patdunlavey's blog

Advokit - Rediscover your Grassroots

Manage Your Campaign

Advokit is a free web-based voter contact management system created by and for the grassroots. Using Advokit, you can combine the power of voter files and social networking to build your grassroots into an organization, and use that organization to identify and mobilize supporters. Advokit is an online hub for a campaign’s activist recruitment, voter registration, supporter identification, get-out-the-vote, door-to-door canvassing and phone bank work.

Activate Social Networks

The Internet is leveling the political playing field, allowing every concerned citizen to become an activist for their chosen issues and on behalf of yours. When friends asks friends to vote, positive response rates are five to ten times greater than when campaigns canvass anonymously. Advokit positions campaigns to harness the grassroots power of social networking.

If you're waiting for version 2.0, dont!

Bob asked on 9/2/2008:

"Any news on the 2.0 release? I looked at the mailing lists, but they seem to have petered out 8 months ago."

At some point I hope to pick up where I left off on the documentation, maybe work on a few bugs, and then report out a nominal version 2.0. However I don't personally envision working on Advokit beyond that. Both politics and technology have moved a fair distance from where they were in 2003 when Advokit was started.

Advokit development since 2004 has been almost entirely a solo effort, with no pay and little community feedback and support. However, if anyone wants to try their hand at designing and coding improvements to Advokit or even taking over the whole project, I will lend all the support I can!

If you're waiting for the official version 2.0 release to try out Advokit, don't! You should go ahead and download the current development version and start using it. No significant changes have been planned between now and the 2.0 release. When and if 2.0 is officially released, you should be able to simply update your existing installation using the installer.

Getting ready for Advokit 2.0

I think I have - finally - completed the list of enhancements that I wanted to include in Advokit 2.0. I hope to officially tag Advokit 2.0 beta 1 next week. From here on out, there will be no significant changes - just bug fixes and easy usability improvements. I will now be turning my focus to compiling documentation and fixing bugs.

The documentation plan is as follows:

  • Update the existing help screens and add many new ones.
  • Create a comprehensive "Advokit 2.0 Guide" for campaign leaders (I've started this at http://advokit.net/node/162 ).
  • Create several printable use-case-specific guides for activists and leaders.
  • Edit existing documentation on advokit.net to bring up to date with Advokit 2.0

If you would be interested in helping test or write documentation, please let me know!!!!

Watch here for further announcements...

Advokit 1x sandbox/demo site

As you will gather if you've read some of my earlier posts, I'm hard at work at an enhanced version of Advokit that I'm calling version "1x" (i.e. something after version 1.0). You'll also know that you can grab a tarball of this development version from our code repository.

Now you can test drive it without all the fuss of setting up your own site! I've created a 1x sandbox site at http://advokit.net/sandbox. Login as username: chief; password: advokit

Progress on "version 1x" - any early adopters ready to give it a try?

I've been very busy the past several weeks going down our long wish list of improvements and adding them to the "1x" branch of Advokit. The main difference between this work and the improvements I made for the version 1.0 release is that now I am now letting myself muck around with the underlying data model of Advokit: adding new tables and adding new fields to existing tables. For example, I added an "interests" table for keeping track of activist interests so that when we want to fill a job, we can search for activists who, for example, have indicated that they are interested in tabling.

New Activist's Guide and Documentation Roadmap

I have fairly extensively revised and updated a user's guide originally created by Dan Robinson for voter-contact activists, and published it as a PDF file. Look in the Tutorials and Guides section of the documentation page. It's pretty comprehensive with lots of screen shots.

I've also started a documentation roadmap so that you can comment on what documentation is need, and hopefully, contribute to the documentation available!

Thanks, Pat

Advokit logo, tagline ideas wanted

I've been messing around with ideas for a new Advokit logo and tagline to grace the upper-left corner of the page in Advokit, as well as anchor a new theme for the Advokit Community site.

Here's what I currently am considering for a logo:

gif:

ping:

For a tagline, I'd particularly like some suggestions. It should be very short (just a couple words), perhaps a little pithy, play on words, and encapsulate the value of Advokit. Here's an utterly unfiltered list of some ideas I've been playing with:

  • grassroots fertilizer
  • grassroots equipment
  • renewable politics
  • people powered
  • community supported politics
  • democratic machinery

Please post your own ideas and comments here, or email the advokit-dev email list.

It's official: Advokit version 1.0 is released!

I'm proud to announce that as of June 8th, 2006, Advokit 1.0 is ready to help your campaign. It took a lot longer to get to the point of having something that I felt comfortable labeling "1.0" than I expected. Since we began talking about releasing 1.0 about three months ago, there have been some 160 revisions made to the code base. And though there remain a few things in the Advokit application that I want to improve in the 1.0.x version, we will soon be able to start thinking about what's next!

Release 1.0.0 is imminent!

We're pretty happy with where Advokit's code is right now. It's quite stable, I recently consulted for a US Senate primary campaign where not a single code bug was encountered. We're just trying to nail down a few loose threads before announcing it as version 1.0.0:

  • We're moving this site up to Drupal 4.7 and making significant modifications.
  • We're switching to a Subversion code repository, which will be nicer than CVS in a number of ways. I really like that it will make and provide access installer tarballs in ways much more elegant than our current system.
  • We're also moving everything to new servers hosted (and paid for) by CivicActions. Thanks Henri, Dan, Fen and everyone else - you are the greatest!

(Re)Introducing Peer to Peer Politics


AdvoKit - Person To Person Politics:

AdvoKit is a Voter ID/GOTV Web application available for free to any organization doing community organizing. The Howard Dean presidential campaign demonstrated that significant political power can result when an online community grows and unites behind a cause. The 2004 Democratic primary proved that people can trump "big" money in our civic lives. In our system of government, at the end of the day, the only thing that matters is winning an election. AdvoKit provides the tools to get people out to vote.

Voter ID/GOTV campaigns, when effectively organized, can easily produce a margin of victory for a contested election. The Web, with its ability to facilitate efficient collaboration among large numbers of people, enables, for the first time, volunteer recruitment and Voter ID/GOTV to be performed by thousands, or even tens of thousands of individual political supporters. However, well designed and inexpensive Web tools for managing such an effort have not been available.

AdvoKit

combines manage­ment and tools for the best practices of traditional Voter ID/GOTV campaigning with the power of social networks and friend-to-friend outreach methodology to produce a campaign system with unprecedented political power, that costs almost nothing, and strengthens civil society - indeed, relies on it. Friend to friend outreach has been shown to be five to ten times more effective at identifying supporters, per contact, than targeted phone banking, and twice as effective as neighbor to neighbor outreach. The secret to AdvoKit is its ability to recruit, manage and effectively utilize large numbers of volunteers - all performing high-yield friend to friend outreach within their communities.

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