Advocacy and Political Campaign Advertising that Gets Results

Latest posts

  • My Baby, the New Walnut Creek Library

    Living in Walnut Creek and free from the political abstinence required by my former job, in 2005 and 2006 I made a concentrated effort to reshape the runaway Walnut Creek Library project. … When I began my “Save Civic Park” campaign, the proposal threatened massive new taxes, a mega-garage in Walnut Creek’s central creekside park,…

    Continue reading


  • Predicting the local SF races

    Just entered the Usual Suspects “Best Political Mind” contest. Some tough picks in the supe races, and I don’t expect to do well. Districts 3, 9 and 11 could all be close for three more candidates. In 11, I have to think the Party endorsement (unofficial link – the Dem ‘s have a very poor…

    Continue reading


  • Brian Schweitzer and Jared Diamond

    Watching the Montana governor’s speech on energy policy, I’m reminded of Jared Diamond’s musings in “Collapse” on his most beautiful place in the world, Montana’s Bitterroot Valley, and the challenges of sustainability. … Fire in that speech – closed very strong. …

    Continue reading

Meta Lead Ads for Large Nonprofits

The Adriel Hampton Group provides strategy, creative, placement, and integrations for Meta Leads Ads programs for nonprofits.

GET STARTED TODAY

Does your organization have a goal of recruiting more supporters, a budget of $25,000 or more, and at least three months to reach that goal? Email leads@adrielhampton.com for a private consultation.

More than ever, political media consultants are battling it out for budget and relevance. But lost in the shuffle of mail, cable, and digital is what’s made social media platforms increasingly influential in our politics and society. If you can cut through the noise, social media is rich with meaningful engagement and less saturated with campaign contacts than calls and texts. (C&E)


As SEEN IN…

NBC News. AdAge. CNN. Campaigns & Elections. Vox. Washington Post. Axios. BBC. Business Insider. Fortune. New York Times. NPR. Medium. Politico.