A voter gets a text from ten digits they don’t know and decides in half a second. Spam. Delete. Verified sender ends the guessing game. The name, the logo, a checkmark, on every message, verified by the carriers, right at the top of the thread.
A voter gets a text from ten digits they don't know. They decide in half a second. Spam. Delete. That half-second is where most political texting dies, and no amount of good copy saves a message nobody trusts enough to open.
The identity gets vetted, not the phone line. The name and the logo attach to your sending, and the badge is the carriers’ word, not yours.
A local line for the field team, a toll-free for big sends, a short code for volume. The voter sees the campaign on all of them. They never see the plumbing.
Add a line, retire a line, it doesn’t matter. The identity holds, and the standing you built rides the name, not the number.
Most political texting dies in the spam-or-delete judgment before anyone reads a word. A verified name at the top of the thread is the difference between opened and gone.
One identity sits above every line the campaign runs. The campaign is the name on all of them, and no voter ever squints at ten digits again.
Their model is burner numbers and rotation, swapping lines to stay ahead of the filters. Earning the checkmark means standing behind one name, and the hiding is the business. This isn’t a nicer coat of paint. It’s a line they can’t cross without becoming something else.
Verified sender, Sender reputation, and Prove it are one stack. Who you are, how clean you send, and the receipt for every number on your list. Two already show in the app. This is the one a voter actually sees.
Verified sender shows at the account level in this build, and every number carries the badge. Live, the identity gets vetted once by the carriers and Google, then it’s tied to your sending. A new number joins an identity that’s already trusted, so it starts with your standing, not from zero.
Left or right, Txtra is the sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve.
The campaign name, the logo, and a checkmark at the top of every thread, verified by the carriers. The voter sees Hardin for District 4, verified, not ten digits they have to judge in half a second.
No. You verify the campaign once and every number carries the badge, the local line, the toll-free, the short code. Live, a new number joins an identity that's already trusted, so it starts with your standing, not from zero.
A verified identity is the opposite of hiding. The rotation model runs on burner numbers swapped to stay ahead of the filters, and earning the checkmark means standing behind one name. The hiding is the business, so the badge stays out of reach.