Sep
17
2008

They really ought to want me to have their crap as badly as I want to have it.

So, this year, Obama’s been selling a lot of buttons, t-shirts, signs, and various other things imprinted with his logo. It’s a pretty nifty idea: run a store on your campaign website and file purchases as campaign donations. Your logo sees broader exposure, you get to report super-high donation totals each month, it’s easier for supporters who live in places without a campaign office or frequent campaign events to get campaign gear, people who would already have made donations get a little token for their trouble. Everybody wins.

But I wonder why it seems to take at least several weeks (and sometimes a few months) for orders to be shipped. I’m not complaining in a “where’s my stuff?!?” way, since Obama was gonna be getting my money even without a store on his website. I’m wondering why distributing campaign advertisements isn’t seen as more of a priority. It took my window sign almost 10 weeks to arrive, and I’ve lately been showered with apologetic emails telling me that my buttons, stickers, and t-shirts (ordered weeks ago) just might be shipping soon (though I’m not to expect them to arrive for a few weeks after they’ve shipped). That’s a lot of weeks that I could have been displaying Obama’s logo everywhere I went.

I suppose the cynical answer is that Obama doesn’t really care about people putting signs in their windows, handing out buttons to their friends, putting stickers on their cars, etc., and is really just after the money. That might be the case, though that would be a little surprising, given the amount of importance Obama’s campaign places on the ground game. The online store is supposed to generate revenue and increase campaign visibility, and I seriously doubt the Obama campaign would sacrifice one almost entirely in order to maximize the other.

Rather, it seems like they’re just being really cheap, which I can appreciate. I’m sure they want to maximize the “profit margin” of the Obama gear, and hiring cheaper, slower manufacturers and using cheaper, slower shipping options would certainly be part of that. But really, I’ll be surprised if my “first edition!!!!1!!1!!!” Obama/Biden stickers and buttons get here before election day, at which point their advertising potential will be moot, and the items themselves will either carry a neutral emotional impact or will be depressing reminders of a very bad day.

4 Comments »

  • Yeah, the Obama store is slow, but my shit did arrive after a few weeks.

    The “free” Obama swag from MoveOn, on the other hand, is going on four months late. I kinda knew at the time that it was just a scam to collect more email addresses, which is why I ignored their request to forward the emails to everybody I know, but since they already have mine I might as well score some free gear, right?

    Wish I could say I’m surprised that they’re blowing it so badly, but I’ve had enough experience with MoveOn to know they’re incompetent at everything other than begging for money and bloating out their mailing lists (which they suck utterly at maintaining, based on my 2004 door-knocking ordeal).

    Fuckin’ MoveOn. I only wish they had the organizational savvy to be half as formidable as the Right wants everyone to believe they are. What a joke.

    Comment | September 18, 2008
  • gray

    Looks like the problem is bigger than we thought: Obama yard signs are apparently harder to find than the Sasquatch.

    Comment | September 21, 2008
  • mark

    Apparently, campaign organizers despise yard signs.

    Comment | September 22, 2008
  • gray

    Wow, thanks for the link, Mark. I’ll consider myself thoroughly, smartly spanked (though I wonder if Quinn’s withering condescension might be counterproductive).

    Comment | September 22, 2008

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