Politico Apparently Helped Make One of the Trump Campaign's Most Successful Ads
The bombshell revelation that Cambridge Analytica apparently used illicitly obtained Facebook user data to hone the Trump campaign’s digital strategy has given way to more granular details of how the data company manipulated media and tech firms to give its client an edge. On Friday, The Guardian published portions of a 27-page post-election report which was presented to Cambridge employees in London, Washington, and New York weeks after Trump’s victory in 2016.
Britanny Kaiser, who until two weeks ago was Cambridge Analytica’s business development director, went on the record about the campaign’s digital blueprint. “There was a huge demand internally for people to see how we did it,” Kaiser told The Guardian. “Everyone wanted to know: past clients, future clients. The whole world wanted to see it.”
The internal document details how Cambridge Analytica micro-targeted pro-Trump and anti-Clinton ads toward users on Google, Snapchat, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook—using tactics that are perfectly legal. But they also went to other sources, as The Guardian’s Paul Lewis and Paul Hilder write (emphasis mine):
One of the most effective ads, according to Kaiser, was a piece of native advertising on the political news website Politico, which was also profiled in the presentation. The interactive graphic, which looked like a piece of journalism and purported to list “10 inconvenient truths about the Clinton Foundation,” appeared for several weeks to people from a list of key swing states when they visited the site. It was produced by the in-house Politico team that creates sponsored content.
The Cambridge Analytica presentation dedicates an entire slide to the ad, which is described as having achieved “an average engagement time of four minutes”. Kaiser described the ad as “the most successful thing we pushed out.”
Politico said editorial journalists were not involved in the campaign, and similar ads were purchased by the Bernie Sanders and Clinton campaigns.
Sponsored or branded content is a relatively new form of digital advertising with unclear ethical boundaries. News organizations including The New York Times, The Atlantic, and Splinter’s parent organization, Gizmodo Media Group, have built out large in-house teams to produce pieces that look and feel like journalism, typically for corporate clients or interest groups. The central question is whether this often slickly produced content, created outside the newsroom, contradicts or muddles newsrooms’ work.