Every political campaign has to face a tough fact: platforms like Google and Meta can change their rules at any time. All it takes is a new policy, an updated algorithm, or a temporary ad restriction, and suddenly your voter outreach plan is thrown off course.
There’s a better way. The key is to stop putting all your eggs in one basket. If you build direct connections with voters—using your own email lists, newsletters, and by working with established local media—you gain channels you control. Places like McClatchy’s network give you that steady, trusted link to voters, no matter what Silicon Valley decides to do next.
If you manage a campaign, you need outreach tools that work. Blending owned data and local media helps you do that.
Depending mostly on Google, Meta, or similar platforms puts your campaign on shaky ground. Policy changes or new regulations can pop up overnight, blocking your ads or limiting your audience just when you need voters’ attention the most.
Let’s say Facebook changes its ad policies close to an election, or Google lowers the visibility of political content. If all your outreach depends on these companies, you could lose momentum fast. Even on a good day, letting platforms stand between you and voters means giving up control. Instead of building your own network, you borrow someone else’s—and pay for the privilege.
Email lists, newsletters, and direct sign-ups give campaigns a stable line of communication with supporters. When you control the list, you control the delivery. No algorithms decide who gets your message.
There are real benefits to owned channels:
Growing these lists takes time, so the sooner you start, the better. With each new subscriber, you’re building a base you can count on through every phase of the campaign.
Unlike global platforms, local news outlets don’t lurch from one algorithm tweak to the next. Their policies rarely shift overnight, so your ads have a better chance of running as planned.
Local media also has something digital giants struggle to deliver: trust. Communities turn to their local papers and news sites for information that matters to them. That trust means readers actually engage with ads and messages—something algorithms can’t manufacture.
Take McClatchy as an example. With digital reach across dozens of communities and deep roots in local journalism, McClatchy offers both audience scale and credibility. Their team works closely with political advertisers, helping you navigate rules and regulations so your plan rolls out smoothly.
The strongest plan relies on several channels working together, not just one. Use your own email and list-building efforts as the anchor. Pair them with trusted local media partnerships to guarantee baseline reach.
After that, bring in social or search advertising as “boosters” instead of the main event. Here’s how the mix shakes out:
This combination makes your voter outreach more resilient and ensures you always have reliable ways to get your message out, no matter what tech platforms decide next.
Campaigns run on momentum and reliability. If your outreach plan swings with the tech giants, you give up both. Building up your own lists and working with proven local media gives you real stability—the kind you need to win.
McClatchy stands out because we connect the dots for you: owned data, established local reach, and campaign support from a team that knows compliance. When uncertainty on major platforms hits, your connection to local voters stays strong.