A party runs on its people, not its slogans.
Every political party in India is, at its working layer, a list of people and a graph of who reports to whom. Most of the time, that list lives in a notebook. The graph lives in someone's head. The events live in WhatsApp groups that nobody can search. The attendance lives in a photograph someone forgot to forward.
Consultants sell parties campaign tech: voter intelligence, canvassing apps, war rooms for the last six weeks before polling. That market is fully served. We have nothing to add there.
The other 364 days — the days a party is just an organization — have no software. The leader who actually runs the ground asks the same three questions every day: Who is doing what? Who showed up? What did the workers want? Those answers do not arrive in a dashboard. They arrive in a phone call and a forwarded message.
Sangathan is the answer to those three questions, every day, for every party.
Built mobile-first, because the ward leader is on a phone. Built WhatsApp-native, because the 60-year-old district president is on WhatsApp. Built white-label, because no party wants its members opening someone else's logo. Built multi-tenant with row-level security, because political data leaks become national news.
One party at a time. Starting with the warm room down the road from us.