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The Era of Big Data

The Era of Big Data. The Data Crunchers Who Helped Obama Win. How to decide who can get the chance to eat at Parker’s West Village brownstone?. Who can get the chance dependent on “big data”.

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The Era of Big Data

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  1. The Era of Big Data The Data Crunchers Who Helped Obama Win

  2. How to decide who can get the chance to eat at Parker’s West Village brownstone?

  3. Who can get the chance dependent on “big data”. • Campaign manager Jim Messina hired an analytics department five times as large as that of the 2008 operation, with an official “chief scientist” for the Chicago headquarters named Rayid Ghani.

  4. How to Raise $1 Billion • The campaign started over, creating a single massive system. • The new megafile allowed the number crunchers to run tests predicting which types of people would be persuaded by certain kinds of appeals. In the end, modeling became something way bigger for the campaign in ’12 than in ’08 because it made their time more efficient.

  5. How to Raise $1 Billion • The new megafile allowed the campaign to raise more money than it once thought possible. • A large portion of the cash raised online came through an intricate, metric-driven e-mail campaign. • Quick Donate had become a big part of the campaign’s messaging to supporters, and first-time donors were offered a free bumper sticker to sigh up.

  6. Predicting Turnout • When polls started to slip after the first debate, they could check to see which voters were changing sides and which were not. • The database that helped steady campaign aides in October’s choppy waters. • Online, the get-out-the-vote effort continued with a first-ever attempt at using Facebook on a mass scale to replicate the door-knocking efforts of field organizers.

  7. Predicting Turnout • Data helped drive the campaign’s ad buying too. • In August, Obama decided to answer questions on the social news website Reddit.

  8. What does this mean for us? • The era of politicians saying the same thing to all voters is over. • Another consequence is that efforts by the Federal Trade Commission and other agencies to regulate data mining in the name of privacy are destined to collapse.

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