- Letter campaigns are now screened for harmful substances and are not timely.
- "Call Your Congressman" campaigns result in ticks for an up or down vote only.
- Email campaigns are almost ignored if they look like they are mass-produced.
- Congress members and staffers are less trusting of advocacy groups.
- Fly-ins are costly, difficult to manage, and only a few people are there.
Some have some creative alternative ideas -
- Meeting their elected officials "in their districts" meaning at their local offices.
- Working with local staff to get the message delivered back to capitol staff.
- Attending local events in support of the elected official.
The problem honestly is, they are only hearing from YOU. Your issue, your problem, your message. The more organizations fill the space talking about only themselves and their own issues, the less impacting your advocacy efforts are going to be.
Being effective in the future will mean bringing in groups that aren't your members, your peers, your industry, your influence group. Being effective will mean bringing in other groups to speak on your behalf:
- Coalitions
- Affiliated groups
- Leaders outside your core group
If you are going to stay the same, you are going to lose as you get swallowed up by the noise. You need to change, evolve, and be two steps ahead of the pack.
Money will only be able to go so far in politics. Efforts can only be so effective. If you want to truly succeed long term, you need to be planning now for what your effort will look like in several years.
Also helpful is to present both data and stories. An insight from the Myers Briggs Type Instrument is that innate personalities are more tuned to either data or stories: either the facts, and what is fair, or how the policy affects people. Since you likely do not know the personality type of the decision-maker, I advice presenting both the facts (data), and personal stories. The decision-maker is likely more persuaded by one or the other, but by presenting both you cover the bases and will be more effective
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