When Joe Trippi signed on to run Howard Dean's 2004 presidential campaign, the long–shot candidate had 432 known supporters and $100,000 in the bank. Within a year, Trippi and his team had transformed the most obscure candidate in the field into a Democratic front–runner with a groundswell of 640,000 supporters and more money than any Democrat in history –– mostly through donations of one hundred dollars or less. Trippi's revolutionary use of the Internet and an impassioned, contagious desire to overthrow politics as usual grew into a national grassroots movement and changed the face of politics forever. As Trippi argues persuasively, the Internet is distributing power to the people right now. And the companies that understand the coming revolution will be the first movers in this new era, while those that wait will be left behind. From his behind–the–scenes look at Dean's shocking rise and fall to his "seven inviolable, irrefutable, ingenious things your business or institution or candidate can do in the age of the Internet that might keep you from getting your ass kicked, but then again might not," Joe Trippi offers an inspiring glimpse of the world we are becoming. And he shows how power, in the hands of all of us, changes everything.
Trippi was campaign manager for Howard Dean for most of his presidential campaign. There is a lot in here about how the Internet came of age as a political tool. Trippi sees this as a truly revolutionary event, shifting power from on high to a much broader base. He takes extreme joy in recounting incidents in which bloggers had immediate impact on the campaign, making it the most interactive such campaign to date. I expect he sees himself in the role of midwife to the birth of a new political experience.
I did get the feeling that there are many tales yet to be told about the campaign, tales that may be unflattering to Trippi.
I find some of these political autobiographies/treatises to be slightly repetitive, and this one is no different. Still, it is pretty exhilerating to read Howard Dean's former campaign manager Joe Trippi's account of how the Internet revolutionized politics and how it took hold of Dean--himself an Internet neophyte. This book will make a good primary source when future historians are looking at the rise of Internet and its impact on community involvement and political participation. When one thinks that this revolutionary media emerged at a time when "Bowling Alone" seemed to define this society, it becomes a godsend.
Very insightful combination of memoir and political strategy coming of age in the internet era. Trippi's first person narrative is a fun and fast read of the Howard Dean campaign that not only brings to life the personalities of the campaign, but also showcases the web's first campaign for President. The 2008 Afterward shows how the Obama campaign not only read his book, but was able to hand Trippi's campaign for John Edwards their own version of how to build a bottom-up campaign.
This book, part memoir of the Howard Dean presidential campaign, part blueprint for the future of politics and the internet, is an engaging and interesting read. Joe Trippi shows how the internet is one of the best things to happen to democracy. This thought-provoking book will make anyone get involved in our electoral process, and shows how people have the power to take our country back.
A really cool look into the life of a campaign manager on the presidential campaign trail. Also explores the innovative use of the internet and how it affected Howard Dean's bid for President in 2004.
I don't read political stuff... but this is keeping me interested. **update** I finished it and mailed it to a friend. I liked that it was pep-talk-like in its ability to get me fired up for politics. Which I am normally not. At all. For either or any side. So, it was really good.
My Friend Michael McGeary made me read this and it was very, very good. Yes, it has an pretty liberal tilt. Still, check it out if you're into politics at all.
An excellent book with great insights. The information age has changed the face of politics and government forever. Those who have not embraced the information age will be punished by it.
Don't read this if you are not already a Joe Trippi fan, as the book is more about his greatness and hard work than it is about using the Internet for political gain.
Was assigned this as a semester project for Campaign Analysis. It's what turned me on to social media. I met Trippi at a Twitter conference 8 years later and totally fangirled my little heart out.
Much of the technology predictions are, obviously, out of date, but his recollections of the Dean campaign were great and brought back a great many memories.