Emails are easy to ignore. Phone calls disappear as soon as they end. A physical postcard is different: it lands on a desk, gets handled by staff, and creates a visible signal that someone took the time to make their message tangible.
The TellGovernment widget turns a regular website page into a civic action tool. Visitors enter an address, choose the right officials, and draft a physical postcard without leaving your site. You then review the postcard, and if you tell us to, we put a stamp on it and put it in the mail!
For elected officials, mail still carries weight because it feels local, deliberate, and harder to dismiss than another inbox notification. A postcard does not just say “someone clicked a button.” It says a real constituent cared enough to put a message into the physical world. And it has a return address on it. A postcard from a voter carries a lot of weight.
That is why this TellGovernment focuses on helping people send clear, personal, printed messages. It keeps the action simple for your audience while giving their advocacy a form that stands out.
If your organization needs supporters, members, customers, or neighbors to speak up at the right moment, this is the kind of lightweight widget you can embed where the campaign already lives.
Built for action
Make it simple for people to turn concern into a clear message to the officials who represent them.
Embeds where you need it
Add the widget to a campaign page, issue page, association site, newsletter landing page, or local advocacy hub.
Keeps visitors focused
People can try the flow in place, instead of being sent through a maze of tabs, forms, and instructions.
Try the widget
Use the live demo below as your visitors would: start with an address, follow the prompts, and see how quickly a letter-writing action can fit into a website.
Want this on your site?
If your website needs a simple way to help people contact government officials, send me a note. I can help you set up the widget, tailor the flow to your audience, and make the page match your campaign.