Skip Navigation
We use cookies to offer you a better browsing experience, provide ads, analyze site traffic, and personalize content. If you continue to use this site, you consent to our use of cookies.

The Effective Member Lobbyist: AEA Guide to Lobbying

Lobbying simply is a political technique for directly making public officials aware of our views in hopes that they will be influenced to support our position on issues.

Most Effective Lobbying Techniques

Personal meeting
Telephone contact
E-mail
Letter

Rules to Remember When Lobbying

  • Always be courteous
  • Don't be combative
  • Know the issue
  • Explain succinctly what you want and why
  • When possible, refer to a bill by the bill number and describe the intent of the bill

The 10 Golden Rules of Lobbying

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
Politics is consumer-driven

Help your legislator understand why your position is important to his or her constituents. Fight where the legislator lives through grassroots organizations at home.


 

2
Do your homework

Know your stuff. Understand your issue, the bill you support or oppose, and the legislative process before you approach your legislator. Know who the players are, who decides what, and which issues are hot at the moment.


 

3
Information is power

The secret is the distribution of information to legislators and their constituents. Be prepared to give the legislator information he or she can use, including what you are hearing from other legislators and from people back home.


 

4
A little professionalism goes a long way

Be credible, honest, and trustworthy. Never threaten, lie, or conceal facts. Stay calm...if you lose your cool, you lose the case.


 

5
Be positive

Always make your case without being critical of others' personalities or motives.


 

6
No permanent friends, No permanent enemies

Don't take your traditional friends for granted. Never write-off a legislator just because of party affiliation. Don't make enemies of legislators - you may need them as friends in the future.


 

7
Build a bond, not a gap

Research things you might have in common with the legislator. Use shared values to create easy, friendly, frequent communication with the legislators.


 

8
Be a partner

Build coalitions and look for allies among other organizations. Be accessible to legislators and other lobbyists if they have questions or need follow-up information. Become known as a reliable resource.


 

9
Rome wasn't built in a day

Aim for consensus rather than for a "victory." Be willing to settle for making progress toward your goal, getting the bill passed, and fine tuning it in future sessions.


 

10
Stay committed

Remember - you are the expert!! You have a compelling, energizing reason to keep fighting until you get what you need.


 

illustrations of different people as changemakers on a dark blue background

Your Voice Matters!

Contact your elected officials on any issue. Use this link to find their contact information, including email, phone number, and even their Facebook or Twitter.
Arkansas Education Association logo

Ensuring the Success of Every Student.

The Arkansas Education Association is a professional organization for teachers, education support professionals, students and advocates. Our fundamental objective is to work for quality and equitable public education for all of Arkansas students, the betterment of the Arkansas state education system and quality working conditions for educators.