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How to get others to vote for it?

Hello, know your audience.

1

Grasp the overall situation. Talk to voters and find out why they care about this election. Do they care about the leadership of the incumbent, or do they just want to cut taxes? Learn as much as possible about these issues, pay more attention to them, and keep your position. Don't run for office just because you want to win, you need to care about urgent issues.

2

Investigate competitors. Elections are not a single-player game: you need to know other candidates, think about how to outsmart your opponents, and organize voters to vote for them. Thoroughly investigate your biggest competitor. Try to make yourself different from them on key issues and expose weaknesses or scandals they are trying to hide.

three

Find your supporters. Not everyone will like you and vote for you, but not every voter is hard to attract. Find the core group who is very willing to vote for you and get in touch as soon as possible. These supporters are necessary for organizing voluntary activities and raising campaign funds. You don't have to spend a lot of time persuading these people, but don't ignore them too much-every candidate who alienates his backing almost died.

four

Collect loose tickets. Voters without clear positions may be a headache for politicians, but they are still the key to the success or failure of an election. Know what they care about and what elements or policies can win their votes for you-and then publicize them purposefully. After establishing and organizing your supporters, winning over neutral voters or getting votes from your opponent's original supporters is the main goal of your campaign.

Release news

Tell a story. They will not be attracted by the invented policy of attracting votes, and they prefer to listen to stories. People will believe these stories, such as starting from scratch, losers struggling with vested interests, and the movement of organizations regained from some people eventually becoming destroyed. Your campaign strategy needs to include telling voters a story about you (and themselves), which will impress them and make them willing to vote for you. Your publicity materials should talk about your views on the significance of the election and the development of political parties.

Take advantage of your personality. This may be unfortunate bad news: people are more willing to vote for their favorite candidates than those who are more experienced and give people better policies. Many excellent candidates are too rigid and lofty. You know, people need to feel that you like them. They can make friends with you, or at least have dinner with you. Try to show your charm, humility, courtesy, friendliness and humor, and don't sound like an elite or professional bureaucrat.

Protect your information. The media and your opponents will try to get you to talk about your past scandals. Don't be distracted whether your position is praised by voters or whether the recent newspaper is occupied by other things! In debates and campaigns, you must try to turn the topic back to your core areas of expertise.

Put forward a slogan. This slogan should be short and pleasant-it should be remembered by people. Try to rhyme or give it a rhythm so that people can sing it. If you can use it to remember your name, so much the better. Detailed policy description can help you win the recommendation, but ordinary voters can only remember one slogan about you, as long as a car tail sticker-so be sure to make this slogan different from your competitors and reflect the concerns of voters.

Suppose there is only one issue in your campaign that requires you to stand firm, then you must choose a slogan that points out this issue, such as "John Smith: workers on the assembly line" or even "John Smith: no new traffic lights."

Attack. Uncover the ugly veil hidden by opponents in the past, or hide in private gossip. People don't like this kind of negative publicity, but it is very useful. If you expose your privacy too much, it will be bad for you, but successful candidates must attack their opponents appropriately in this way. One less ticket for your opponent is as good for the campaign as one more ticket for you.

If you can control it, try to let a third party do it, and you can stay out of it. Successful presidential candidates always make some walk-ons behave like police dogs while maintaining a positive image.

Organize a successful election

Organize volunteers. Even in a small election, it is difficult to win the election alone. Find a few volunteers to help you organize your campaign and prove your ability to voters. Invite your friends and family to work with you. A dedicated volunteer can be worth a hundred votes on election day.

Shake hands. Get to know as many people as possible. Even in the digital age, face-to-face conversation is still the easiest way to win each other's hearts. Knock on the door with your most convincing volunteers and staff as much as possible, and meet as many voters as possible in lively public activities. Many people may refuse you, but those who take the time to listen to you-even those who shake your hand-are more likely to vote, donate money or volunteer for you.

Distribute a large number of publicity materials to raise awareness. The most tangible products of any large-scale activity are slogans, posters, brochures, badges, car stickers and T-shirts. Many products are limited to displaying your name and slogan, or just an icon. They can't do anything to win personal votes, but they do make your name known to the public and may make people go to your website. They also tell voters where you get support in the community. Many people just want to take part in an already popular activity.

You may not really change your mind because of the slogans around you, but if volunteers have to organize an election campaign in an environment where only your opponents are shouting, their morale will be low. Politics is an arms race. If your opponent does this, you need to be ready to stand side by side with him.

Raise funds. Victory is not cheap. All important campaign activities need money to print campaign materials, organize activities and even pay the salaries of campaign employees. Start with potential big donors, but small donations of only a few dollars each can accumulate quickly. If a voter seems confident enough to support you, be sure to ask them to donate.

Get the votes. If you can't get people to show up on election day, all fund-raising, campaigning and vigorous debate will be in vain. Make every effort to get your supporters to vote, from sending simple reminder emails to providing round-trip transportation.