Skip to content

RNC Uses YouTube as Main Social Media Outlet

RNC Uses YouTube as Main Social Media Outlet
Published:

The Republican National Convention has made known this year’s main social media strategy: YouTube. Calling their approach the “Convention Without Walls”, the happenings to occur in Tampa, Florida will be live-streamed on the social media site with intentions to “provide a place for delegates and attendees to share and interact with one another and with the outside world,” says Communications Director James Davis. The director says that YouTube will be the “central point of activity” with Facebook, Twitter, as well as Google+ coming in at second.

This new approach and first ever social media delve into YouTube by the convention has received overall approval by the main GOP presidential candidate and his team. Zac Moffatt, Mitt Romney’s digital director says that “What they’ve come up with is pretty awesome... [This convention] is the first time technology has given us the platform to bring the convention outside the halls ”.

Check out the Republican National Convention’s YouTube here.

With already 20 videos and roughly 24,000 views on the RNC's page, the directing of traffic to their YouTube account will undoubtedly create a spike in activity in the coming weeks. Key playlists to keep an eye on are the "In Case You Missed It" and "Convention Insider" playlists.

Do you think the choice of making YouTube the focal point in the convention's social media strategy was a smart move?

Amanda Le

Amanda is a fourth year at the University of California, San Diego as a International Relations major and Business minor.

IVN is rated Center by AllSides and High Credibility by MBFC — follow our independent journalism in your feed.

Add IVN on Google

Contact IVN

Questions about this article or our coverage? Send us a message. A free IVN member account is required.

Message sent

Thanks, we’ll review it and get back to you if needed.

Message not sent

Sorry, something went wrong. Please try again.

Sign in to send a message

Messages are tied to your IVN member account. Signing in is free and takes a few seconds.