Crowdsourcing the Election – Vibewire and YouTube Combine with electionWIRE to Show How it’s Done

The Australian Election for 2010 has, thus far, been a fairly lack lustre affair. The politicians have kept to tightly scripted, rehearsed announcements designed to appeal to minutely targeted swinging voters in marginal electorates. It’s policy without vision and politics without conviction. And it’s largely why non-issues such as the “real Julia Gillard” and the deposing of former Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, have generated broad coverage.

Interestingly, given the success of the grass roots, social media activation of the David Cameron and Obama campaigns, the local strategists have largely ignored social media – and the web in almost all its incarnations. As Stephen Collins suggests, it’s not the social media election we were looking for.

But one of the more interesting efforts around the election is coming from an unexpected quarter. Vibewire, the innovative, non-profit youth organisation (disclaimer: I'm a board member) have teamed up with YouTube to cover, debate and shape the political conversation over the next four weeks. They have recruited and trained young, graduate reporters from across the country and are also crowd sourcing comment and commentary through a dedicated electionWIRE channel. Back at the “Vibewire Hub” an editorial team is managing, vetting and promoting the coverage as it comes to hand.

Anyone can get involved. You can submit a video or suggest a story. And judging by the quality of the coverage and perspective already coming through, it seems that Vibewire’s mandate to showcase the skills and expertise of young media professionals is more than delivering for reporters such as Megan Weymes and Elise Worthington, it’s providing insight and new perspectives on an otherwise dull election. Be sure to check it out! 

Five Must-Read Posts from Last Week

This week it’s an all-Australian must-read list.

  1. Craig Wilson declares that Masterchef is the future of TV advertising, providing seven reasons to back up his case. And while I am about the only person in Australia to have no interest in the show, the ratings prove out its popularity and therefore its attractiveness to advertisers. But reality TV goes stale very quickly – it will be interesting to see how long the programming chefs can keep it fresh.
  2. Publishers rarely get insight into the reasoning behind a strategy – they simply see the execution and are expected to deliver. This week, Ben Shepherd asks why are you using digital and suggests that a little more transparency could yield better results.
  3. I have never been a fan of automated sentiment analysis, so Mandi Bateson’s Analysis of Sentiment Analysis strikes a chord with me. I particularly like the quote from Avinash Kaushik – “Most solutions stink. Not just stink… dinosaur’s breath after a meal stink.”
  4. I love the way that Gordon Whitehead continues to stir-up conversation in his local area. His Lunaticks Society of Newcastle efforts have surfaced an online population that is more than willing
  5. Zoe Scaman quotes Nicholas Carr – and suggests that the ready availability of information is giving us the illusion of knowledge. With a few keystrokes we can get the answer to almost any question – but does this mean we actually KNOW the answer. And could we take responsibility for our actions based on that information? There’s an important distinction.