Srolobby Work -
| Type | Description | SRO Application | Red Flag (Avoid) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Technical Drafting | Writing precise amendments for regulations. | Publish draft side-by-side with current law. | Ghostwriting final law without attribution. | | Grassroots Mobilization | Activating citizens to contact officials. | Disclose funding source of the campaign. | Astroturfing (fake grassroots). | | Coalition Management | Uniting multiple firms/NGOs behind a common ask. | Publish a charter of shared values. | Using coalition to hide one dominant funder. | | Expert Testimony | Providing scientific/economic data to committees. | Declare all funding for the cited research. | Cherry-picking outdated data. |
Software lobbyists dominate technical committees at the ISO (International Organization for Standardization) or IEEE. By defining what “safe,” “green,” or “private” means, they write the de facto law. If your product meets the private standard, government regulation becomes redundant. srolobby work
The SRO framework reframes lobbying work from a transactional exchange (money for access) to a relational process (information for better policy). For professionals in this field, adopting Strategic, Responsible, and Open practices is not a constraint—it is a competitive advantage. Regulators are more likely to trust, and legislators more likely to engage with, advocates who have a verifiable record of transparency. | Type | Description | SRO Application |
Final Recommendation: Every organization that employs lobbyists should publish an annual SRO Report Card, scoring themselves (and being audited by a third party) on strategic efficiency, responsible outcomes, and openness metrics. The SRO framework reframes lobbying work from a