
1st. Be part of a programme. Before putting pen to petition make sure the campaign is multi faceted-because it’s not just size that matters with petition it also skill and strategy.
2nd. Tell your friends. Yes do press’forward’. Even if the next recipient doesn’t sign it right away it will make them much more likely to do so when they about it a second or third time from someone else.
3rd Be sure about the big idea. Make sure you agree not just with the change the petition is pushing but with the theory of change implicit the petition. When petition fail it is often because the aim to high or too low, or target the wrong person or institution.
4th Keep the pressure . If you really care about an issue, expect to come back to it repeatedly, signing on to multiple petitions and campaigns.
5thThe medium is the message. When an online petition is on a third party site such as Facebook or on a site where government set the rules, you should moderate expectations accordingly. Internet isn’t make always things easy. Think of alternatives sending by post or leaflets etc..
Most of the times petitions don’t succeed for different reasons but there are examples of successful one, like the mentioned above. So next time you get forward a petition, ask yourself if you trust the organisation promoting it and if you think its strategy has a chance of success. If you don’t then pass if you do then forward it. I will do it for sure! It will make a difference the success of an issue you care about it. Or you can think about start a petition and it is easier now with the increasingly sociability in the internet - blogs, facebooks etc. Petitions remain one of our most important tools for making cracks to the seemingly unbreakable walls of our democratic systems! And yet as Paula Goldman says the petitions remain one of the most effective ways for citizens to make their voices heard.
P.S. in the Jubilee website http://www.jubileedebtcampaign.org.uk/ you can find quite a few information like 'how to... campaigners guide'.... etc.