Every one of these runs against a panel assembled for your exact geography and audience. Read reactions relatively: which option moves more, and for whom.
Upload a speech, a mailer, a social post, or a TV/radio script and put it in front of the audience you're actually trying to reach. See resonance, backlash risk, emotional activation, and where subgroups diverge — then rewrite and run it again the same afternoon.
Illustrative. Directional read of relative lift, not a forecast.
Simulate the opposition's likely attacks and test your defensive framings against them. Find the counterargument that appears to hold with the voters who decide the race — before it plays out in public.
“Voted to raise your taxes three times.”
Reframe to services funded → contains net favorable among Independents to −1.9.
Run two framings of the same policy and see which appears to lift support — and which may quietly cost you with a subgroup you need.
Estimate enthusiasm shifts and issue-driven mobilization — and flag demobilization risk before a field program locks in.
Take any result apart by demographic or geographic slice, or map issue intensity and persuasion opportunity across the areas you're contesting.
| Who | What they use it for |
|---|---|
| Local & state legislative campaigns | Message and framing on a budget that could never buy a poll |
| Political consultants | Fast iteration across a whole slate of client races |
| Ballot initiative committees | Test yes/no framings and identify persuadable geographies |
| Advocacy organizations & unions | Issue salience and mobilization by district |
| PACs | Prioritize spend where a message appears to move voters most |
| Media organizations | Explore public opinion at hyperlocal resolution |
Tell us the race and the question — we'll show you the read.