The document discusses strategies for effective online political advocacy. It begins by defining online advocacy as using digital tools like websites, social media, email and advertising to engage supporters and influence policy debates. It then outlines key aspects of an online advocacy strategy like having an integrated digital presence, building relationships with supporters through ongoing communication, and identifying pressure points and channels to advance your goals. The document also reviews specific tools like websites, petitions, email and CRM software that can be used in advocacy campaigns and provides tips on managing supporters and keeping them engaged over the long term through tiered actions.
N. Chandrababu Naidu Receives Global Agriculture Policy Leadership Award
Crafting Digital Strategies for Practical Political Advocacy
1. Crafting a Digital Strategy for
Practical Political Advocacy
Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat - Sun Tzu
Conference audio: call 805.309.5900
Enter ID: 590-814-35
2. Colin Delany
Former political staffer (Texas)
Founder/editor Epolitics.com
Online communications
consultant
Political advocate
3. What I Do
Communications strategy planning, including social media,
email campaigns, online fundraising, influencer outreach &
more
Audits of organization websites, social media properties, email
campaigns & online fundraising
Technology planning & project management
Planning and implementation for specific online comms
projects & advocacy campaigns
Training on digital advocacy & politics topics, including
email campaigns, Facebook, Twitter, communicating with
Congress, fundraising & more
5. The Essentials
What does effective online advocacy look like?
Examples
Rules of thumb:
-- relationships
-- content
6. The Essentials
Where online advocacy fits in a communications
strategy
Amplifier
Force-multiplier
Key aspect: integration
Key resource involved: time
7. The Essentials
Typical structure of an online advocacy campaign:
Online hub (website, Fb page)
Ongoing communications with supporters
(email, social media, SMS)
Outreach (recruiting, influencing the
conversation)
11. The Tools
Website (persuasion/recruiting hub)
Petitions (outreach, recruiting, engagement)
Email (sustained contact/mobilization)
CRM (enables email, sometimes social media)
Social media (persuasion/recruiting outreach +
sustained contact/mobilization)
Advertising (persuasion/recruiting outreach)
Direct contact (blogger/influencer outreach)
12. Strategy
Creating an online strategy in a fast-moving
political/policy environment
Identify pressure points
Identify channels
Identify resources
13. Strategy
More rules of thumb:
Leverage existing narrative/conversations (media
outreach, hashtags, memes, infographics)
Integrate your communications – be relentless in
your messaging
Keep up the pressure – keep your advocates busy