Monday 12 July 2010

How the internet really affected the election from The Guardian

In today's media section of The Guardian is an interesting article by Jemima Kiss on how the internet affected the election following a report by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.
Jemima wrote...

Nic Newman, the BBC's former future media controller for journalism, spent six weeks reviewing Facebook groups, Twitter coverage and the use of social media by traditional media organisations. "This was never going to be an internet election," he says. "Social media is just another layer ... it has always been there, through discussion and networks in the pub."
Facebook dominated the media behaviour of the 18-24 age group he surveyed, with an emphatic 97% saying they used the site during the election. The same group used the web more than any other source of news – 89%, compared with 81% for TV and 59% for newspapers.

in conclusion she wrote....

"Mainstream media are largely getting it right, and recognising that this is about conversation and not broadcast," Newman says. "For politicians, this is the first election where they are really having a go and some, like John Prescott, have been authentic and posted regularly while others have been in broadcast mode, still finding their feet."
Easy to dismiss, but less easy to master – social media is yet to come of age. But its growing influence and ubiquity, particularly among younger voters, cannot be ignored. Newman cites one of the more modest estimates, by Mori, that the voting turnout of 18- to 24-year-olds increased by 7%, above the national average of 5%.
"The complications of this new reality are that 18- to 24-year-olds do enjoy big events like the TV debates, but they are not prepared to consume political messages passively," he says. "[Social media] puts more tools in the hands of audiences to make politicians and the media more accountable."

So Social Media hasn't made it yet, but this election has shown it is a way that the 18 to 24 generation are having their say, they are not prepared to be passive and absorb whatever is fed them.

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