Nine cards. Swipe each one away, or tap it. The story ends where it started.

A web consultancy and design agency built for political campaigns, back when putting a race on the internet was a radical act. The work won national awards. The lesson outlasted the trophies. Campaigns don't buy software. They buy the last week.
Swipe or tap →Twenty-plus years in tech leadership, working with most of the Fortune 500 on the hardest technical initiatives they ran. Building at the scale where systems fail loudly. Big tech teaches what a platform owes its users. It doesn't teach what a platform owes the law. That lesson came later, from the other side of the table.

A business texting platform out of South Jersey. Diners, shops, the businesses that live on their regulars. Reach Everyone Instantly on the door. Unlimited keywords free when the category charged per keyword. Every feature at every price. No contracts.
Per-message fees land. Sender vetting begins. The anonymous blast dies, and registration, verification, and consent become the price of admission. Txtra's blog covered the Verizon fee the week it took effect.

Small operators don't get a training week. Deliverability is the product, everything else is furniture. One bad sender on a shared short code kills the number for every business on it. That's where the compliance gate was born.

Elected in 2023. Three years deep at the state, county, and municipal level, inside the rooms where the last week actually gets run. The tool either works at 11pm or it doesn't, and the sender's name on the filing is yours.

Gray routes, rented lists, numbers cycled faster than the carriers could block them. The campaigns paying for it got filtered sends and legal exposure. The fix wasn't a feature. It was a floor.

Txtra rebuilds for political campaigns. Same name, same doctrine, new floor. Every plan is still the full product. Keywords are still unlimited. Under it all sits a compliance gate no one can switch off.
Compliance is the floor, not a feature. A tool that lets a rushed 9pm send break the law is a bad tool, whatever else it does. The floor is the same for every party. The law doesn't care who's sending. Neither does the gate.