Voter Map
Overview
Section titled “Overview”The Voter Map provides an interactive, full-screen map view of all voters in your database. Use it to visualize voter density, canvassing coverage, and geographic patterns across SRP districts.
Map Features
Section titled “Map Features”Navigation
Section titled “Navigation”- Zoom - Scroll wheel or pinch to zoom in/out
- Pan - Click and drag to move around the map
- Full Screen - The map fills the available dashboard area
Voter Markers
Section titled “Voter Markers”Voters are displayed as markers on the map, color-coded by their canvass status:
| Color | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Green | Supportive / Positive result |
| Red | Opposed / Negative result |
| Yellow | Undecided / Neutral result |
| Gray | Not yet contacted |
Clustering
Section titled “Clustering”When zoomed out, nearby voters are grouped into clusters showing the count of voters in that area. Zoom in to see individual voter markers.
Voter Details
Section titled “Voter Details”Click on a voter marker to see a popup with:
- Voter name
- Address
- Current canvass result
- Voting acres
- Link to full voter detail page
Using the Map
Section titled “Using the Map”Canvassing Planning
Section titled “Canvassing Planning”- Identify areas with high concentrations of uncontacted voters
- Plan door-to-door routes through dense neighborhoods
- Find geographic gaps in your canvassing coverage
Progress Tracking
Section titled “Progress Tracking”- Watch green markers spread as canvassing progresses
- Identify districts or neighborhoods needing more attention
- Compare contacted vs. uncontacted areas visually
Turf Creation
Section titled “Turf Creation”The Voter Map works alongside the Turfs page. Use the map to identify geographic areas, then create turfs with the polygon drawing tools on the Turfs page.
Best Practices
Section titled “Best Practices”- Use the map at the start of each week to plan canvassing priorities
- Share map views in team meetings to show progress
- Look for clusters of gray (uncontacted) markers near supportive areas—these are high-priority targets