How the Operations Hub Works
The Operations Hub is the execution side of the campaign system. It is used to track what is actually happening in the field: staff activity, office progress, volunteer movement, voter contact work, ballot collection, and other core operating numbers.
Unlike planning tools, the Operations Hub is built for live usage. It should reflect current reality as closely as possible. That means the most important habits are consistency, accuracy, and timely updates.
In practical terms, this system helps campaigns answer questions like:
- Are we entering data on time?
- Are organizers producing at the expected level?
- Is an office on pace toward its goals?
- Are volunteer numbers healthy or weakening?
- Are ballot collection efforts moving?
- Where is intervention needed before a problem becomes serious?
Page-by-Page Walkthrough
Use this section to understand what each major area of the Operations Hub is for, who should use it, and what good usage looks like. If your live page labels differ slightly, match the live labels while preserving the guidance and substance below.
Operations Overview / Dashboard
Purpose
This page gives users a top-level view of field operations performance. It should help staff and managers understand the current state of the office or campaign without digging through every individual workflow page.
Who should use it
Office managers, organizers, regional leadership, and anyone responsible for operational oversight.
What to review here
- current progress toward major goals
- recent productivity trends
- volunteer activity
- ballot collection progress
- office contribution to larger campaign goals
- warning signs that require follow-up
How often to check it
Managers should review it daily and use it as part of weekly performance conversations.
What good usage looks like
This page should be the first stop for understanding whether the operation is healthy, on pace, and reporting consistently.
Common mistakes
- treating the dashboard like a substitute for reviewing underlying data
- ignoring trend changes because totals still look acceptable
- assuming missing or delayed inputs mean weak performance rather than incomplete reporting
Daily Entry / Daily Reporting
Purpose
This page exists to capture the work that happened that day. It is the source layer for many of the numbers used elsewhere in the hub.
Who should use it
Staff responsible for entering daily activity, usually organizers or office-level operators.
What belongs here
- voter contact work
- volunteer activity where applicable
- shifts or staffing activity
- office outputs tied to daily work
- other campaign-defined daily field metrics
How often to update it
Daily. Data entry should happen as close to the workday as possible.
Why this page matters
If daily entry is inconsistent, every summary page becomes less trustworthy. Strong daily discipline is one of the most important operational habits in the system.
Common mistakes
- entering data late
- skipping days and trying to reconstruct them later
- inconsistent counting standards across staff
- forgetting corrections after a reporting error is found
Organizer Performance
Purpose
This page shows how individual staff members are performing against expectations and goals.
Who should use it
Organizers, office managers, and field directors.
What to review here
- individual output
- consistency over time
- pace toward personal or assigned goals
- comparison to office expectations
- warning signs for coaching or intervention
How managers should use it
Use this page for weekly 1:1s, productivity reviews, accountability conversations, and support planning.
What this page should help answer
- who is on pace
- who is falling behind
- who may need coaching, better turf, more support, or clearer expectations
- whether an office’s problem is broad or concentrated in a few users
Common mistakes
- using this page only for punishment rather than coaching
- overreacting to one bad day instead of reviewing patterns
- ignoring context such as staffing changes, bad turf quality, or uneven volunteer support
Office Performance / Office Metrics
Purpose
This page shows whether the office as a whole is moving at the right speed.
Who should use it
Office managers, field directors, senior operations leadership.
What to review here
- total progress to goal
- remaining gap
- average pace needed from here
- contribution to campaign-wide targets
- staffing and volunteer health
- whether the office is stabilizing, improving, or slipping
Why this page matters
A manager should be able to look at this page and quickly understand whether the office is functioning as expected and where to intervene.
Common mistakes
- focusing only on cumulative totals
- ignoring whether the current weekly pace is enough
- missing early signs of underperformance because the headline goal still seems achievable
Volunteer Tracking
Purpose
This page tracks the movement and health of volunteer activity in the office or campaign.
Who should use it
Organizers and managers responsible for recruitment, retention, and activation.
What to review here
- active volunteers
- recent volunteer engagement
- show-up consistency
- whether volunteer numbers are growing, stalling, or declining
Why it matters
Volunteer energy is often one of the earliest indicators of whether an operation is scaling or stalling.
Common mistakes
- counting volunteers inconsistently
- inflating active numbers with people who are no longer participating
- failing to distinguish recruitment from actual activation
Ballot / VBM Tracking
Purpose
This page tracks ballot collection or vote-by-mail operational movement.
Who should use it
Organizers, managers, and leadership tracking early vote execution.
What to review here
- ballots collected
- collection pace
- recent changes in activity
- contribution of ballot operations to wider turnout goals
Why it matters
Ballot work is time-sensitive and often requires fast follow-up. Delayed reporting reduces the campaign’s ability to adapt.
Common mistakes
- updating too late
- failing to reconcile duplicate or incomplete ballot entries
- treating ballot numbers as static instead of part of an active chase operation
Metrics Glossary
Active Volunteers
The number of volunteers currently participating in campaign work according to the campaign’s reporting standards. This should reflect real operational activity, not just names in a list.
Progress to Goal
How much of a target has already been completed. This helps users see how far they have come, but it should always be paired with pace and remaining gap.
Remaining to Goal
The amount of work still required to reach the target. This is often more useful for management than the raw total already completed.
Pace Needed
The average amount of work that must be completed over the remaining time period in order to hit the goal.
Average Per Organizer
The average contribution expected or observed per organizer. This helps managers judge whether staffing structure and output are aligned.
Office Contribution
How much one office has contributed to the larger campaign-wide target. This is especially useful for regional and senior management.
Ballots Collected
The number of vote-by-mail or ballot collection actions recorded under the campaign’s reporting standards.
Productivity Trend
The direction of performance over time. Trend matters because totals can hide whether an operation is improving or slipping.
Reporting Discipline
How consistently and on time the campaign enters data. Strong reporting discipline improves trust in every page of the Operations Hub.