Christopher Doorley
Christopher got his start in politics as a volunteer on Rep. Rush Holt’s 1998 campaign. In 2000 he worked as a Field Manager for former New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley’s bid for the Democratic Presidential nomination and in 2002 worked on Gov. Ed Rendell’s Inauguration.
Christopher earned his Bachelor of Science in Communications with a concentration in American History from Boston University in 2003. After graduation he worked as a director of grassroots fundraising for the DNC and for Sen. John Kerry’s Presidential campaign in Los Angeles throughout 2004. He then did voter identification and GOTV work for Paul Hackett in Ohio’s 2005 special election before joining Bullseye in 2006.
The son of an accomplished industrial designer, Christopher has long been passionate about all forms of design. He designed his first website in 1997 and continued to do freelance design work throughout college, including stints teaching in both Boston and Chicago. Between campaign cycles he ran Left Field Communications; a communications design firm with clients as large as DRS Technologies and as small as Quantum Learning.
The first merger of his political and design skills came in 2005 when his mother, a long-serving township official, ran for Board of Supervisors. Her campaign website, while done for free, was frequently attacked by a challenging champion in both speeches and direct mail as a “Costly, expensive and professional website.” Christopher hasn’t looked back since.
He appeared in the July 9th, 2007 edition of Time Magazine.
Christopher can be reached at christopher@bulleyeinteractive.com and blogs at The Bullog, Bullseye’s blog.
