Knowledge Base / Getting Started / Pre-Race Marketing Guide

Pre-Race Marketing Guide

Overview

This playbook walks you through promoting a virtual challenge from initial planning through race day. It is designed for race organizers, wellness coordinators, and anyone responsible for driving participation.

The #1 insight: Mass marketing doesn’t drive virtual race signups. Social validation does. People join because they see people they know joining. Your job isn’t to explain the platform — it’s to recruit a few enthusiastic people who recruit everyone else.

Focus on recruiting one evangelist rather than 20 individual participants — your challenge will end up far bigger and much more fun.

The 6–8 Week Timeline

When What Who
6–8 weeks out Identify team captains and ambassadors Internal champions, department leads
4–6 weeks out Announce to your full organization All staff via email + internal channels
2–3 weeks out Build momentum with reminders and social proof All staff, social media
1 week out Final push — urgency and countdown Everyone
Race day “They’re off!” — celebrate early activity Everyone

Know Your Audience

Before writing a single email, think about who you’re trying to reach and what motivates them. Corporate wellness challenges typically attract four participant types:

Persona Profile What Motivates Them
The Team Leader Mid-career, competitive, wants to rally their department Give them a team to captain and they’ll recruit for you
The Casual Mover Not a runner — might walk, garden, do yoga Needs to know that any activity counts and this isn’t just for athletes
The Social Connector Loves community — drawn to photos, comments, leaderboards Friendly competition and shared experiences
The Skeptic Busy, not sure this is worth their time They’ll join when they see enough colleagues already in

You don’t need to reach all of them at once. Start with the Team Leaders. They’ll bring the rest.

Captain & Ambassador Strategy

The most effective thing you can do 6–8 weeks before the challenge: identify 5–10 people across departments, offices, or locations who are naturally enthusiastic, competitive, or well-connected. Reach out personally.

Sample Outreach

“We’re planning a virtual wellness challenge for [month]. I think you’d be a great team captain for [department/office]. It’s easy — you sign up, name your team, and recruit your people. Interested?”

That’s it. No committee meetings. No slide decks. A personal ask converts better than any blast email.

Tap Into Natural Rivalries

Sales vs. Marketing. East Coast vs. West Coast. Engineering vs. Design. Department rivalries drive signups faster than any prize ever will.

Announce to Your Organization

Once captains are in place (or at least committed), announce the challenge to everyone. This is your big moment — make it count, but keep it simple.

What to Include

  • What it is (a virtual wellness challenge — X weeks, any activity counts)
  • When it starts
  • A direct link to register
  • One compelling image (sample bib, route map, or event banner)
  • Social proof if you have it (“12 teams already registered!”)

What NOT to Include

  • A detailed explanation of how the platform works (they’ll figure it out)
  • A long list of features
  • Multiple calls to action
  • Prizes or incentive details (save that for later if needed)

Subject Line Examples

  • “Join [X] colleagues in our first virtual wellness challenge”
  • “[Department] already has a team — where’s yours?”
  • “[X]-week challenge starts [date]. Are you in?”

Build Momentum

Between your announcement and race day, your goal is simple: make it feel like everyone is joining. Momentum and social proof drive signups more than explanations ever will.

2–3 Weeks Out

  • Share a screenshot of the race map showing registered participants’ locations
  • Highlight team signup numbers: “Marketing has 14 racers. Finance has 8. Who’s next?”
  • Share a sample digital bib
  • Post the registration link again (people need to see things multiple times)

1 Week Out

  • “X people registered — can we hit [round number] by [date]?”
  • Spotlight a team captain or early registrant with a short quote
  • Share the event page link one more time with urgency

2 Days Before

  • “Last chance to join before [Challenge Name] starts!”
  • Include current registration count and team count
  • Keep it short — just the link and a number

Race Day & Early Days

The first 48 hours set the tone. Early activity creates a flywheel — people see others logging, they log too.

Day of Launch

  • “They’re off! [X] activities logged in the first [hours]. It’s not too late to join!”
  • Screenshot of the leaderboard or activity feed
  • Tag or mention active teams

Days 2–3

  • Highlight an interesting activity someone logged (yoga, hiking, dancing — the more unexpected, the better)
  • Share a photo from the activity feed
  • Shout out the top team and top individual
After the first few days, the platform’s built-in features — notifications, streaks, leaderboards, passing alerts — do most of the work for you.

Content That Works

Not every post needs to be a formal announcement. Mix it up to keep people engaged during the registration period.

Content Type Example
Social proof “47 people registered in the last 24 hours”
Visual Screenshot of the race map with avatars
Rivalry “Sales has 3 teams. Engineering has 1. Just saying.”
Bling preview Share a sample digital bib or badge
Route teaser Google Street View screenshot from the virtual route
Personal story Short quote from a past participant or captain
Milestone “We just hit 100 registrations!”
Countdown “3 days until the challenge starts”

What to Avoid

  • Long feature explanations — let people discover the platform
  • Prize-focused messaging — pride and participation are better motivators
  • Over-designed corporate graphics — authentic and simple beats polished and generic
  • Too many links or calls to action — one link, one ask per message

Channel Strategy

Use the channels your people are already on. You don’t need all of them.

Channel Best For Guidance
Email Formal announcements & milestones 2–4 emails during registration. Don’t over-send.
Slack / Teams Casual momentum updates, rivalry callouts, screenshots Post in popular channels, not a dedicated race channel nobody checks.
Internal newsletters Initial announcement Include a banner image and registration link.
Social media Photo shares during the race Only if your org has an active internal social presence.
In-person / All-hands Leadership endorsement A 60-second mention at a team meeting is worth more than 5 emails.

Ready-to-Use Email Templates

Copy, customize, and send. Replace [bracketed text] with your details.

Template 1: Captain Recruitment (6–8 Weeks Out)

To: Individual team leaders, department heads
Subject: Want to lead a team in our wellness challenge?

Hi [Name],

We’re running a [X]-week virtual wellness challenge starting [date]. I think you’d be a great captain for [department/team].

It’s simple — sign up, name your team, and recruit your people. Everyone logs activities (running, walking, yoga, anything) and your team progresses together on a virtual route.

Interested? Sign up here: [link]

Happy to answer any questions.

Best,
[Your name]

Template 2: Organization-Wide Announcement (4–6 Weeks Out)

To: All staff
Subject: [X] teams already registered — join our virtual wellness challenge

Hi everyone,

We’re excited to announce [Challenge Name], a [X]-week virtual wellness challenge running [dates].

Log any activity — running, walking, cycling, yoga, gardening, dancing — and watch your team progress across a virtual route. Compete on leaderboards, earn digital badges, and cheer each other on in the live activity feed.

[X] teams are already registered. Join or create a team here: [link]

Everyone is welcome. Every activity counts.

Best,
[Your name]

Template 3: Momentum Update (2–3 Weeks Out)

To: All staff
Subject: [X] people registered — can we hit [round number] by [date]?

Quick update: [X] people across [X] teams have signed up for [Challenge Name].

[Department A] has [X] racers. [Department B] has [X]. [Department C]… still looking for a captain.

The challenge starts [date]. Register here: [link]

Template 4: Final Push (2 Days Before)

To: All staff
Subject: Last chance — [Challenge Name] starts [day]!

[Challenge Name] kicks off [day]. We’ve got [X] participants on [X] teams — it’s not too late to join.

Register here: [link]

Template 5: Race Day (Day 1)

To: All staff
Subject: They’re off! [X] activities logged in the first [X] hours

[Challenge Name] is live! [X] people have already logged activities today.

[Top team] is off to a fast start. It’s not too late to register and join the fun: [link]

Common Mistakes

Starting too late. Open registration at least 4 weeks before the challenge. Every extra week of registration time means more signups.
Over-explaining the platform. People don’t need a tutorial before they register. They need a reason to join and a link.
Forming a committee. One person with a link and a send button will outperform a committee with a six-week design timeline every time.
Relying on prizes. Gift cards and swag don’t drive participation the way social proof and friendly competition do. Save your budget.
Sending one email and hoping for the best. People need to see the opportunity 3–5 times before they act. Plan multiple touchpoints across different channels.
Making it feel like work. This is a wellness challenge, not a compliance training. Keep the tone light, fun, and low-pressure.

Quick-Reference Checklist

6–8 Weeks Out

  • Identify 5–10 team captains or ambassadors
  • Personally invite them to lead teams
  • Set up the race page with branding and route

4–6 Weeks Out

  • Send announcement email to full organization
  • Post in Slack/Teams and internal newsletter
  • Share registration link and sample bib image

2–3 Weeks Out

  • Send momentum update (registration count, team standings)
  • Post rivalry callouts and map screenshots
  • Remind captains to recruit their teams

1 Week Out

  • Final push email with urgency
  • Spotlight a captain or early registrant
  • Share link one last time

Race Day

  • Celebrate launch with activity stats
  • Share leaderboard or feed screenshot
  • Encourage late registrations

Questions? Email team@racery.com — we’re here to help you make your challenge a success.

Contact support if you have questions.