A list of campaign materials was posted in the campaign supplies sub-forum. These are listed as "left over" and available for postage:

Door Hanger Literature 6,000
Super Brochure Door Hangers 145
New Rally Signs 1 Box
Used Rally Signs 1 Box
Ron Paul Letterhead Paper 1 Box
brochures:
Standing Up for Homeschooling 1600
Lower Taxes 1700
Strong, Secure, & Respected 5100
Plan to Restore America Packet 460
Miscellaneous Literature 1 Box
Prolife Campaign 3600
Man of Faith 14,400
Workers Rights 3500
Restore America's Prosperity 3700
Secure Boarders 2500
End Fed 400
Energy Independence 300
Right Remedy 300
Protect Gun Rights 100

They were apparently abandoned by the official campaign. Just going by this list, it looks like the #1 most popular brochure was "Protect Gun Rights" with only 100 left.

The least popular: "Man of Faith" with 14,400 left and "Strong, Secure, & Respected" with 5100 left. 6,000 door hangers also were not hung.

Are these good numbers? Were some things more popular in some areas? Did this office lowball the gun rights flyer?, do a lot of gun shows? or was it just really, really popular. We don't know how many of what the office ordered, so this is difficult. If they distributed 100,000 of each - these numbers are pretty meaningless. If they ordered 20,000 of one flyer and had 14,000 left - that's very telling.

What I'm looking for here is what of our campaign materials were gobbled up and effective, and which were not. Probably the best measure would be all of them laid out on a fair table in equil number and see which are taken and what left.

Anyone have any feedback on that? What was your situation this campaign?

Were we effective at recycling campaign supplies and moving them to the next state? If not, why not?

We used a lot less home made material this time and were more reliant on the campaign - how did that work?

What about the supply train? Some states got higher priority depending on calender. Shortages?

Anything else? The varriety of supplies, esp 3rd party ones seemed less this time.

-t