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Introduction
Winning campaigns depend not only on persuading voters but on mobilising supporters to take action. Effective mobilisation depends on identifying engaged supporters, lowering the barriers to participation, and creating positive experiences that encourage people to return and bring others with them.
Research consistently shows that political participation follows a highly unequal pattern. A small core of committed activists typically produces a large share of campaign activity, while many supporters participate only occasionally or not at all. Successful campaigns recognise this dynamic and organise accordingly, investing time in supporting their most engaged volunteers while lowering the barriers for others to take part.
This briefing outlines practical steps for building and sustaining an active volunteer base, helping campaigns turn passive support into meaningful campaign activity. You can also find a more in depth guide to member mobilisation here.
How to Mobilise
Effective mobilisation follows a simple pattern: identify engaged supporters, invite them to take specific actions, and create positive experiences that encourage them to return and bring others with them.
1. Understand your Context
Begin by identifying the members and supporters who already show a pattern of engagement. Map out activists and keep track of attendance at events. Collect contact details wherever possible. A simple spreadsheet can help track volunteers and their engagement.
Mobilisation works differently in different places. In active local parties, members typically engage less with centralised emails but are highly active through local organisers, WhatsApp groups, and party structures. In less active areas, structured central outreach may be necessary to initiate activity.
Participation is not evenly distributed, and mobilisation efforts should reflect that reality. Prioritise the most active individuals for early outreach, feedback, and responsibility. Treat them as organisers, and explicitly encourage them to activate their own networks. Supporting and recognising these members increases retention and multiplies their impact.
Recognise communities that can be mobilised. Local party networks are the most obvious source, but don’t forget to look beyond your own organisation. Are there nearby pre-existing communities you could connect with that might be willing to help?
Segment your approach by geography and local capacity. Focus on enabling and resourcing strong local networks where they exist, rather than duplicating effort.
Template mobilisation spreadsheet
2. Refine your Message
Consider the tone of your mobilisation message. Research suggests that moral framing can significantly increase participation. In one study, volunteers exposed to morally framed appeals were roughly twice as likely to engage in activism initially and four times as likely to remain active a month later. This suggests that emphasising values and purpose can strengthen both recruitment and retention.
You might also want to consider volunteer’s motivations when you are thinking about engagement. The below table lists some common motivations you may want to think about:
Reason for Participation | Motivation | Things that may appeal | Ideas for volunteering |
|---|---|---|---|
Curiosity and learning | Learning a new skill or new piece of knowledge | Training and learning about persuasive conversations or how to campaign |
|
Show a superpower | An opportunity to contribute their skills and expertise to something they believe in | Showing off their organising, doorknocking or analysis skills |
|
Have a voice | Having their opinions, personal experiences, or questions heard and included in the conversation | Expressing their opinions or insights on the process |
|
Transparency | Gaining a deeper understanding of how political strategy works | Getting the inside scoop on the organisation’s specific political strategy |
|
Passion | A chance to show love for your mission, and demonstrate that they are proud to be affiliated with the party. | Telling the party’s story, relaying the importance of key issues, and recruiting members |
|
Community | Being part of something larger than themselves and becoming part of the community around this work. | Attending socials or weekly meetings and having the chance to meet new people |
|
3. Engage Potential Activists
Mobilisation is all about communication and connection, but different channels should be approached differently to maximise their benefit.
Research shows that mobilisation emails are most effective when you personalise the contact. Generic appeals to “get involved” are less effective than clear, specific requests. Ask people to do one defined task, at a particular time, with a clear purpose. Link the action to a tangible outcome, such as winning a marginal ward or responding to a local issue.
The ease of taking action matters more than perfect messaging. Sign-up and RSVP links should sit directly beneath the call to action and require as few steps as possible. Design mobilisation around micro-commitments. The first click is a gateway behaviour: lowering effort at this stage significantly increases the likelihood of further involvement.
Chat & SMS
Chat apps can be highly effective mobilisation tools. Create groups to share events and calls to action. One-to-one messaging is more time-consuming but can be particularly effective at encouraging volunteers to take part.
Try to collect phone numbers when volunteers first attend and follow up afterwards to invite them back. Because of GDPR restrictions, chat apps can be difficult to use for first contact. However, mobilisation is as much about retention as recruitment, and chat groups often become the backbone of active campaign teams. You can read more about making the most of group chats here.
Telephone Mobilisation
Calling members to ask them to get involved can be time-consuming, but where campaigns have the capacity it can be an effective way to reach new volunteers. Before calling, make sure you have a clear idea of what you want volunteers to do and what next steps are. Even if a volunteer isn’t able to help in one way, they may be willing to take on a less intensive form of activism.
Relational Mobilisation
Research consistently shows that people are more likely to participate when encouraged by someone they know and trust. Messages delivered through trusted personal networks often have far greater impact than traditional campaign communications.
Despite this, many supporters hesitate to raise politics with friends or family because they fear awkwardness or backlash. In practice these concerns are often overstated: most conversations are neutral or positive, and supporters frequently underestimate their own influence.
Campaigns should actively normalise relational mobilisation. Reassure volunteers that these conversations are usually well received and provide simple scripts or prompts to lower the barrier to starting them. Avoid leaving this open-ended. Encourage supporters to think about specific people they could contact friends, family members, neighbours, or colleagues rather than defaulting to already-engaged activists.
Structuring relational outreach in this way helps convert passive goodwill into meaningful campaign activity and allows mobilisation to spread through existing social networks.
A short guide to relational mobilisation
4. Direct your Mobilisation
Think carefully about where you send new volunteers. First impressions matter. Where possible, direct new volunteers to high-energy recruitment events such as large weekend canvassing sessions with local representatives or campaign socials rather than smaller sessions.
Not everyone will want to knock on doors, so keep track of a range of activities. Use a sign-up form and update your tracking sheet to record which volunteers are interested in which tasks. Key campaign activities include canvassing, leafleting, phone-banking, boosting posts on social media, and helping with GOTV on polling day.
When asking people to help with GOTV, try to get time-specific commitments and track them. This helps with planning and makes volunteers more likely to stick to their commitment.
If someone is new to doorknocking you can use Canvass Coach– an AI chatbot designed to help new volunteers practise canvassing. It helps activists build confidence and develop useful skills for effective canvassing.
5. Rewarding your Activists
Mobilisation is more sustainable when it feels useful, social, or helps volunteers develop new skills. Design activities so volunteers feel their time is well spent and their contribution matters. Early positive experiences are critical for retention and long-term engagement.
Create meaningful ways to reward activists: say thank you, show genuine appreciation, stay in touch, and build social elements into campaigning. Hold proper events to thank activists after an election. What motivates people will differ from activist to activist, so getting to know individuals and responding to their motivations is particularly powerful.
Conclusion
Successful mobilisation is built on relationships, organisation, and positive volunteer experiences. Campaigns that invest time in understanding their local networks, making participation easy, and supporting activists to bring in others can rapidly multiply their capacity.
Mobilisation rarely depends on a single breakthrough moment. Instead, it depends on consistently encouraging small acts of participation that build into sustained campaign activity over time.
This guide is one of six short briefings designed to help progressive campaigners build effective local campaigns. You can explore the full Winning in May series for more practical guides, tools and research.