Barack Obama’s Million-Dollar Text Message?
This morning, Barack Obama announced his VP pick, Delaware Senator Joe Biden, via email and text message. Great stunt. How much did it cost?
Sending out a bulk email didn’t cost Obama much, and it will be free for anyone who gets it in their inbox. But as anyone who’s sent or received a text message knows, the wireless business doesn’t give those away.
Estimating how much Obama spent — and how much the U.S. mobile business will receive — depends on a few factors: How many people have signed up to receive the message; what percentage of those people pay for bulk text-message plans; and how much Obama’s campaign pays to send out its bulk messages. But via a combination of guesswork and homework, we figure that the VP announcement could generate as much as $3 million for the U.S. wireless business, split evenly between Obama’s campaign and his supporters. (Full assumptions and math below.)
No matter what the cost, Obama’s getting his money’s worth: A mailing list full of devotees he can send more messages to, like “VOTE!” on election day — and lots of buzz.
Update: The consensus among our commenters is that Obama’s campaign could have gotten a better rate for the messages it sent and received than we had assumed. That wouldn’t affect how much his supporters would have to spend to receive his message — at least half of the total amount, we’ve figured — but could mean that Obama’s campaign spent significantly less than we’d calculated. We don’t have specifics yet, but we’ll try to find out more.
Our initial assumptions:
We’ve gone ahead and made a variety of assumptions and run them through a handful of scenarios. Some of the data — like the number of people signed up to receive the message — is a flat-out guess, which
We assume that Obama’s campaign will pay a text message aggregator between 5 cents and 10 cents per person for each message it sends. Aggegators buy text message capacity from carriers in bulk and resell it to organizations like Obama’s. We’re told that 5 cents per message is a ridiculously good deal that the aggregator would basically be providing at no profit — something many companies would probably do just to say they handled Obama’s text message campaign. 10 cents per message, per person would be a decent deal. We’re ignoring any monthly retainer that Obama’s campaign pays the aggregator for their services.
We assume that 50% of Obama’s recipients will have to spend $0.20 to send/receive the text messages, or an average $0.10 per person. comScore M:Metrics estimates that about 34% of U.S. wireless subscribers pay for a monthly bulk text message plan. Those people are essentially getting the message for free. The remainder of wireless subscribers have to pay a “casual” messaging fee, which we think runs around $0.20 per message. But Obama’s audience skews young and tech-savvy, and the ones who sign up for a VP text message are even more so. So we’re assuming that half of his recipients are have a bulk plan and are getting it for free — meaning the average cost is ten cents per person.
We assume that the entire transaction generates a minimum of 6 charges: 3 for Obama, 3 for the recipient. In order to receive the Obama message, supporters have to send his campaign a message (VP to 62262 or OBAMA). Then he will send a confirmation message back. Then he’ll send out the actual update. Each one of those messages generates a charge for both sides. We’re assuming it costs Obama the same amount to send and receive a message.
We don’t know how many people have signed up for the message. This is the most important variable, but the one we have the least insight into. Presumably at some point in the campaign, perhaps as soon as this weekend, we’ll hear how many message were sent out, and we can revisit our math again.
If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.





It Was Only a Matter of Time: The Facebook Phone Cometh
WorldFriends Mixes Facebook With Match.com (And Dares Charging Subscription Fees)
Chrome To Get Extensions - Just Not Yet



Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a comment