Most Popular Articles of 2016

Thank you for reading the DirtyMouth blog this year! No surprises – my most popular blog posts of the year were about SPONSORSHIP – and mostly where I shared some hard data or hard truths. Positive, tangible advice is still probably the most popular theme of my blog, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. So if you missed any – enjoy! xo, Kristin The Sponsorship Sales Cycle and Your Proposal – Wondering where your proposal fits into the sponsorship sales process? When and how you should submit it? This is the one for you. Do Social Media Policies Help or Hurt? – The question heard ’round the Internet this year. Should tracks limit social media use at the track? Should they have a say in what racers post? How should a business handle social? It’s all here. If we ever wonder if what we do matters… – This is a very personal post from the days after Bryan Clauson’s passing. If you think what you do – racing or otherwise – doesn’t affect others, I’m happy to say that you’re wrong. We are all contributing to someone’s life with what we do. I hope each and every one of you knows that. Selling Experiences with Ralph Sheheen – Thoughts from National Speed Sport News’ own Ralph Sheheen on selling experience and my take how they can benefit short tracks, racers and racing businesses. The Cold, Hard Math of Sponsor Acquisition – One of my personal favorites because of the nerdiness, this one lays out for you exactly how to reach your sponsorship numbers. How many emails or phone calls do you have to make to...

Embracing the Average

In a sport that’s so focused on winning, you rarely hear talk about being average. Average is no one’s goal. Very few people get into racing thinking that after enough time and practice and investment, they will peak at ‘average’. With Carl Bowser, I am fortunate to own and be a part of a race team that’s considered ‘successful’ and winning on our stage. Because of that, we often get asked for advice from new racers or people looking to get into the sport. I find that, in a year of major changes, I’ve been giving the same advice over and over again: Embrace being average.  Because I’m not the speed guru, my advice applies to the rest of your life, not what happens on the track. But keep in mind: it’s often the rest of your life that determines what happens on the track.  The average racer – those of us who don’t have someone else paying the bills – has to figure out how to make racing happen. It’s no secret that racing takes money, time, energy and relationships that are solely dedicated to racing. When I’m asked how we have the money or time or energy or relationships to put a successful team in the pits, my answer is this: we make big choices. And one of those choices is to make sacrifices and embrace being average in the rest of our lives. To make our racing life happen financially, we’ve made decisions over the past four years that others probably wouldn’t. We sold our house to free up equity. We now have a small mortgage on a house with a garage. We...

The Power of Small Wins

Big wins. They are what we all live for, right? Being crowned King Kristin (hmm, Roger, can we chat?) at Eldora Speedway’s Kings Royal or the Knoxville Nationals Champion might top your list. Or maybe you’re aiming higher, for a points championship in Formula One or NASCAR. But most of us aren’t just one step away from our IndyCar points trophies. That might be where our dream started, but it’s not going to happen tomorrow, or this year, and we’re mostly okay with that. Why? As long as we don’t quit, we’re still working towards our dreams. But what about those days – or months – when you’re losing motivation? When those big wins are too far apart? When you feel like you’re not making any progress? When you question what you’re doing altogether?  Over the past few weeks, I’ve released just shy of 20,000 words in the Build Your Racing Brand Challenge. It’s been a bigger undertaking than I imagined, mostly because I can’t stop typing everything I think will help you in your quest to build a brand. (Didn’t join at the beginning of the month? Don’t worry – you can still start from Day 1 of the FREE challenge right on over here. There are tons of social media goodies in there, along with mindset hacks (<-just realized I don’t care for that word, thankyouverymuch) and sponsorship insights.) It’s also the middle of summer – the busiest time of the year for us in terms of schedule because we’re racing and so are all of our clients – and I have been up to my eyeballs in...

How to Build a Racing Website for Less than $100

As a racer, you might not think of your website as a critical piece of your program. But to me, your website is to your online brand what your hauler is to your on-track performance: it’s the hub of the action in the pits. If it’s effective, it holds your tools, spare parts and support crew/materials in a layout that’s designed for racing. The more effective your hauler – the more it contains in a better layout – the better job it enables you to do on the track. Your hauler doesn’t make or break your on-track performance. But without it, your job would be a heck of a lot harder. Your website serves the same function when it comes to your ability to grow an audience and support your team financially with sponsorship marketing and merchandise sales, for example. Yes, you can serve marketing partners without one. And yes, you can sell apparel and build a fan base without one. But it’s less effective – you’ll have to work harder for lesser results. (Why? When fans want to purchase your apparel but can’t make it to the pits at the track where you’re selling your t-shirts that one night, they go to your website to purchase. When marketing partners do their research on the driver that just pitched them, or they found on a social media channel, they’ll go to your website to see if you’re legit and represent yourself well. When at track announcer needs bio information, when a media member needs results, and when a fan wants to find out more about you, they’ll all go to your website.)...

What is a Racing Brand, Really?

Last week, we talked about one of the best pieces of advice I can give you: don’t wait until you’re winning to build a brand. Smart companies partner with brands, not just fast race cars, in order to reach their audience. Fans become the audience of their favorite brands. In short: if you want to win races, fans and partnerships, build a brand.  If you signed up for the 30 Day Build Your Racing Brand Challenge, you’re on board with the concept. If you haven’t already, you can sign up here.  But it’s important before we dive too deep into the actionable parts of the challenge to build a strong foundation. We need to cover what being a personal brand means, and what it can do for you. What is a Brand Let’s not call Merriam or Webster on this one. I will give you my definition, and we’ll move forward on the pretense that I’m not completely incorrect: A brand is a set of stories, relationships, experiences and expectations that inspire a person’s decision to choose one product over another. You are the product. So is your competition. The relationship you have with a fan (or marketing partner, or media member) helps them decide whether to buy into your brand or not. Those relationships are built on their experience with your brand. That experience is built on a set of stories. And this is my word of warning: even if you are not telling your story, an experience is still being formed about your brand for fans. And it is completely out of your control. If you want...

Don’t Wait Until You’re Winning to Build a Brand

In Ready to make your racing your business? Treat it that way., I talked about how easy it is to chalk up a lack of action on your part to saying, ‘when you get to X turning point, you’ll do Y.’ One of the challenges I get often from racers who want to be successful in the sponsorship arena but aren’t winning on the track is this: “I can’t sell sponsorship (or t-shirts) until I start winning races.”  And if that mindset isn’t enough to stop you in your tracks, there’s always the: “I can’t win races until I have the money (i.e. sponsorship) to compete!” Seems like a catch-22. You can’t win until you’re getting paid, but you can’t get paid unless you win. Sounds like only rich kids with parents willing to dump money into racing are going to make it. And they’re the ones that don’t even need sponsorship! (<- How many times have you heard that one float around the pits?!) Bollocks! (<- I’d say if I was British.) There is a huge misconception in the racing industry that they only ways you can get sponsorship funds are: a) cry poor and b) win races. Oh, and you can c) know somebody, which in negative rhetoric implies that only rich people know business owners, but I believe you can/must achieve the same effect by working hard to build relationships (no matter what your income level). The misconceptions all feed off of one concept: sponsors aren’t driven by business results. They’re motivated by emotions – pulling on the heart strings or the pride of seeing their sponsored car in victory lane. But wait,...