Michael Cornfield, an adjunct professor of political management at George Washington University, thinks candidates would be better off with another site. "It seems to me that [politicians] should find better ways to ingratiate themselves" with young voters, he says, "Anyone over 30 looks awkward on MySpace." Cornfield hopes a more dignified approach could come from outfit ElectionMall.com, a politics oriented Internet company where he is vice-president of public affairs.
Business Week Online, May 31, 2006
“For candidates gaga over web fundraising and political blogs, a 10 minute chat with Singh can be sobering.”
BusinessWeek, October 2004
“Ravi Singh ... said many candidates try unsuccessfully to put technology into politics, rather than politics into technology.”
Chicago Tribune, 2004
“It was a matter of time before the internet would change the way politics is done in this country...ElectionMall can do this.”
Chicago Tribune, 2000
“E-campaign businessman, Ravi Singh...Meet five of the new powerbrokers whose sites and bytes may well influence how you cast your ballot come November.”
USA Weekend, July 2004
“Were certifying trust for the next generation of voters, one click at a time,”
CEO ElectionMall Technologies, Inc., Ravi Singh, Washington Post
“Didn’t catch the Bush-Kerry debates? Or did you miss some of them? If so, you can replay the audio from them, complete with pull-down pick lists that let you jump to certain topics... The debates archives and the accompanying avatars were put together by ElectionMall Technologies…”
PC Magazine, October 2004
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