
You don't switch it on. Every message runs the same guardrails before it leaves, consent, quiet hours, STOP, a verified sender, whoever's sending and whatever the hour.
Every message runs the same guardrails before it leaves. Not a setting, not a checklist you remember. The floor under everything you send.
One hard stop and one advisory grade on every message. Nothing that would fine a campaign leaves the building; the rest gets a nudge.
Opted-out and unconsented numbers drop out of the send automatically, before you ever hit go.
Send windows resolve against each recipient's own state law, in their local time, per person.
Opt-outs and help requests are processed and logged the instant they arrive, no staffer required.
You send as a registered, known political sender, so messages land and you're identifiable.
Traffic runs through real carriers with automatic failover, so one bad path doesn't sink a send.
The gate blocks anything that would actually break a rule, no consent, wrong hours, missing STOP. The grade is advisory: it reads the message and flags what would make it land better, like a missing sender ID.
Consent isn't a claim you make, it's a log you can show. Every opt-in carries its source and timestamp, every STOP is stored, and when a contact moves between accounts the crossover is recorded. If a carrier or counsel ever asks, the answer is one screen.
No. Matching to the voter file adds party, precinct, and turnout data to a contact. It never turns a number that hasn't opted in into a textable one. Reach comes only from a real opt-in.
It's the carrier registration that identifies you as a known, approved political sender. Registered traffic lands; unregistered burner traffic gets filtered. Txtra handles the registration.
Each recipient's send window is resolved against their own state's rules, in their local time. You don't carry a map of fifty rulebooks; the platform applies the right one per person.
The gate is a hard stop, it blocks a message that would break a rule. The grade is advisory, a read on how to make a compliant message better. One protects you; the other sharpens you.
Yes. Every opt-in stores its source and timestamp, and every opt-out is logged. That record is what you show a carrier or your counsel if a program is ever questioned.
The sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve, left or right.