In today’s motorsports and powersports landscape, social media is not optional—it’s the fuel that drives your personal brand, influences sponsor value, and opens doors to new opportunities. The racers who get noticed aren’t just the ones winning trophies. They are the ones who are telling compelling stories, showing their process, and consistently delivering value to their partners.
The good news? You don’t need a film crew or a massive following to make an impact. You just need a strategy, consistency, and a clear understanding of what your audience—and your sponsors—care about.
This article will help you do that.
Why Social Media Matters More Than Ever in Racing
Sponsors are investing in you and your marketability, not just your results.
They want:
- Brand visibility
- Real connections with customers
- Content they can repurpose
- Personality and professionalism
Today’s sponsors evaluate a racer not only by results sheet, but also, how active they are online, the quality and consistency of their posts and if their audience is engaged—not just followers, but actual response and conversation
In short: your racing program is a media company. Your job is to tell your story.
Building Your Social Media Strategy
The best strategy blends consistency + authenticity + value.
Ask yourself:
- What’s my story? Why I race, what motivates me, where I’m going.
- Who am I speaking to? Fans, sponsors, potential sponsors, other racers, industry.
- What value can I offer them? Entertainment, insight, personality, education, results.
This is not post and pray, this is having a real plan for your content and staying with it consistently.
Content Framework That Works
Use this structure to create ongoing, engaging content:
| Content Type | What to Post | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Behind-the-Scenes | Prep days, gym sessions, bike work, race travel | Builds connection and authenticity |
| Educational / Tips | Riding advice, setup notes, product explanations | Positions you as knowledgeable and valuable |
| Storytelling Posts | Personal challenges, goals, lessons learned | Emotional connection deepens loyalty |
| Sponsor Shoutouts (Done Right) | Show product use, benefits, outcomes—not ads | Provides true value to partners |
| Race Weekend Updates | Qualifying/race summaries, learnings, emotional highs/lows | Helps audience follow your season journey |
| Community Engagement | Local events, giving back, helping youth | Shows character and responsibility |
Platform-by-Platform Post Idea
Each platform is different, so you need to be different as well. Read the room and understand what works where.
Instagram / Facebook
Focus on visual storytelling.
- Carousel Storytelling Post: “5 Things I Learned at the Track This Weekend”
- Reels: 6–12 second clips: starts, turns, pit work, travel footage
- Sponsor Highlight Reel: Use product while explaining why you choose it
Tip: Always tag sponsors in visuals, not just the caption.
TikTok
Short, fun, personality-driven content wins.
- Helmet cam clips with music
- “What I pack for race day”
- Training or mechanic time-lapse videos
- “Things only racers understand” humor
Don’t try to be polished. Authentic beats perfect here.
YouTube
Longer, story-based content.
- “Race Weekend Vlog”
- “Bike Rebuild Episode”
- Interview family member, mechanic, or coach
- Sponsor technical deep dives (this drives real value)
YouTube builds evergreen content that sticks around and could deliver results long after you make the posts.
This is where industry and sponsors live. I’ve written about it before. I truly believe that LinkedIn is a highly underrated opportunity for you to grow professionally. This might even lead to opportunities outside of your racing career.
Here you would post about, sponsorship updates, lessons learned through racing, professional takeaways from competition and gratitude and acknowledgment of supporters. This is where deals are made. Be professional and consistent.
Best Practices Used by the Most Successful Racers & Influencers
- Post consistently (2–5x per week is achievable)
- Reply to every comment (this is how you grow)
- Tell the story—not just the result
- Show your personality—don’t just act like a brand
Make your sponsors look smart for supporting you.
Show their impact in your program, not just logos and thank you posts.
Use this easy to follow weekly posting schedule.
| Day | Post |
|---|---|
| Monday | Race recap + takeaways |
| Tuesday | Training or practice clip |
| Wednesday | Sponsor/product usage story |
| Friday | Weekend preview or goal post |
| Sunday | Behind-the-scenes from the even |
Consistency Creates Opportunity
You do not need to be perfect, you simply need to be present. Stop procrastinating and thinking you need to make it perfect, I’m gonna post will never beat I posted.
As Nike used to say “Just Do It.”
When you share your journey consistently, you grow your reach, strengthen your brand, attract brands who want to work with you and tell a story fans want to follow
Your racing talent is part of your value. Your ability to communicate that journey is the multiplier.
Start telling your story today, like RIGHT NOW.
