• zephorah@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Does door knocking work? I don’t answer the door anymore, haven’t for a while. I check the cameras. If I don’t recognize someone or their uniform I don’t get up.

    Same with picking up the phone. Leave a message and I’ll call back, if it’s relevant. Don’t leave a message and there’s no callback.

    And I’m skeptical of text surveys, what new scam could be contained within?

    Who is doing participating in these polls? Is this all boomer data? Or are they just pulling numbers out of air for headlines?

    • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I’ve gone door knocking both for campaigns and other non-political canvases and most people don’t have cameras. Heck, many people don’t even have doorbells, it literally is knocking on the door.

      Most people will answer the door if they are home, most won’t want to talk. You just move onto the next, it’s about being visible and talking to those that are willing to do so.

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It can work yeah. From experience it’s usually more catching people out and about while you have the pamphlet bag and they get curious. Otherwise you’re just leaving pamphlets in doors. Calling people seems to be worse in my experience. If you catch someone outside there’s a good chance you aren’t interrupting with a short conversation. Whereas phone canvassing has gotten worse and worse about that somehow. Maybe it’s just something psychological. Some of my best results were being in the same area twice, (to finish pamphletting doors), and someone who couldn’t talk the day before can talk the next day and they give you time because you didn’t chase them like a salesperson.

      • zephorah@lemm.ee
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        16 hours ago

        So much scamming via phone. You in person is verifiable, so that makes sense.

    • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      I’m there with you.

      We have a camera on the driveway and the front walk. We have a sign at the start of the front walk that, in compliance with state/federal law requirements, says no politics (among others). Anybody who makes it to the door gets yelled at for not reading the sign and asked for their permit from the city to go door to door.

      We really don’t like people, outside of expected visitors/deliveries, coming to our door. Our dogs lose their minds barking and then are on high alert for a while going off at every little noise.

      Political texts, regardless of party or content, get an automatic delete and mark junk. Same with emails.

      Mailers don’t make it into the house and go right into the recycling.

      We don’t vote based on the best marketing campaign.

      • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        We really don’t like people, outside of expected visitors/deliveries, coming to our door. Our dogs lose their minds barking and then are on high alert for a while going off at every little noise.

        Your dogs take their emotional cues from you. You lose your mind when someone comes to your door unexpectedly, said so yourself.

        • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Firstly, nobody comes to our door “unexpectedly”. We’re alerted and have them on camera before they hit our front walk.

          Secondly, our dogs lose their minds barking when my wife comes home from work, when we have expected company, when we come back from running errands, when our neighbor comes home from work and slams his car door etc. etc. etc.

          It’s almost like they both have high amounts of guard dog breeds in them.

          • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            Secondly, our dogs lose their minds barking when my wife comes home from work

            What do you do when she comes home? What does she do when she comes in the door as far as greeting you and the dog?

            when we have expected company

            How do you greet your company? What do you do with the dog from the moment the bell rings?

            Practice with expected company. You and your family stay seated in the room and ask a friend knock on the door.say, “come in its open.” Stay seated, let your friend come in and take a seat. Everyone ignore the dog. If the dog is not calm throughout after one or two tries at this, I will eat my hat.

            when we come back from running errands,

            When you get home from errands, what is your dog’s experience? Is it a bunch of excitement and greetings? Lots of attention for the dog? Immediate play, petting, or food? Do you start arguing when you get in the door?

            when our neighbor comes home from work and slams his car door etc. etc. etc.

            Do you watch the neighbor come home and gripe about the loud noises? When you hear a loud noise outside, do you run to the window? Go outside to see what it is? Talk about it? Pay attention to it?

            Regardless of breed, your dogs are going to pay attention to what you pay attention to, and their emotions are going to mimic their human’s, with very little exception. If you hear noise and then look out the window, obviously your dog is going to get excited about that noise and want to look for it, too.

            • LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee
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              12 hours ago

              Well damn! You’re 0/2!!! Look at you go!

              Maybe, just maybe, two comments on Lemmy, one not even directly about our dogs, isn’t enough for your armchair analysis.

              Don’t worry, I don’t expect you to actually eat your hat, though that was a foolish thing to say.

          • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            Dogs are dogs. I’m familiar with many dogs. I’m familiar with many dogs that are Shepherd breeds that don’t flip out when someone rings the door bell. The dog only knows about doorbells because of how humans react to it. If you react calmly, and sit down for a second, and then walk to the door calmly and open it calmly, and you don’t do loud sing-song greetings with everybody making a bunch of noise, if you’re not trying to restrain the dog or block the dog from running out the door, or panicking that someone is there, then the dog will be calm too. It’s not rocket science.