The document discusses youth voter engagement and trends in the 2010 UK general election. It notes declining youth voter turnout between 2001 and 2005. Social media emerged as a factor, with over 150,000 tweets about the third leaders' debate and the Liberal Democrats gaining more Facebook fans than Labour. Surveys suggested Generation Y support for the Liberal Democrats and Nick Clegg could help produce a hung parliament outcome. However, youth voting intentions remained uncertain as young voters wanted change and might vote strategically.
This document discusses Generation Y voters and their potential influence on the 2010 UK general election. Younger voters have become less engaged over time, with fewer voting in recent elections. However, social media has grown in importance and groups supporting different parties have large followings online. The document also notes that voter registration among 18-24 year olds surged in response to campaigns on Facebook. Overall, younger voters appear disenchanted with Labour and open to supporting other parties like the Liberal Democrats.
This document discusses Generation Y voters and their potential influence on the 2010 UK general election. Younger voters have become less engaged over time, with fewer voting in recent elections. However, social media has grown in importance and groups supporting different parties have large followings online. The document also notes that voter registration among 18-24 year olds surged in response to campaigns on Facebook. Overall, younger voters appear disenchanted with Labour and could support the Liberal Democrats or vote strategically, but their impact on the election outcome remains uncertain.
Period 3 Michael Murtaugh The Negative Effects of Technology on Teenagersmrsalcido
The document discusses the negative effects of technology on teenagers. It notes that most teenagers have access to and regularly use cell phones, video games, computers, and the internet. Too much use of these technologies can negatively impact teenagers' health, social lives, and behaviors. Specifically, excessive video game and social media use has been linked to obesity, while sexting and interacting with strangers online raises risks of legal issues and sexual exploitation. The document questions whether the benefits of these technologies outweigh the potential downsides for teenage users.
Teniel And Courtney S Slid Show On PaparoaRoom6hhs
Paparoa National Park is located on New Zealand's West Coast between the towns of Westport and Greymouth. It is a small park at 30,000 hectares but contains diverse landscapes and wildlife. Features include beautiful forests, limestone cliffs and canyons, blowholes, caves, underground streams, and animals like kiwi, tui, and parakeets. Popular activities include walking trails like the Pancake Rocks Walk and Blowholes Walk, canoeing, caving, fishing, and surfing. One of the landmarks is the Pancake Rocks, formed 30 million years ago, near the famous blowholes that shoot jets of water when the tide rises.
- Nelson Lakes National Park in New Zealand's South Island contains Lakes Rotoiti and Rotoroa, which were formed when the Maori chief Rakaihaitu dug holes with his ko.
- The park protects native wildlife and offers opportunities for hiking, boating, fishing, and climbing. Popular activities include the Travers-Sabine Circuit and the hike to Lake Angelus.
- Located in the northern Southern Alps, the park was carved by glaciers and features beech forests, lakeshores, and alpine scenery that attract visitors throughout summer.
Pucca é uma garota de 12 anos que vive na vila de Sooga. Ela está apaixonada por Garu, um jovem ninja treinado que tenta evitá-la. Apesar disso, Pucca o persegue constantemente com beijos e abraços, tentando conquistar seu coração.
This slide is a comparison between version 1.2, 1.3 and 1.3 with flat catalog from the famous Magento E-Commerce solution.
The benchmarks also include a comparison with and without Zend Server, Community and commercial Edition.
This document discusses Generation Y voters and their potential influence on the 2010 UK general election. Younger voters have become less engaged over time, with fewer voting in recent elections. However, social media has grown in importance and groups supporting different parties have large followings online. The document also notes that voter registration among 18-24 year olds surged in response to campaigns on Facebook. Overall, younger voters appear disenchanted with Labour and open to supporting other parties like the Liberal Democrats.
This document discusses Generation Y voters and their potential influence on the 2010 UK general election. Younger voters have become less engaged over time, with fewer voting in recent elections. However, social media has grown in importance and groups supporting different parties have large followings online. The document also notes that voter registration among 18-24 year olds surged in response to campaigns on Facebook. Overall, younger voters appear disenchanted with Labour and could support the Liberal Democrats or vote strategically, but their impact on the election outcome remains uncertain.
Period 3 Michael Murtaugh The Negative Effects of Technology on Teenagersmrsalcido
The document discusses the negative effects of technology on teenagers. It notes that most teenagers have access to and regularly use cell phones, video games, computers, and the internet. Too much use of these technologies can negatively impact teenagers' health, social lives, and behaviors. Specifically, excessive video game and social media use has been linked to obesity, while sexting and interacting with strangers online raises risks of legal issues and sexual exploitation. The document questions whether the benefits of these technologies outweigh the potential downsides for teenage users.
Teniel And Courtney S Slid Show On PaparoaRoom6hhs
Paparoa National Park is located on New Zealand's West Coast between the towns of Westport and Greymouth. It is a small park at 30,000 hectares but contains diverse landscapes and wildlife. Features include beautiful forests, limestone cliffs and canyons, blowholes, caves, underground streams, and animals like kiwi, tui, and parakeets. Popular activities include walking trails like the Pancake Rocks Walk and Blowholes Walk, canoeing, caving, fishing, and surfing. One of the landmarks is the Pancake Rocks, formed 30 million years ago, near the famous blowholes that shoot jets of water when the tide rises.
- Nelson Lakes National Park in New Zealand's South Island contains Lakes Rotoiti and Rotoroa, which were formed when the Maori chief Rakaihaitu dug holes with his ko.
- The park protects native wildlife and offers opportunities for hiking, boating, fishing, and climbing. Popular activities include the Travers-Sabine Circuit and the hike to Lake Angelus.
- Located in the northern Southern Alps, the park was carved by glaciers and features beech forests, lakeshores, and alpine scenery that attract visitors throughout summer.
Pucca é uma garota de 12 anos que vive na vila de Sooga. Ela está apaixonada por Garu, um jovem ninja treinado que tenta evitá-la. Apesar disso, Pucca o persegue constantemente com beijos e abraços, tentando conquistar seu coração.
This slide is a comparison between version 1.2, 1.3 and 1.3 with flat catalog from the famous Magento E-Commerce solution.
The benchmarks also include a comparison with and without Zend Server, Community and commercial Edition.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election and the campaign strategies used. It describes the aims of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates like David Cameron, Nick Clegg, and Gordon Brown. The target audience was adults. Methods used in the campaign included websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and which cities had voted, and posters attempting to persuade people not to vote for certain candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election and the campaign strategies used to engage voters. It describes the aims of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for particular candidates. The target audience was adults, and methods used in the campaign included websites providing candidate information and videos reporting on election results. Posters were also used to criticize opposing candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election campaign. It describes the campaign's goals of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates (David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Gordon Brown). It discusses targeting the campaign at adults since only adults can vote. It outlines techniques used in the campaign, including websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and highlights, and posters criticizing opposing candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election campaign. It describes the campaign's goals of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates (David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Gordon Brown). It discusses targeting the campaign at adults since only adults can vote. It outlines techniques used in the campaign, including websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and highlights, and posters criticizing opposing candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election campaign. It describes the campaign's goals of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates (David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Gordon Brown). It discusses targeting the campaign at adults since only adults can vote. It outlines techniques used in the campaign, including websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and leading parties, and posters criticizing opposing candidates.
The document summarizes a study on the impact of social media platforms Twitter and Facebook on the 2015 UK General Election. It utilized a mixed-methods approach including an online survey of 52 participants and interviews. The survey found that most respondents were female, between 16-18 years old, and lived in urban areas of England. Qualitative interviews explored how and why social media may have influenced peoples' votes. The study aimed to understand if social media was a major factor in political campaigns and if any voting patterns emerged in relation to these platforms.
Social class is no longer the dominant factor in shaping political attitudes and voting behavior. While some residual class loyalty remains, factors like personality, policy issues, media influence, and regional differences now play a larger role in how people vote. Voters are also more volatile and willing to change their party alignments. With more floating voters, political parties must now appeal to a wider range of demographic groups and policy priorities to attract votes.
This document provides an overview of social media and its implications for business. It discusses key statistics about major social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter. It explains how social media has led to a social internet revolution with user-generated content and the power of crowds. The document also discusses why businesses should engage with social media for visibility, market research, and building trust. It provides examples of companies using social media creatively and outlines some risks if social media engagement goes wrong, such as the spread of misinformation.
Fine Gael's digital strategy was key to their success in the 2011 Irish elections. They created a 'Digital Task Force' and completely overhauled their website, engaging over 40,000 users to provide feedback. Fine Gael used social media aggressively, growing their YouTube channel over 3,000% in 4 weeks. On election day, Fine Gael won a record 76 seats. The case study demonstrates that embracing e-democracy tools, including social media and new technologies, can significantly impact an election outcome. Other parties would be wise to learn from Fine Gael's innovative digital approach.
Pew Research: 2012 US Election Campaign News Source SurveyBrian Crotty
Twitter, Facebook Play Very Modest Roles
Cable Leads the Pack as Campaign News Source. With a contested primary in only one party this year, fewer Americans are closely following news about the presidential campaign than four years ago. As a consequence, long-term declines in the number of people getting campaign news from such sources as local TV and network news have steepened, and even the number gathering campaign news online, which had nearly tripled between 2000 and 2008, has leveled off in 2012.
Political communication, digital and Y generationLéa Bellaïche
Our society is changing. The social gap between older and younger generations is growing faster. How does the political institutions has changed their way to communicate with Internet, especially through social media ? And what are the implication and motivation of the young generation ?
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to cheaply reach and engage with voters in real-time. Barack Obama mastered the use of platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr during his successful 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns. He used these channels to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and rally voters. New tools are emerging that allow campaigns to better understand voter sentiment through social media analytics and polling.
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to engage voters inexpensively and in real time. Barack Obama mastered social media in his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, using platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and rally voters. Looking forward, social media will continue to evolve how politicians and the public communicate and influence the political process.
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to engage voters inexpensively and in real time. Barack Obama mastered social media in his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, using platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and rally voters. Looking forward, social media will continue to evolve how politicians and the public communicate and influence the political process.
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to cheaply reach and engage with voters in real-time. Barack Obama mastered social media in his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, using platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and encourage interaction with over 24 million Facebook likes and over 11 million Twitter followers. Looking forward, social media will continue to evolve how politicians and voters communicate and influence the political process.
The document discusses political participation and voter turnout in the United States. It provides data showing that roughly half of nonvoters are registered to vote but do not vote, and the top three reasons registered nonvoters give for not voting are being too busy, having family obligations, and believing their vote will not make a difference. The document also discusses arguments for and against a proposed bill that would make Election Day a national holiday and fine citizens who do not vote.
Social Media in a Corporate Context 2010 - Ben Lloyd, Echo ResearchCommunicate Magazine
Digital democracy - It’s not just television debates and the rise of the LibDems that has made this election different. The extent to which social media has played a part in campaigning can be debated, but there can be no denying that the landscape is very different from 2005. Echo Research will be sharing some major new research on influence, media consumption habits and how the three main parties are fairing in the social media space.
The document describes a study conducted by The California Group on the impact of online political advertisements in Florida's 11th Congressional District during the 2010 election. The study found that 14 million impressions of a negative online ad targeting the Democratic incumbent, Kathy Castor, over the final 8 days of the campaign led 4% of those who recalled the ad to change their vote in favor of the Republican challenger. The ad was also highly effective at targeting specific demographic groups, particularly Republican men.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election and the campaign strategies used. It describes the aims of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates like David Cameron, Nick Clegg, and Gordon Brown. The target audience was adults. Methods used in the campaign included websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and which cities had voted, and posters attempting to persuade people not to vote for certain candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election and the campaign strategies used to engage voters. It describes the aims of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for particular candidates. The target audience was adults, and methods used in the campaign included websites providing candidate information and videos reporting on election results. Posters were also used to criticize opposing candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election campaign. It describes the campaign's goals of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates (David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Gordon Brown). It discusses targeting the campaign at adults since only adults can vote. It outlines techniques used in the campaign, including websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and highlights, and posters criticizing opposing candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election campaign. It describes the campaign's goals of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates (David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Gordon Brown). It discusses targeting the campaign at adults since only adults can vote. It outlines techniques used in the campaign, including websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and highlights, and posters criticizing opposing candidates.
The document discusses a 2010 UK general election campaign. It describes the campaign's goals of getting people to vote and persuading them to vote for specific candidates (David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Gordon Brown). It discusses targeting the campaign at adults since only adults can vote. It outlines techniques used in the campaign, including websites providing information on each candidate, videos reporting on election results and leading parties, and posters criticizing opposing candidates.
The document summarizes a study on the impact of social media platforms Twitter and Facebook on the 2015 UK General Election. It utilized a mixed-methods approach including an online survey of 52 participants and interviews. The survey found that most respondents were female, between 16-18 years old, and lived in urban areas of England. Qualitative interviews explored how and why social media may have influenced peoples' votes. The study aimed to understand if social media was a major factor in political campaigns and if any voting patterns emerged in relation to these platforms.
Social class is no longer the dominant factor in shaping political attitudes and voting behavior. While some residual class loyalty remains, factors like personality, policy issues, media influence, and regional differences now play a larger role in how people vote. Voters are also more volatile and willing to change their party alignments. With more floating voters, political parties must now appeal to a wider range of demographic groups and policy priorities to attract votes.
This document provides an overview of social media and its implications for business. It discusses key statistics about major social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter. It explains how social media has led to a social internet revolution with user-generated content and the power of crowds. The document also discusses why businesses should engage with social media for visibility, market research, and building trust. It provides examples of companies using social media creatively and outlines some risks if social media engagement goes wrong, such as the spread of misinformation.
Fine Gael's digital strategy was key to their success in the 2011 Irish elections. They created a 'Digital Task Force' and completely overhauled their website, engaging over 40,000 users to provide feedback. Fine Gael used social media aggressively, growing their YouTube channel over 3,000% in 4 weeks. On election day, Fine Gael won a record 76 seats. The case study demonstrates that embracing e-democracy tools, including social media and new technologies, can significantly impact an election outcome. Other parties would be wise to learn from Fine Gael's innovative digital approach.
Pew Research: 2012 US Election Campaign News Source SurveyBrian Crotty
Twitter, Facebook Play Very Modest Roles
Cable Leads the Pack as Campaign News Source. With a contested primary in only one party this year, fewer Americans are closely following news about the presidential campaign than four years ago. As a consequence, long-term declines in the number of people getting campaign news from such sources as local TV and network news have steepened, and even the number gathering campaign news online, which had nearly tripled between 2000 and 2008, has leveled off in 2012.
Political communication, digital and Y generationLéa Bellaïche
Our society is changing. The social gap between older and younger generations is growing faster. How does the political institutions has changed their way to communicate with Internet, especially through social media ? And what are the implication and motivation of the young generation ?
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to cheaply reach and engage with voters in real-time. Barack Obama mastered the use of platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr during his successful 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns. He used these channels to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and rally voters. New tools are emerging that allow campaigns to better understand voter sentiment through social media analytics and polling.
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to engage voters inexpensively and in real time. Barack Obama mastered social media in his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, using platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and rally voters. Looking forward, social media will continue to evolve how politicians and the public communicate and influence the political process.
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to engage voters inexpensively and in real time. Barack Obama mastered social media in his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, using platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and rally voters. Looking forward, social media will continue to evolve how politicians and the public communicate and influence the political process.
Social media has become an important tool for political campaigns by allowing them to cheaply reach and engage with voters in real-time. Barack Obama mastered social media in his 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, using platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube to cultivate grassroots support, fundraise, advertise, and encourage interaction with over 24 million Facebook likes and over 11 million Twitter followers. Looking forward, social media will continue to evolve how politicians and voters communicate and influence the political process.
The document discusses political participation and voter turnout in the United States. It provides data showing that roughly half of nonvoters are registered to vote but do not vote, and the top three reasons registered nonvoters give for not voting are being too busy, having family obligations, and believing their vote will not make a difference. The document also discusses arguments for and against a proposed bill that would make Election Day a national holiday and fine citizens who do not vote.
Social Media in a Corporate Context 2010 - Ben Lloyd, Echo ResearchCommunicate Magazine
Digital democracy - It’s not just television debates and the rise of the LibDems that has made this election different. The extent to which social media has played a part in campaigning can be debated, but there can be no denying that the landscape is very different from 2005. Echo Research will be sharing some major new research on influence, media consumption habits and how the three main parties are fairing in the social media space.
The document describes a study conducted by The California Group on the impact of online political advertisements in Florida's 11th Congressional District during the 2010 election. The study found that 14 million impressions of a negative online ad targeting the Democratic incumbent, Kathy Castor, over the final 8 days of the campaign led 4% of those who recalled the ad to change their vote in favor of the Republican challenger. The ad was also highly effective at targeting specific demographic groups, particularly Republican men.