Advocating For Change

E-mail is a fast and inexpensive way to communicate with a large number of people at one time and it saves the time and expense of printing and postage. It can be used for one-on-one exchanges, group discussions, distributing information, and getting people involved. To make the most of this tool:

Once you have set up an e-mail account and begun to collect e-mail addresses, you can:

Establishing a Listserv™ back to top

Listserv is a kind of software that allows you to create an interactive opportunity for you, your constituents and colleagues to sign up and exchange information with each other. To provide this feature on your web site, you can purchase Listserv software or you can use a free list hosting service from Google (www.googlegroups.com) or Yahoo (www.yahoogroups.com). Tools that are called Listservs allow you to send out mass e-mails that can disseminate information, facilitate an online conversation, or request action. It can help you to build, engage, and activate your supporters. In establishing a Listserv:

Joining other Listservs back to top

There are already thousands of Listservs online. By subscribing to those that are relevant to your work, you can find out what is happening in other communities, pick up promising practices and lessons learned, find out about new reports and other publications, and—depending on the type of Listserv—ask questions, solicit advice, and build relationships with advocates in other places.

Distributing newsletters back to top

E-mail newsletters are an effective way of staying in touch with your supporters, sending information and updates, and building momentum. They’re cheaper than printed newsletters and are easily forwarded to others for wider circulation:


Sending out action alerts back to top

Action alerts are e-mails that urge your supporters to take a specific and immediate action, such as writing a letter, making a call, or sending an e-mail or fax to a public official. In sending out your action alerts:

Gathering signatures for a petition back to top

E-mail petitions are just like paper petitions, except that they are transmitted electronically. They usually include a request that you sign your name at the bottom, forward the e-mail to others, and send the petition to a specific person once it has a certain number of signatures.

A lot of people use e-mail petitions. They are frequently ineffective because the instructions are not always clear: the petition isn’t signed properly, it ends up having lots of duplicate signatures, or it bounces around in cyberspace indefinitely without ever reaching its intended target.

To increase your likelihood of success with your petition:

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