Well, we’ve safely docked at beautiful downtown Ensenada, Mexico, and are about to start Day 2 of this year’s ConservaCruise.
But it’s not been all play and no work.
Yesterday, I was able to finish up a new special report on campaign signs – you know, those things that have been springing up like weeds the past few weeks.
And it’s only going to get worse now that official filing for office in Nevada is open. So let’s talk about ‘em.
If you’re not running for office, you might think this doesn’t apply to you. It does.
Because if you’re writing checks, knocking doors, hosting meet-and-greets, or putting a sign in your yard, you’re investing your time and money in someone else’s campaign decisions.
And some of those decisions are killing campaigns before they ever get off the ground.
In this special report – “Campaign Signs That SELL!” – I break down a real-world case study of a sign that looks polished, professional, and impressive…
But fails at its only job: Persuasion.
This isn’t about graphic design. It’s about whether your candidate understands how to win.
Inside, you’ll discover:
- Why “pretty” signs often signal amateur strategy
- How consultant-safe slogans waste valuable roadside real estate
- The difference between branding and persuasion
- The 8-point Sign Pre-Flight Checklist every serious campaign should pass
Here’s why this matters to you…
If you’re donating $100, $1,000, or $10,000, wouldn’t you like to know whether that money is being spent wisely?
If you’re giving up Saturdays to walk precincts, shouldn’t you know whether the campaign’s messaging is sharp or sloppy?
A campaign sign tells you a lot about the campaign behind it.
Does it pass the One-Second Test? Does the message answer, “What’s in it for me?” Does the candidate pop, or blend into a pastel blur?
Once you read this report, you won’t look at campaign signs the same way again.
And you’ll be able to:
- Spot weak strategy from 30 feet away
- Ask smarter questions before you donate
- Push your candidate to tighten up their messaging
- Identify which campaigns are built to persuade – and which are built to look nice
Most campaigns lose quietly.
Not because the candidate is terrible. But because no one around them is willing – or able – to say, “This isn’t working.”
Read this report so you can be that person.
The one who protects your investment.
The one who raises the standard.
The one who helps good candidates avoid rookie mistakes.
Click the link below to access the full special report now.
https://campaigndoctor.com/signs
Then take a drive around town. You’ll start seeing the difference immediately.
And you’ll better understand why I teach that campaigns aren’t about politics – they’re about marketing!
Chuck Muth
The Campaign Doctor