Product · Audience · List audit

Drop the list in. Get the grade before one text sends.

Every campaign buys a list. Off a vendor, off a departing staffer, off a friendly committee. List audit grades it at the door. A letter, A to F, the counts that earned it, and the price of sending to it, in dollars and in reputation points.

LIST AUDITvendor-export-oct.csv · 4,112 rows
D+This list costs $212 and 4 reputation points on the first send.
Landlines, can’t receive a text214
Invalid numbers187
Known TCPA litigators3
Duplicates you already have96
Land the clean 3,612 · drop the 500
The problem

Every campaign buys a list, loads it, and hopes. The first send is where they find out it was junk. By then the opt-outs already hit, the dead numbers already burned money, and the score already dropped.

How it works

How List audit works.

1

Drop the list in

The grade runs in front of you. Landlines that can’t receive a text, invalid numbers, known TCPA litigators, and the duplicates you already have, counted before anything imports.

2

Read the price

The number that decides it. What this list costs on the first send, in dollars on numbers that can’t receive the message, and in reputation points from bad sends.

3

One button lands the clean

The clean numbers import, the rest drop. The junk never touches your list, and it never touches your score.

Why it matters

What you actually get.

The gamble, priced first

A bought list is a bet every campaign makes blind. The first send is where they find out it was junk, and by then the money burned and the score dropped. This is the first tool that prices the bet before you take it.

The number that decides it

Not a vague warning. A dollar figure and a reputation cost, on this list, on your first send. You can put it in front of a treasurer and get a decision in one meeting.

The sales weapon

Run a prospect’s current vendor list through the audit and show them the mess their old tool is about to send. Dead numbers, litigator count, opt-out exposure, priced out in front of them. They switch on the spot.

What a loophole shop can’t show

Running the audit confesses what their own lists look like. The audit is a thing only a clean platform can put on the table, which is the whole point.

One honest note.

The audit math is real and runs in front of you now. The scrub underneath sorts numbers by a demo rule in this build. Live, it reads a carrier line-type lookup and a litigator subscription, so the landline, invalid, and litigator flags come from real data, and the grade holds up.

List auditA to FThe first-send priceLitigators, countedOne button, clean only
LIST AUDITvendor-export-oct.csv · 4,112 rows
D+This list costs $212 and 4 reputation points on the first send.
Landlines, can’t receive a text214
Invalid numbers187
Known TCPA litigators3
Duplicates you already have96
Land the clean 3,612 · drop the 500
Every list audit send runs on the compliant floor.Consent, quiet hours, STOP and HELP, verified sender. On by default, before a single message leaves.
See the compliance model →

Put List audit to work.

Left or right, Txtra is the sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve.

This sits on the floor. Consent, quiet hours, STOP status, and sender verification check every send from this screen before it leaves.

See it on your race.

Questions

Asked and answered.

What is List audit?

A grade on a purchased or imported list before one text sends. A letter, A to F, the counts that earned it, landlines, invalid numbers, known TCPA litigators, duplicates, and the price of the first send in dollars and reputation points. One button lands only the clean numbers.

How is List audit different from List hygiene?

The audit is the decision moment at the door. A new file gets graded and priced, and you choose what lands. List hygiene is the standing scrub that runs on everything, all the time. The audit decides. The hygiene maintains.

Is the audit data real?

The math is real and runs in front of you now. The scrub underneath sorts numbers by a demo rule in this build. Live, it reads a carrier line-type lookup and a litigator subscription, so the landline, invalid, and litigator flags come from real data, and the grade holds up.