Product · Grow · Canvass

The walker never taps yes. That’s why it holds.

Every canvasser carries their own code. The resident scans it, joins on their own phone, and the yes is credited to the person who earned it. A conversation at the door becomes a subscriber for the rest of the cycle.

KNOCKS → SIGN-UPSSATURDAY, WARD 4
MRMarco Reed62 knocks9
TATom Alvarez54 knocks19
DCDana Cole41 knocks12
Marco is working harder than anyone on the team and converting worse than anyone on the team. That’s a coaching conversation, and it’s invisible on a clipboard.
Every scan is credited to the walker. The walker never taps yes.
The problem

A canvasser knocks two hundred doors in a Saturday and keeps almost none of them. They have a real conversation on a porch, someone nods and says they'll vote, and then the walker writes a tally mark on a clipboard and that person is gone. The campaign spent a volunteer's weekend to produce a number.

How it works

How Canvass works.

1

Presence turns into permission

A canvasser knocks two hundred doors in a Saturday and keeps almost none of them. A nod on a porch becomes a tally mark on a clipboard, and that person is gone. The door is the best opt-in source a campaign has and the one it wastes.

2

The resident’s own act

The walker never taps yes. A canvasser is staff, standing on a porch, looking over a shoulder. The resident scans, reads the exact language, and types their own number on their own phone. There is no screen in Txtra where a walker enters a stranger’s number, and there never will be.

3

The credit follows the code

The walker’s identity rides the link path, not a query string a carrier can strip. The opt-in writes with the source, the turf, the date, the words agreed to, and the walker as the hand. Open that subscriber six months later and the walker is still named.

Why it matters

What you actually get.

An answer a regulator accepts

Field QR, scanned at the county fair, October 12, by their own hand. That is an answer. A volunteer wrote it down is not. The receipt names both people. The hand is the walker. The consent is the resident’s.

The number nobody has ever seen

Knocks count the scans. Subscribers count the people who joined. The gap between them is the only canvassing number that has ever mattered, and almost no campaign has ever looked at it.

One leaderboard, not five

A volunteer who knocked a door and a supporter who texted her sister did the same work through different doors. Doors, circle, links, hours, dollars raised, all feeding one number. The weights are set by the campaign, in the open, since a sign-up and a dollar don’t share a unit.

The wall of thanks

A campaign can publish a page thanking the volunteers who brought people in. First name, last initial, only for volunteers who agreed to appear. No turf, since a precinct tells a stranger where to find a volunteer on a Saturday. No breakdown, no rankings, and no supporter is ever named.

What Txtra deliberately does not do.

No turf drawing. No walk order. No routing map. Every field program already has a tool for that, and none of them are why a campaign would switch texting platforms. The voter file never enters the door flow. Consent is made at the door, not pulled from a file. Txtra owns the opt-in moment and everything after it, and that is enough. One honest note. The link, the receipt, the scan, and the leaderboard are built, and every door opt-in writes a real consent record with its source, its turf, and the walker who earned it. Live, the confirmation text goes out over the carrier, and that last mile is the carrier keys.

CanvassThe walker never taps yesCredit in the link pathKnocks against sign-upsOne leaderboard
KNOCKS → SIGN-UPSSATURDAY, WARD 4
MRMarco Reed62 knocks9
TATom Alvarez54 knocks19
DCDana Cole41 knocks12
Marco is working harder than anyone on the team and converting worse than anyone on the team. That’s a coaching conversation, and it’s invisible on a clipboard.
Every scan is credited to the walker. The walker never taps yes.
Every canvass 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 Canvass 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.

Does the canvasser see the voter's phone number?

They see it the way anyone sees a phone screen someone else is holding. The resident types their own number on their own device. The walker never enters it, and there is no screen in Txtra where they could.

How does the volunteer get credit if they never touch the sign-up?

Their code carries their identity in the link. The resident scans it, and the opt-in writes with the walker named as the hand. It shows on the new subscriber's record and on the leaderboard.

Can we publish the leaderboard?

Yes, and it is a different page. First name and last initial, only for volunteers who agreed to appear, no turf, no conversion rates, and no supporter is ever named. The internal board stays behind the login.