You can’t govern on guesswork

  • Alarm Clock

    You're two months into office. The infrastructure vote is next week.

  • Speech

    Five people showed up to town hall: three retirees and two activists with the same sign.


  • Cable

    You're not plugged into what the majority of your community really thinks.


How you find out:

Text your residents one question. Get hundreds of responses. Walk into council with data, not hunches.

Reach the quiet majority

Working parents. Night-shift workers. Homebound seniors. The people who have opinions but never make it to a 7 PM town hall.

Message Circle
Hear from every resident

Quickly reach citizens who can’t make a weeknight meeting with just one text

Badge Check
Defend your decisions

See exactly who cares about what, where they live, and how strongly they feel. Lead with confidence, not opinions

Recycle
Efficiency

Keep the conversation going between elections without knocking on 500 doors every weekend

How it works

3 Polls. Real input. Confident leadership.

Your three-poll system

Ask the right questions in the right order. Get actionable answers without canvassing fatigue.

Data that holds up

When the developer challenges your zoning decision, you can say: “67% of residents within 0.5 miles oppose this project, with a ±5.2% margin of error at 95% confidence.”

Show your work

Keep constituents in the loop without hours of face-to-face conversations. Send updates, share results, and prove you're listening. All with one system.

Trusted by Local Leaders

Serve is 100% free to start, no tech skills required

Getting the data, being able to follow up with it, and just understanding the pulse of where we're coming from is helpful to me.
Alisa Mercer
School Board Member, Davis School District, UT
The biggest benefit for me from this survey is definitely being able to take it back to the budgeting office and to other board members.
Robin Brown
Prince George's County, MD School Board Member
It's good to have a randomized and well-rounded group of responses to try to understand what everybody thinks and not just one group. It's just having actual, real data to make real decisions on, versus just guessing or having kind of a biased anecdotal experience.
Ty Miller
City Council Member, Palm Coast, FL