Field QR codes that open an opt-in. Print one on a yard sign, a door hanger, a mailer, or the table at the county fair, and a scan becomes a subscriber with the source recorded.
The field meets thousands of voters and keeps almost none of them. The clipboard gets typed up Thursday, or never.
Generate a code per placement. The yard sign batch, the parade handout, the debate-night screen, each its own code.
The code opens a hosted opt-in. The person adds their own name and number, and the consent is theirs, recorded.
Each placement tracks separately. You learn the door hangers outperform the mailer before you print the next ten thousand.
Every printed thing the campaign already makes becomes a subscription door.
Nobody types a stranger's number off a clipboard. The voter opts in on their own phone, on the record.
Code by code, you see which field investments produce subscribers and which produce litter.
Canvassing meets thousands of voters and keeps almost none of them. A code on everything the field touches turns presence into permission, and the per-code numbers tell you where presence pays.
Left or right, Txtra is the sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve.
Generate a code per placement, print it on anything, and a scan opens a hosted opt-in. The voter adds their own name and number, and the source records per code.
Yes. Every code reports its own yield, so the door hangers and the mailer compete on numbers before the next print run.
No. The voter opts in on their own phone. Self-serve consent, on the record, no clipboard transcription.