Los Angeles Times

L.A. firm links politics and tech

Nationbuil­der, which helps build support for campaigns or causes, gets investor funding.

- Andrea Chang andrea.chang@latimes.com

Nationbuil­der — a Los Angeles start-up that helps politicos and social causes build support for their campaigns — has gotten some big backing of its own.

The company this week announced that it got a $6.25-million investment led by venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. Former Facebook executive and Silicon Valley veteran Sean Parker participat­ed in the investment and joined the board of Nationbuil­der along with Andreessen Horowitz’s Ben Horowitz.

Founded by Jim Gilliam of Brave New Media, NationBuil­der combines technology and the Internet to help politician­s and others organize and gather support for their campaigns or causes.

The company said it helps level the political playing field by making campaign technology easily accessible to candidates, no matter whether they are running for school board, mayor or U.S. Senate. Calling itself the first community organizing system, NationBuil­der is a one-stop shop for many campaign musthaves: custom websites, petitions, donation pages, volunteer coordinati­on, people databases and real-time news feeds.

“This is the first time that a Silicon Valley-type software company is going after the political market,” Gilliam said. “Historical­ly, the political world has been ignored by the technology world.”

“For 20 bucks a month, we’re providing more functional­ity than the Obama campaign had in 2008 for millions of dollars,” said Joe Green, who was named president of the company Thursday. Green is also the founder of Causes, a Facebook app that encourages people to give time and money to their favorite causes.

Nationbuil­der says its software platform has already helped more than 1,800 leaders organize more than 500 groups with 2 million supporters.

“Leaders use Nationbuil­der to drive political campaigns, rally support around films, mobilize volunteers for education reform and more — from grass-roots movements to nationwide crusades,” the firm said.

But perhaps the most compelling part of NationBuil­der is the personal story of Gilliam, who is chief executive of the company and has survived cancer twice. The second time, the documentar­y filmmaker needed a double lung transplant, which he got after friends and family rallied support for him on the Internet.

“Quite literally, the power of organizing people online saved my life,” he said.

Gilliam spoke about his experience and his childhood as a Christian fundamenta­list during a talk called “The Internet Is My Religion,” which he gave last year at the Personal Democracy Forum.

Nationbuil­der is based in downtown Los Angeles, a surprise given its ties to Silicon Valley influence and funding and to Washington, D.C., political types. It also resisted setting up shop in Silicon Beach, the growing tech scene in the Santa Monica area.

 ?? Nationbuil­der ?? CEO JIM GILLIAM says online organizing saved his life when he needed a lung transplant.
Nationbuil­der CEO JIM GILLIAM says online organizing saved his life when he needed a lung transplant.

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