RonPaulFTW08
Member
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2007
- Messages
- 433
mmmmmmm... got bump?
Thanks for the inspiring topic. I took the plunge as well, thanks to this thread.
I love this thread, I've always thought the shy people were the most interesting people to talk with.
I also think it is the shy people that are the natural born leaders in this world, funny as it sounds, in todays world of bullshit and arrogant, so-called leaders without vision, critical thinking, or ability, we need the real leaders, the thinkers, to come forward.
Please come forward and lead, we need you, the silent majority!
Would someone please explain to me exactly what is involved in being a precinct leader? I'm trying to deal with some volunteer related fatigue since I returned to Georgia from two weeks in NH. The trip has put me behind in terms of money and time and I also lost some of my enthusiasm for canvasing and phone banking. I may be on the verge of a second wind, and this may be the inspiration I'm looking for. An explanation of what precinct leader entails would be helpful.
Listen folks, let's look at this through a cost benefit analysis.
It takes less than 30 seconds to leave a flyer on someone's door. That is 120 homes/hr. If you have 250 homes to canvass, that is only ~2 hours!!
Compared to spending between $0.26-$0.41 for postage which equals a total of $65-$145. And that is not counting the cost of envelopes!
I'm telling you guys, do the extra leg work and walk your precinct and do literature drops!
Top 4 reasons to walk your precinct instead of using mail:
1. People are more likely to open and read a flyer left on their door than a random envelope in the mail.
2. Mailing takes extra time to get to the recipient, that is time that we can't afford.
3. It's good exercise.
4. It'll save you roughly $50/hour!!!