Your sender reputation is a number the carriers already keep. A credit score for whether your texts are wanted. Txtra surfaces it, and now you can present it. A clean card with your campaign name, the band, the score on a 300 to 850 scale, a verify link, and a stamp.
Every campaign claims it runs a clean list. The claim is worth nothing, since anyone can make it, and the ones who can't back it up make it loudest.
The score mirrors what the carriers keep. It isn’t yours to set, so a campaign can’t inflate it and a dirty one can’t fake it. That’s the whole point.
Copy it or download it. The name, the band, the score, the verify link, and the stamp, formatted to hand a committee, a party, or a vendor before anyone trusts you with a list.
The verify link resolves to a page they check against Txtra directly. The card stops being your word and becomes their lookup.
A claim anyone can make is noise. A number you can’t move yourself is proof. Every campaign says clean list. One of them can hand over the score.
You present credit before a landlord hands you keys. Now you present reputation before a party hands you the joint list. Same move, same reason it works.
A party deciding who gets the joint list. A committee deciding who to trust with the voter file. A coordinated campaign picking who shares the number. Every one is a moment where a verified score beats a promise.
Their reputation erodes every time they mask traffic to dodge registration. Handing over the real number would end the conversation, so they won’t. The credential is a card only a clean sender can show, which is exactly why it’s worth showing.
The score is seeded in this build. Live, it’s your real carrier-anchored reputation, and the verify link resolves to a page the party can check against Txtra directly, so the card can’t be forged and the number can’t be doctored.
Left or right, Txtra is the sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve.
A button that turns your sender reputation into a credential you can hand over. The card carries the campaign name, the band, the score on a 300 to 850 scale, a verify link, and a stamp. Copy it or download it for a committee, a party, or a vendor.
No. The number mirrors what the carriers keep, so it isn't yours to set. Live, the verify link resolves to a page the party checks against Txtra directly, so the card can't be forged and the number can't be doctored. The score is seeded in this build.
Any moment trust gets decided. A party handing out the joint list, a committee deciding who touches the voter file, a coordinated campaign picking who shares the number. A verified score beats a promise in every one of them.