Crafting Your Campaign’s Message

How to build your campaign messages in line with your objectives

Campaign messages are like arrows: their trajectory must be precise, and their impact deep and effective. It’s better to launch a single, well-aimed arrow than to waste a hundred with no clear direction. Always keep in mind the specificities of the people you are addressing. Once you understand your audiences, communicating your ideas to each of them becomes much easier.

Follow these five steps to build your campaign messages:

Put your proposals in order, thinking of them as solutions to the problems your constituents (audiences) are facing. Organize them according to the public’s priorities and also according to the agenda you want to set to your potential mandate. Your proposals are the core of your campaign; all messages should be variations deriving from them.

Identify the key messages or themes you will address throughout the campaign and prioritize them. You need absolute clarity on your public policy proposals:

  • what do you want (and realistically can) implement that would generate meaningful change?
  • How can you communicate these proposals clearly and simply?

At the intersection of your proposals and how you communicate them lie your key messages.

Organize your key messages into a coherent, well-structured document that includes main ideas and supporting arguments. Add relevant data and statistics to back up your messages. This document (your “argumentarium”) should serve as a research-based reference you and your team can return to whenever you need to defend or deepen your proposals. It should clearly explain why the changes you propose are necessary and outline your strategic plan for implementation. Needs (including data), proposals, and arguments all belong here. Include a section explaining why you are the best candidate for this position.

Remember that your unique personal experience also contributes to building solutions. Include elements about who you are and the life philosophy you want to project.

  • Why are you the solution to these problems?
  • What about you will motivate people to vote?
  • What is your political story?

Write it as a story of struggle and achievement.

A slogan should reflect your proposals, key messages, and personal and political story. It should be short, powerful, and capable of expressing something profound about your struggle.

Example: Colombian Vice President Francia Márquez used the campaign slogan “Vivir sabroso” (“Living well”), a philosophy rooted in Afro-descendant communities. Francia is the first Afro-Colombian woman to become Vice President, and her campaign centered her identity and the way her personal experience enriched Colombian politics. Vivir sabroso condenses a cultural and political vision grounded in a harmonious relationship with nature and the environment. It is a demand for dignity, peace, and the right to enjoy life, things that violence and insecurity have taken away from many people in Colombia. It also fills historically marginalized communities with pride. Two simple words that carry representation and proposal at once.

Key considerations when crafting messages

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