Campaign Management Software...
How
many
votes
can
my
PC get me? From the monitor to the ballot box in a single click...
Campaigning is one
of those tasks that computers have not managed to replace yet. Like it or not,
candidates must still go through the hard slog of visiting each district,
city, town, and rural community one by one if they want to get elected. And woe
be it should they forget to pay a call on each and every political leader,
mayor, and local celebrity, current or past.
Nevertheless, computers do
provide us with invaluable services. You know that any good candidate must have
an amazing memory for names, faces and situations. Well, can you name a
candidate who can boast of memorizing 100 Gigabytes of information? Or nor who
can run a 512 megabyte RAM database? In this area, PCs are unbeatable.
Election campaign software
started off life, more than anything else, as databases with an interface
adapted to campaign use. Some of the main programs for campaign use are derived
directly from well-known database programs. The best example of this is Voter
Access which, as its surname suggests, leaves no doubt as to the identity of its
parent program.
This kind of software is mainly
used to handle essential campaign information. Information obviously related to
voters but also to fundraising sources and to internal organization.
As far as the voters are
concerned, these programs sort them into groups and handle information to send
out mailings and all kinds of direct mail contacts. Likewise, certain direct
contact techniques, such as Canvassing, allow the database to be fed and built
up by classifying voters according to their relative proximity to the candidate
and by the probability that each voter will vote for our proposal or not.
As for fund raising, these
programs manage existing lists of possible campaign contributors and help to
avoid one of the most common and tragic errors found in campaign funding
committees which is to ask for a thousand dollars from the contributor who can
afford fifty thousand.
Each software application comes
with very different options. Most are placed on the client’s computers, but
some are web-based. There are programs for nationwide campaigns and other for
local campaigns. Some programs combine databases with geographic, mapping
software. Frequently they have e-marketing tools, like pre-designed campaign
websites, letter templates, mailbombers etc.
There are programs to suit all
budgets, from the odd freeware application to other options that cost several
thousand dollars per license. They generally range between two and five hundred
dollars. Nearly all the programs on offer are concentrated in the USA although
there are a few manufacturers in Canada. Below you can find a list of the
campaign software available on the market.
Campaign Commander: http://www.timelesstech.com
Win Campaign: http://www.win-campaign.com
Voter Access: http://www.politicaldata.com
Back Office: http://www.completecampaigns.com
Elect: http://www.electinc.com
Trail Blazer: http://www.trailblz.com
Voter Track: http://www.votertrack.com
CamPane: http://www.votes4u.com
FILPAC: http://www.filpac.com
Digital Campaigns: http://www.digicamp.com
Best Vote: http://www.dotstar.net
Political Opsware: http://www.cubistix.com
Visteva e-Campaign: http://www.visteva.com
Campaign Catapult: http://www.campaigncatapult.com
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