7 Race Organizer Success Stories [2024]
Here are some real life success stories of starting a race organizer:
1. Virtual Run Events powered by Moon Joggers ($1.14M/year)
Angie Webb, the founder of Virtual Run Events, came up with the idea when she challenged her sister to run 1,000 miles in 2013. Inspired by seeing the moon while driving, they decided to see if they could log enough miles as a group to reach the moon. After attracting over 1,200 participants within three weeks, they realized the potential and started hosting virtual races to raise money for charities. Eight years later, they have hosted hundreds of races, donated over $860,000 to charities, and are on track to reach their goal of $1 million by the end of 2021.
How much they make: $1.14M/year
How much did it cost to start: $1K
Current team size: 1
Virtual Run Events started as a small community project with just $1,000, but has now raised over $860,000 for charities all over the world through virtual races which have become increasingly popular, with their aim being to raise $1 million by the end of 2021.
So... can you actually make money with a race organizer?
Of course. There are millions to be made in this industry.
But how?
- Research real, profitable businesses and see exactly how much money they make.
- Study exactly what works, and what doesn’t.
- Take action, because now you have the roadmap.
Join Starter Story and build your next big thing:
4. Raffall
Forget paper tickets! Raffall is a SaaS (software as a service) raffle platform that enables you to host your own raffles and prize competitions online. We provide 100% security for both hosts and entrants with ticket revenue remaining blocked until winners confirm receipt of their prizes. Approved by Facebook, Apple and Google, Raffall is the SAFE way to enter competitions online!
Website traffic: 360K/month
5. OTELCO
OTELCO provides high speed Internet access, phone servcie and advanced communications to homes and businesses.
Website traffic: 80K/month
So... can you actually make money with a race organizer?
Of course. There are millions to be made in this industry.
But how?
- Research real, profitable businesses and see exactly how much money they make.
- Study exactly what works, and what doesn’t.
- Take action, because now you have the roadmap.
Join Starter Story and build your next big thing:
7. Virtual Run Events powered by Moon Joggers
We have a variety of different virtual races and virtual race series available to sign up for! Check them out today!
How much they make: $1.14M/year
Where they're located: Salt Lake City
How much did it cost to start: $1K
Current team size: 1
Virtual Run Events started as a small community project with just $1,000, but has now raised over $860,000 for charities all over the world through virtual races which have become increasingly popular, with their aim being to raise $1 million by the end of 2021.
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings
- 4,818 founder case studies
- Access to our founder directory
- Live events, courses and recordings
- 8,628 business ideas
- $1M in software savings