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Obamacare – Where brand and technology collide

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English: President Barack Obama's signature on...

English: President Barack Obama’s signature on the health insurance reform bill at the White House, March 23, 2010. The President signed the bill with 22 different pens. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

by Robert Liljenwall

One doesn’t have to be a brain surgeon to figure out that the Obamacare brand and its technology (health care.gov) have fallen on bad times. We at BTN have not seen any collision this colossal in scope and damage that has affected so many millions as the Obamacare rollout. The brand – Obamacare, is really a mixed bag between President Obama and his signature program, the Affordable Care Act – but as we all know, President Obama owns it now, and for a long time since its passage in 2010, it was a plus. Now, it has become an albatross around President Obama and the Democratic Party – at least for 12 Democratic senators up for re-election next year.

Even as we write this story, former President Bill Clinton bluntly chimed in that “Obama should live up to his promise to Americans that if they like their health plans, they can keep them.” For the record, Clinton didn’t think Obama’s apology “cut it.”

From a brand point of view, Obamacare – if it is ultimately successful – will be the President’s greatest legacy – a brand that will live positively forever. Who knows how we will refer to the Affordable Care Act in 10 years or 40 years, as we do with Social Security or Medicare? But if it doesn’t fare well, then everyone, including Democrats, will run as fast as they can from that brand. And one journalist commented on Bill Clinton’s rebuke of Obama is that he is laying the groundwork for Hillary in 2016 – “it isn’t her program!”

So how does one measure the Obamacare brand, and how is it linked to the President? On the surface, the brand linkage between the ACA and Obama is a natural extension of the President’s own brand. Obama, a brand by itself, is a strong, easy-to-pronounce six-letter word that represents one of the most powerful persons in the world – and comes with all of the attendant prestige and power of the office. So it was a natural brand extension – and it sounds good – O-ba-ma-care. Rolls right off your tongue and ear. It reads well, too. And focus groups would have probably given this symbolic brand name a thumbs-up. “Works for me …” one Democrat pollster said. So, it is difficult to “cut off” the Obama brand from the public perception of Obamacare, when it is actually the Affordable Care Act.

Latest Polls measure brand strength

As a “brand,” Obamacare poll numbers indicate that a majority – 53 percent – of likely voters are unfavorable toward the ACA and only 43 percent are favorable. (Rasmussen)  But the numbers have been fluid since the near-collapse of the website and attendant confusion on how and when the site will be fixed. In some states, like Virginia, poll numbers by CNN indicated that 48 percent viewed the ACA favorably and 50 percent viewed it unfavorably.

But in looking at the “Obama” brand by itself – the latest Wall Street JournalNBC poll, shows that only 41 percent in late October viewed Obama in a positive light, with 45 percent holding a negative impression. Surely, his falling poll numbers have something to do with the Obamacare rollout.

A more fluid measure of Obama’s standing is the public assessment of his performance in office is also sinking:  Only 42 percent approved of the job he was doing, a low in the President’s tracking on the Wall Street Journal – NBC since he took office. When you compare these poll numbers with both Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton at a similar time in their presidency, they had a 58 percent and 62 percent approval rating respectively. Bush (W) had a low of 36 percent at the same time – after Katrina hit.

So, how does Obama get back a positive brand perception?  According to former Clinton White House adviser Chris Lahane, second-term presidents all face a decline in their second term which “effectively makes them lame ducks.” But other Democratic leaders beside Clinton state that Obama “over promised” what the public was going to get with the new health care law. With the continuing confusion and technology fiasco at hand and the top news story on every newscast every day, Obama can only improve his brand by ‘fixing the website’ and making good on his promises, as Clinton has urged. He needs to build back trust with the public.

Of course, political brands are most vulnerable to personality and performance issues, and because Obama pushed so hard to get the bill passed and lauded its benefits (“… you can keep your doctor” … and “keep your plan if you like it”) have just ‘done him in in our opinion, no matter how hard you try to back-track with even legitimate reasons. The public, it seems, has already voted on this for now … and we await the looming Dec. 1 fix-it-deadline. – RJL



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