8 Lessons On Engaging Digital Content From The White House

Proof that great con­tent and dig­i­tal expe­ri­ences can start gen­uine con­ver­sa­tions with con­sumers.

Lisa Lacy By Lisa Lacy. Join the discussion » 0 comments

In order to cre­ate an engag­ing dig­i­tal expe­ri­ence to accom­pa­ny Pres­i­dent Obama’s 2015 State of the Union address, the White House’s dig­i­tal media team end­ed up dri­ving 75,000 engage­ments in 61 min­utes. How did they do it? And what can brands learn from it?


Lesson 1: Listen To Your Audience, Give Them What They Want

The president’s annu­al State of the Union address is the White House’s ver­sion of the Super Bowl. It’s the time of year the brand knows it can expect the most site vis­i­tors and when they must focus on its top-line objec­tives.

That’s accord­ing to Leigh Hey­man, direc­tor of new media tech­nolo­gies at the White House, who deliv­ered a keynote address at Dig­i­tal Sum­mit Phoenix on Feb­ru­ary 5.

For the 2015 State of the Union, which took place Jan­u­ary 20, Hey­man said the White House estab­lished three objec­tives for its engage­ment strat­e­gy:

Nailing The Mobile Experience

Not only is mobile traf­fic up over­all every­where, but con­sumers told the White House they want to engage via mobile, Hey­man said.

While 34 per­cent of U.S. con­sumers as a whole use their mobile devices as their pri­ma­ry means of access­ing the Inter­net, that num­ber jumps when the data is seg­ment­ed demo­graph­i­cal­ly, Hey­man said. Minori­ties, low-income con­sumers and con­sumers under the age of 30 are more like­ly to use mobile devices as their pri­ma­ry means of Inter­net access.

So by focus­ing on mobile, [Oba­ma] is mak­ing it a pri­or­i­ty to engage with peo­ple that are not best served by tech­nol­o­gy,” Hey­man added.

Providing A ‘Really Fantastic Social Experience’

Three years ago, the White House site was not respon­sive, images were blur­ry, and the mobile expe­ri­ence was not ide­al, so the brand sought to build more engag­ing con­tent for the 2015 speech.

Now, con­sumers can watch a livestream on WhiteHouse.gov or on part­ner sites like YouTube or Hulu with enhanced graph­ics and addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion “to the things the pres­i­dent is talk­ing about in real-time,” Hey­man said. “We embed that into the stream itself, so our part­ners can pick it up.”

Creating Curated Content

2015 was also unique because pres­i­dents have typ­i­cal­ly used their State of the Union address­es to intro­duce new ini­tia­tives, but have kept the announce­ments under wraps until the speech itself.

This year, how­ev­er, there was a “slow roll­out of the ini­tia­tives [Oba­ma] was going to talk about,” Hey­man said. That meant Heyman’s office came into the speech with a fair­ly sig­nif­i­cant body of con­tent and “rather than just present the speech, we want­ed to give frame­work and con­text to the speech.”

Lesson 2: Creating Good Content And Digital Experiences Is A Team Effort

Hey­man’s office sees a copy of the speech about five days before­hand and then his team spends the next week pro­duc­ing some­thing on the order of 150 visu­al prod­ucts to com­ple­ment it. From there, the team needs to spell- and fact-check, as well as acquire rights to images. And this is all under a strict timetable.

It has to be done to the design stan­dards that go to the White House brand, which speaks to the lev­el of team­work that goes to cre­at­ing a fan­tas­tic dig­i­tal expe­ri­ence for an event like this,” Hey­man said.

In addi­tion, the White House couldn’t pull off the chal­leng­ing task of real-time con­tent synced to the livestream of the speech with­out fur­ther team­work.

Lesson 3: Make It Easy To Share Your Content

Shar­ing options for graph­ics the White House dis­played dur­ing the address used to be lim­it­ed to find­ing a tweet with the graph­ic with­in the White House’s live feed or sim­ply doing a screen grab.

How­ev­er, if a con­sumer opts for the lat­ter, “We’ve lost the con­ver­sa­tion,” Hey­man said. “We’re com­mu­ni­cat­ing in siloes rather than a col­lec­tive con­ver­sa­tion.”

To pre­vent that from hap­pen­ing, the White House added the abil­i­ty to take graph­ics embed­ded in the livestream and embed them in a share­able for­mat right below the video play­er. So instead of just tweet­ing out graph­ics in one chan­nel, Hey­man said the White House switched this year to curat­ing a body of con­tent. “We knew we could deliv­er a much rich­er body of infor­ma­tion around the speech. We need­ed a rich­er expe­ri­ence for engag­ing with con­tent,” he said.

Lesson 4: Provide The Functionality Your Users Want

As any­one from Myspace and Friend­ster can tell you, it’s not enough to reach crit­i­cal mass,” Hey­man said. “You have to have func­tion­al­i­ty and fea­tures that peo­ple com­ing to the plat­form want.”

Lesson 5: Do More Than Just Ask To Share When Engaging Users

The 2015 State of the Union also saw the advent of “real­ly excit­ing engage­ment meth­ods on the site,” Hey­man said. “Now, it’s ‘let’s not just share about it – let’s do more.’”

That includes adding drop-down menus that allow view­ers to select their states, which pro­vides real-time infor­ma­tion around the speech tied to wher­ev­er the view­er is watch­ing, kind of like “pitch and swing info in real time on MLB Game­day,” Hey­man said.

That means the brand can do more than just say, “Hey, tweet out this info,” he added.

For exam­ple, when the pres­i­dent was talk­ing about teach­ing chil­dren to code, Hey­man and his team were able to ask view­ers if they knew how to code and then cre­ate a call to action by send­ing a link for those who answered in the affir­ma­tive to teach oth­ers to write code.

Lesson 6: Brainstorm With Your Team For New And Better Ideas

All this comes about not sim­ply because dig­i­tal strate­gists said it was a good idea, but because [we had] a col­lab­o­ra­tion hap­pen with the engi­neers sit­ting in the room with the con­tent peo­ple brain­storm­ing new ways and tech­nol­o­gy to achieve our dig­i­tal objec­tives,” Hey­man said.

The end result was, “Basi­cal­ly our best year ever,” he said.

Lesson 7: Give Your Content Team The Tools It Needs To Create Great Content

The brand built the dig­i­tal tools that con­tent strate­gists need­ed to get their jobs done. Dur­ing in the 61 min­utes it took Oba­ma to deliv­er the speech, the White House received:

  • 18,000 poll respons­es.
  • 40,000 email respons­es.
  • 17,000 con­tent shares.

Lesson 8: Have A Genuine Conversation With Your Audience

The White House also has a peti­tions web­site that allows con­sumers to eas­i­ly sub­mit peti­tions and those with a cer­tain num­ber of sig­na­tures are guar­an­teed a response.

Look­ing at a tongue-in-cheek peti­tion about build­ing a Death Star, Hey­man said the White House brand has anoth­er engage­ment oppor­tu­ni­ty, point­ing to the num­ber of clicks on the links embed­ded in the White House’s response. That includes infor­ma­tion about the U.S. space pro­gram and the like.

We get a lot of peti­tions from across the polit­i­cal spec­trum,” Hey­man said. “That’s a con­ver­sa­tion hap­pen­ing between us and the peo­ple who cre­at­ed the peti­tion and is not fil­tered by talk radio and cable news. It’s not a real con­ver­sa­tion we could have any­where else.”


What do you think about the White House­’s efforts to engage view­ers?

Lisa Lacy

Written by Lisa Lacy

Lisa is a senior features writer for Inked. She also previously covered digital marketing for Incisive Media. Her background includes editorial positions at Dow Jones, the Financial Times, the Huffington Post, AOL, Amazon, Hearst, Martha Stewart Living and the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

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