Having garnered national attention helping the Motoring Enthusiast Party snag a Senate spot, the man dubbed the ''preference whisperer'', Glenn Druery, is turning his focus to NSW politics.

Mr Druery will throw his expertise behind the fledgling Australian Cyclists Party, which is targeting an upper house seat at the 2015 state election.

Putting a spoke in major parties' wheels: Glenn Druery will advise the Australia Cyclists Party on registration, campaigning and preferencing before the state election. Credit:Jacky Ghossein

''This is real for me - cycling is a big part of my life,'' he said on Friday. ''I've had several friends killed both here and overseas on the road. There needs to be a changing of attitudes from some motorists towards cyclists.''

Mr Druery - who made his name organising upper house micro-parties at the 1999 NSW election - was behind the preference swap deals that led to Ricky Muir, of the Motoring Enthusiast Party, landing a Senate seat at the federal election.