
People advocate for a large number and variety of topics. Some of these are clear-
cut social issues that are universally agreed to be problematic and worth solving,
such as human trafficking. Advocacy can include many activities that a person or
organization undertakes including media campaigns, public speaking,
commissioning and publishing research. Lobbying (often by lobby groups) is a
form of advocacy where a direct approach is made to legislators on a specific issue
or specific piece of legislation.
Advocacy
Generally we can say that Advocacy is an activity by an individual or group that
aims to influence decisions within political, economic, and social systems and
institutions.
Ritu R. Sharma from the Academy for Educational Development describes
advocacy as a tool for “putting a problem on the agenda, providing a solution to
that problem and building support for acting on both the problem and the solution”.
[https://www.culturepartnership.eu/en/publishing/advocacy-course/what-is-
advocacy]
So Advocacy means taking action to create change.
Importance of advocacy
Advocacy includes many different types of activities. It has many importances. It
can mean researching new solutions, creating coalitions of like-minded people,
public campaigning to raise awareness and much more. The main importance of
advocacy is to create change. Given below some importance of advocacy:
To raise awareness
To influence and change policies
To represent individuals who may not be able to speak for themselves
1Lotus Market Research is an independent market research fieldwork agency assisting Market Research Companies, Market Research Fieldwork partners, Advisories, Consulting Firms, Outsourcing Firms, Advertising Companies and Clients. 1Lotus Research conducts primary healthcare and non healthcare across Asia Pacific and MENA Region - viz. In Asia Pacific : India, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Australia and Sri Lanka and In Middle East Region : UAE, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia, Jeddah, Riyadh, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Egypt, Philippines and Turkey
Like most businesses, political players want to increase their slice of the available market – and like most businesses, they can only do so through proper, contextual understanding.
On Election Day of 2014, Republicans won a big victory. And it really was a “Wave” victory, bigger than 2010 in a lot of important ways despite the fact that you'd never know it listening to the mainstream media.
Just because it was more or less expected doesn't make it less of a major thrashing than 2010 was.
One of the reasons it was so big and so important is that the GOP didn't win the same way everywhere. In 2010 the pattern was pretty consistent across the country.
In 2014 Republicans again won big, but it's a little more complicated how. And that's important as we look toward 2016 and beyond.
Obama thinks the election wasn't about him. Some political scientists are already trying to make hand-waving arguments that Republicans didn't win groups that exit polls show they won.
So, what should Republicans take from the 2014 Election? Here are five important lessons:
1) Obama's policies were on the ballot, as he said. But to dismiss 2014 as only about Obama is both to diminish the massive size of the Republican victory and to miss the important lessons of the election. This was a complete rejection of Democrats and liberal policies.
2) The return of working class whites (aka, Reagan Democrats, Angry White Males, Tea Party Voters) to the polls proves that 2010 was not a fluke and teaches Republicans an important lesson for 2016:
The GOP must have a nominee, and candidates up and down the ballot, who can connect with this populist voting block.
3) Despite their vaunted turnout technology, Democrats didn't fully get the Obama coalition to the polls. This raises real questions about the replicability of African American turnout without Obama at the top of the ticket.
Where Democrats did get other parts of their coalition out, the messaging required likely cost them more votes elsewhere than it earned them in turnout (e.g., Udall in Colorado).
4) The GOP has messages and candidates who can win in a diverse array of states. The message of a David Perdue in Georgia, a Greg Abbott in Texas, and a Larry Hogan in Maryland shared some basic similarities. But they were also each somewhat unique to the candidate and situation.
5) Outside of African Americans (persuading whom is going to be the work of many campaigns) 2014 proved that Republicans can win Asians nationally and can come very close to splitting Hispanics in a race with the right message and campaign.
The myth of Republicans as the white party is just that: a myth. Toward that point, the GOP must continue a robust campaign toward all demographic groups.
Energy prices are the top concern of Americans among energy issues.
A plurality of Americans (43%) believe that energy prices are the most important energy issue facing the country today. And of those, 75% say that energy prices are are too high.
Roughly one quarter of Americans believe that expanding renewable energy sources (26%) and increasing the production of natural energy sources (23%) should be our primary focus.
While only eight percent of Americans view grid security as the most important energy issue in America, this issue has not gotten extensive media attention.
A plurality of Americans believes that our energy grid is not secure against a terrorist attack.
Forty-six percent (46%) of Americans say that they don’t believe that the nation’s energy grid is secure against a terrorist attack.
While 44% do say that the grid might be secure, only one-in-ten (11%) show confidence in that, saying they think it is very secure.
The public is still coming to a consensus on this issue, only 33% have strong opinions either way.
Americans overwhelmingly believe that securing our electric grid and infrastructure is a federal issue.
Nearly half (45%) of Americans say that securing our power grid is the role of the federal government.
Only one quarter (26%) say it is the utility companies’ job and fewer (23%) say it is a state government role.
While most American’s are less willing to pay more for better service, a strong minority (40%) indicate that they would be willing to pay more despite energy prices currently being the most important issue.
White Paper from Campaign Sciences, helping to explain how we help our clients win. Campaign Sciences is the only Analytics firm exclusively serving conservative Republican candidates and organizations
What do you mean by advocacy? Discuss the importance and types of advocacy. ...Md. Sajjat Hossain
What do you mean by advocacy? Discuss the importance and types of
advocacy. Write the steps of an advocacy plan. What are the tools of
advocacy?
Introduction
People advocate for a large number and variety of topics. Some of these are clear-
cut social issues that are universally agreed to be problematic and worth solving,
such as human trafficking. Advocacy can include many activities that a person or
organization undertakes including media campaigns, public speaking,
commissioning and publishing research. Lobbying (often by lobby groups) is a
form of advocacy where a direct approach is made to legislators on a specific issue
or specific piece of legislation.
Advocacy
Generally we can say that Advocacy is an activity by an individual or group that
aims to influence decisions within political, economic, and social systems and
institutions.
Ritu R. Sharma from the Academy for Educational Development describes
advocacy as a tool for “putting a problem on the agenda, providing a solution to
that problem and building support for acting on both the problem and the solution”.
[https://www.culturepartnership.eu/en/publishing/advocacy-course/what-is-
advocacy]
So Advocacy means taking action to create change.
Importance of advocacy
Advocacy includes many different types of activities. It has many importances. It
can mean researching new solutions, creating coalitions of like-minded people,
public campaigning to raise awareness and much more. The main importance of
advocacy is to create change. Given below some importance of advocacy:
To raise awareness
To influence and change policies
To represent individuals who may not be able to speak for themselves
1Lotus Market Research is an independent market research fieldwork agency assisting Market Research Companies, Market Research Fieldwork partners, Advisories, Consulting Firms, Outsourcing Firms, Advertising Companies and Clients. 1Lotus Research conducts primary healthcare and non healthcare across Asia Pacific and MENA Region - viz. In Asia Pacific : India, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Japan, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Australia and Sri Lanka and In Middle East Region : UAE, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia, Jeddah, Riyadh, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Egypt, Philippines and Turkey
Like most businesses, political players want to increase their slice of the available market – and like most businesses, they can only do so through proper, contextual understanding.
On Election Day of 2014, Republicans won a big victory. And it really was a “Wave” victory, bigger than 2010 in a lot of important ways despite the fact that you'd never know it listening to the mainstream media.
Just because it was more or less expected doesn't make it less of a major thrashing than 2010 was.
One of the reasons it was so big and so important is that the GOP didn't win the same way everywhere. In 2010 the pattern was pretty consistent across the country.
In 2014 Republicans again won big, but it's a little more complicated how. And that's important as we look toward 2016 and beyond.
Obama thinks the election wasn't about him. Some political scientists are already trying to make hand-waving arguments that Republicans didn't win groups that exit polls show they won.
So, what should Republicans take from the 2014 Election? Here are five important lessons:
1) Obama's policies were on the ballot, as he said. But to dismiss 2014 as only about Obama is both to diminish the massive size of the Republican victory and to miss the important lessons of the election. This was a complete rejection of Democrats and liberal policies.
2) The return of working class whites (aka, Reagan Democrats, Angry White Males, Tea Party Voters) to the polls proves that 2010 was not a fluke and teaches Republicans an important lesson for 2016:
The GOP must have a nominee, and candidates up and down the ballot, who can connect with this populist voting block.
3) Despite their vaunted turnout technology, Democrats didn't fully get the Obama coalition to the polls. This raises real questions about the replicability of African American turnout without Obama at the top of the ticket.
Where Democrats did get other parts of their coalition out, the messaging required likely cost them more votes elsewhere than it earned them in turnout (e.g., Udall in Colorado).
4) The GOP has messages and candidates who can win in a diverse array of states. The message of a David Perdue in Georgia, a Greg Abbott in Texas, and a Larry Hogan in Maryland shared some basic similarities. But they were also each somewhat unique to the candidate and situation.
5) Outside of African Americans (persuading whom is going to be the work of many campaigns) 2014 proved that Republicans can win Asians nationally and can come very close to splitting Hispanics in a race with the right message and campaign.
The myth of Republicans as the white party is just that: a myth. Toward that point, the GOP must continue a robust campaign toward all demographic groups.
Energy prices are the top concern of Americans among energy issues.
A plurality of Americans (43%) believe that energy prices are the most important energy issue facing the country today. And of those, 75% say that energy prices are are too high.
Roughly one quarter of Americans believe that expanding renewable energy sources (26%) and increasing the production of natural energy sources (23%) should be our primary focus.
While only eight percent of Americans view grid security as the most important energy issue in America, this issue has not gotten extensive media attention.
A plurality of Americans believes that our energy grid is not secure against a terrorist attack.
Forty-six percent (46%) of Americans say that they don’t believe that the nation’s energy grid is secure against a terrorist attack.
While 44% do say that the grid might be secure, only one-in-ten (11%) show confidence in that, saying they think it is very secure.
The public is still coming to a consensus on this issue, only 33% have strong opinions either way.
Americans overwhelmingly believe that securing our electric grid and infrastructure is a federal issue.
Nearly half (45%) of Americans say that securing our power grid is the role of the federal government.
Only one quarter (26%) say it is the utility companies’ job and fewer (23%) say it is a state government role.
While most American’s are less willing to pay more for better service, a strong minority (40%) indicate that they would be willing to pay more despite energy prices currently being the most important issue.
Camapign Sciences is the analytics arm of Wilson Perkins Allen Opinion Research. This deck is our attempt to explain what we do, how we do it and how our clients use it.
Social Media Report Example--Cong. Ann Wagner(R-MO) Case StudyWPA Intelligence
This is a sample of WPA's social media monitoring run for Congresswoman Ann Wagner (R-MO). This analysis runs from February 13 to March 15 and is updated every week. Some of the major events captured in the window we used for this analysis included the VAWA vote, an op-ed on sequestration, and CPAC.
A quick description of the analysis -
• Activity - the total number of Tweets about you on a daily basis.
• Exposure - the number of unique users that saw posts about you in their news feeds through posts and re-posts.
• Discovery - provides insight into the other topics discussed by those who posted about you.
• Experts - based on followers and number of Tweets/re-Tweets, this metric identifies the key players in the social media discussion.
• Top Results - the most shared or highly visible Tweets in the sample period, both positive and negative.
• Top Results Photos and Videos - simply the most shared pictures and videos by users who discussed you in this time period.
• Sentiment - WPA pulls out the top Tweets (those that were shared or included a link) about you and codes them into useful categories to put the social conversation into context. We have created four categories - your own tweets, positive, neutral, and negative.
WPA Social Media Monitoring Capabilities and PricingWPA Intelligence
Social media has become an integral part of engagement with voters and constituents. Regular monitoring of social media communications allows you to take advantage of breaking news to maximize outreach and exposure, watch the progress of social mediastrategies on both an individual and global level, and fix image problems before they develop.
WPA can perform detailed analysis of your social media presence and activity on Twitter.Using real time and historic analysis we can track the impact of press releases, news events, and social media campaigns.
Most research companies rely on voters to guess at what motivates them.
What we know about how human beings evaluate information, make choices, and respond to survey questions tells us that the traditional approach to message testing—askingto judge which people how effective message would be—is not reliable. The problem: voters (or people in general) just aren’t good at understanding the reasons they do things.
Message Mapping is the only research technique proven to solve this problem. If you're relying on traditional message testing (more/less likely or vote for/against scales), you might as well be guessing. They don't work.
Ministries and their consultants have invested heavily over the past decade or more in message development for fundraising appeals and in testing mail and e-mail concepts to determine which are likely to yield the greatest returns in each specific appeal transaction. While this has been successful, in the most recent economic downturn many ministries struggled to maintain levels of support even with well-tested appeals. Our work on behalf of several of these ministries suggests that one reason for this decline in support is that they had cultivated a group of donors who were characterized by high levels of transactional response but low levels of overall engagement with the ministry.
In this analysis we explore patterns of engagement that we commonly see between donors and our ministry clients and share new tools for building and monitoring effective and sustainable engagement.
El Puerto de Algeciras continúa un año más como el más eficiente del continente europeo y vuelve a situarse en el “top ten” mundial, según el informe The Container Port Performance Index 2023 (CPPI), elaborado por el Banco Mundial y la consultora S&P Global.
El informe CPPI utiliza dos enfoques metodológicos diferentes para calcular la clasificación del índice: uno administrativo o técnico y otro estadístico, basado en análisis factorial (FA). Según los autores, esta dualidad pretende asegurar una clasificación que refleje con precisión el rendimiento real del puerto, a la vez que sea estadísticamente sólida. En esta edición del informe CPPI 2023, se han empleado los mismos enfoques metodológicos y se ha aplicado un método de agregación de clasificaciones para combinar los resultados de ambos enfoques y obtener una clasificación agregada.
01062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
An astonishing, first-of-its-kind, report by the NYT assessing damage in Ukraine. Even if the war ends tomorrow, in many places there will be nothing to go back to.
03062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
‘वोटर्स विल मस्ट प्रीवेल’ (मतदाताओं को जीतना होगा) अभियान द्वारा जारी हेल्पलाइन नंबर, 4 जून को सुबह 7 बजे से दोपहर 12 बजे तक मतगणना प्रक्रिया में कहीं भी किसी भी तरह के उल्लंघन की रिपोर्ट करने के लिए खुला रहेगा।
Here is Gabe Whitley's response to my defamation lawsuit for him calling me a rapist and perjurer in court documents.
You have to read it to believe it, but after you read it, you won't believe it. And I included eight examples of defamatory statements/
31052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
04062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper