Pick who hears from you, write it once, and it personalizes per person. The compliance gate rides along on every send, so even a rushed push can't cross a line.
The list is big, the window is small, and the tools that move fast are the ones that get campaigns fined.
By tag or saved group. Opted-out and unconsented numbers drop out of the count automatically, before you write a word.
Drop in an approved template or draft with AI. First name, district, and polling site render per person, so everyone gets their own message.
The gate checks consent, quiet hours, STOP language, and sender ID. Then it goes, now or on a schedule.
A message to the whole list in minutes, and the gate rides along so a 9pm GOTV push still can't break a rule.
Identical texts read as a blast and get flagged. Vary shifts the wording per batch so every copy lands as a message, not a pattern.
The message translated to the language the voter reads, tokens intact. One composer, every doorstep.
Hidden characters pad segments and pad the bill. Txtra catches them before they cost. Money kept by doing nothing.
The compliance grade flags a problem and one tap rewrites the message inside the lines. Fix it where it's cheap.
Every recipient gets their own render. Flip through real samples before you send, including one with no name on file.
Insert a pre-approved template so the whole team sends fast and stays on script.
Broadcast is RCS-first, so a message can carry images, media, and tappable buttons, not just words. A tap does work on the spot: it answers a poll, RSVPs, or scores a voter, and every answer tags the contact and lands in your reports.
Left or right, Txtra is the sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve.
As many as your plan allows and your numbers can carry. A broadcast splits across your numbers and paces to carrier throughput, so a 15,000-person send on three locals finishes in a fraction of the time one number takes.
Yes. Write once with fields like first name or district, and every voter gets their own copy. The preview shows a real contact before you send.
No. Quiet hours resolve per recipient against their own state law in their local time. Recipients in an open window get the message. The rest hold until morning.