25.06.2008 12:55:00
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Why So Pro-Obama? Today's College Students Declare 'Yes We Can and, Obama, You Can Help'!
As the election draws closer and final candidates set the stage for the
race to the ballot box, college students have declared their
presidential picks and, overwhelmingly, cast their vote for the
candidate most aligned with their own beliefs. These early findings from
Alloy Media + Marketing’s 2008 Alloy College
Explorer report, powered by Harris Interactive, reveal a snapshot of the
attitudes and behaviors of the largest - and perhaps most politically
influential - class in history.
Coming off last year’s survey, which
indicated college students’ general dismay
over the state of our union - with 58% (net) giving fair to poor grades
& almost three–quarters (73%) of
respondents giving President George W. Bush’s
performance fair or poor marks - the campaign trail has fueled this
young generation’s drive to implement
positive change. With just 132 days left until election day and nearly
80% of students now registered to vote, according to the survey, this
group’s voice is growing louder and clearer.
"This year’s
report finds college students heading back to campus in record numbers,
with stronger brand loyalties than we’ve seen
in previous years”, stated Samantha Skey,
EVP, Strategic Marketing, Alloy Media + Marketing. "Their
loyalties are deep and traverse multiple categories. They’re
discerning citizens and consumers and their desire to invest in brands
that reflect their personality is very strong. From their choice of
footwear to presidential candidate, today’s
college students want to be aligned with names that reflect who they are
as citizens and consumers.” IT’S
A DEMOCRATIC DECISION
While it may come as no surprise by now that Obama is leading the polls
among college students and has racked up more friends on Facebook than
his Republican opposition, the College Explorer offers a look at the
clear winner among multiple key segments of the college audience.
It’s Obama who claims the Presidency among
college students - winning the popular vote and doubling his support
from last year with almost half of the college vote at 43%. Although
Hillary was still in the race when the survey was conducted, her support
stayed consistent with ’07 figures, retaining
just 18% of the vote. What lies ahead for McCain is the question as he
is pulling only half of Obama’s tally with
21% of votes; just where will Hillary Clinton supporters turn their
attention in November?
Also of note, whereas Hillary pulled the female vote in 2007, this year’s
report shows females heavily leaning toward Obama with 42% of women
voters reporting that they plan to support him in November. McCain gives
Obama a run for his money - where money is concerned.
Among students who rank highest in discretionary monthly spending
(spending an average of more than $500 each month on discretionary
purchases), support for the candidates is in nearly a dead heat at 32%
for McCain vs. 35% for Obama.
This voting class plans to exercise their freedoms to the fullest - of
those registered to vote, a resounding 92% of students say they intend
to show up at the polls to mark their choice for the next presidential
leader.
Dana Markow, Ph.D., Vice President, Senior Consultant at Harris
Interactive commented, "With close to all
students appearing primed to cast their votes and with strong opinion on
which candidate they feel should fill the top slot, this passionate
generation undoubtedly plans to make their mark with the 2008
presidential election. This could well be history in the making, with
the largest college population turnout on record.” Yes "WE”
can
While candidate Barack Obama may have attached himself to the phrase, it’s
college students who have been shouting it all along. Today’s
college students are clearly affected by the ongoing events shaping our
world and are well aware that the impact decisions made today may affect
their future, so they don’t plan to sit on
the sidelines.
Echoing their position a year ago, students still feel they are the ones
that truly have the ability to effect change. When asked which group has
the greatest ability to impact positive changes in the world - ranking
at the top, a considerable 36% responded that people their age have what
it takes. A notable measure, giving the next President-elect an even
tougher challenge with influential young citizens, who state a
confidence of only 20% for the U.S. Federal Government and, dropping
further, just 9% for Fortune 500 companies to impact positive change.
When breaking down students’ responses by
ethnic demographics, the survey reveals intriguing results. Obama’s
rise seemingly has empowered young and optimistic black voters - over
50% of African Americans responded that they are the ones with the power
to impact positive change, a figure skyrocketing since last year’s
response at 35%.
YOU TUBE OR YOU LOSE
For the 2008 candidates, the rules of engagement have shifted since last
election. You’re just as likely now to see
your candidate on the social networking circuit as you are the late
night TV talk show circuit and the media choices for this generation
appear to multiply daily.
In a typical day, 83% of college students are using email and, further,
88% (up from 73% just last year) report engaging with social media,
including visiting social networking web sites, video web sites like
YouTube, and blogs. By winning a college student’s
vote, a candidate may also gain the full power of that student’s
online audience. Over one-third (36%) of students themselves have become
media distributors (sharing their content or existing content with
friends) - an almost 10% increase since 2007. Further, 15% are media
creators, uploading or posting content that they have created. In short,
they are "The Media”.
Social networking and user-generated web sites also show their growing
influence as a source of information with almost one-quarter (16%) of
college students stating that they choose to gather information about
the 2008 presidential candidates through these platforms and 13% taking
advantage of on-campus events, where most of the candidates made a point
to connect with their hopeful constituents in the race leading to the
White House.
"For a generation increasingly invested in
the state of the union, today’s college
students have a unique ability to propel their opinions, promote their
causes and garner support. They are passionate in their conviction that
their generation will succeed as change agents and eager to bring their
media prowess to bear for the candidate who enables them to do change
the world”, concluded Ms. Skey.
The full Alloy College Explorer report will be available on August 1 for
purchase. For more information, you may send your inquiry to Collegexplorer@alloymarketing.com.
Survey Methodology
The 2008 Alloy College Explorer study was conducted online within the
United States by Harris Interactive on behalf of Alloy Media + Marketing
between April 1 to April 17, 2008 among 1,554 U.S. 18-30 year old
college students (2-year, 4-year and graduate students). Results were
weighted as needed for age, sex, race/ethnicity, region and school
status (full-time, part-time, 4-yr., 2-yr.). Propensity score weighting
was also used to adjust for respondents’
propensity to be online.
All sample surveys and polls, whether or not they use probability
sampling, are subject to multiple sources of error which are most often
not possible to quantify or estimate, including sampling error, coverage
error, error associated with nonresponse, error associated with question
wording and response options, and post-survey weighting and adjustments.
Therefore, Harris Interactive avoids the words "margin
of error” as they are misleading. All that
can be calculated are different possible sampling errors with different
probabilities for pure, unweighted, random samples with 100% response
rates. These are only theoretical because no published polls come close
to this ideal.
Respondents for this survey were selected from among those who have
agreed to participate in Harris Interactive surveys. The data have been
weighted to reflect the composition of the U.S. 18-30 year old college
students. Because the sample is based on those who agreed to be invited
to participate in the Harris Interactive online research panel, no
estimates of theoretical sampling error can be calculated.
About Alloy Media + Marketing
Alloy Media + Marketing (AM+M) (nasdaq: ALOY) is one of the country’s
largest providers of media and marketing programs reaching targeted
consumer segments. Alloy manages a diverse array of assets and services
in interactive, display, direct mail, content production and educational
programming. Alloy works with over 1,500 companies including half of the
Fortune 200. For further information regarding Alloy, please visit our
corporate website at www.alloymarketing.com.
About Harris Interactive
Harris Interactive is a global leader in custom market research. With a
long and rich history in multimodal research that is powered by our
science and technology, we assist clients in achieving business results.
Harris Interactive serves clients globally through our North American,
European and Asian offices and a network of independent market research
firms. For more information, please visit www.harrisinteractive.com.
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