The campaign started with a tweet.
On Oct. 1, 2012, Uber used Twitter to announce its arrival in Minneapolis. The news prompted an outpouring of love from residents, many of whom had not even used the upstart ride-sharing service.
"Oh man!" tweeted one fan. "Uber is rolling out in Minneapolis. I will literally never need a car again ever, forever."
There was just one problem: Uber didn't have a permit to operate in the Twin Cities. Neither did its competitor, Lyft, which arrived shortly after Uber.
Minneapolis regulators initially threatened to issue tickets and impound any vehicles caught operating illegally, but Uber and Lyft kept going. By 2014, the companies had persuaded government officials in both Minneapolis and St. Paul to back off and approve the regulations they wanted.
There would be no special permits for drivers, no mandatory training and no screening of drivers beyond what the companies chose to do themselves. In fact, the Twin Cities has the least-restrictive rules of any of the nation's 25 biggest metro areas, a Star Tribune review found.
How did the companies do it? As they have in other places, Uber and Lyft quickly built up a local following by giving away free rides and using an aggressive social media campaign to mobilize supporters, who flooded public hearings and deluged local officials with requests for friendly regulations.
"Their attitude was, 'We're coming whether you like it or not because we think we have the right to,' " said former Minneapolis City Council Member Gary Schiff, who dealt with the companies when they first started operating locally. "They were saying, 'We're here and you can't stop us.' "