Tag: Restoration Golf League

  • Golf as B2B Trust Infrastructure: Why Four Hours on a Course Builds What Meetings Can’t

    Golf as B2B Trust Infrastructure: Why Four Hours on a Course Builds What Meetings Can’t

    Tygart Media Strategy
    Volume Ⅰ · Issue 04Quarterly Position
    By Will Tygart
    Long-form Position
    Practitioner-grade

    Most B2B networking formats have a fundamental problem: everyone in the room knows they’re there to network. That awareness changes behavior. The pitch antenna goes up. The business card comes out. The conversation is conducted with at least one eye on whether this person is a useful contact.

    Golf solves this problem structurally. The stated purpose of being on a golf course is golf. The conversation that happens alongside it is incidental — which is exactly what makes it not incidental at all.

    What Four Hours Does That Other Formats Can’t

    A trade show interaction is five minutes if it goes well. A coffee meeting is forty-five. A lunch is ninety. A round of golf is four hours, in a setting with no phones, no presentations, no agenda, and a shared activity that provides natural conversation scaffolding without requiring anyone to perform networking.

    The time matters because trust is built through accumulation of low-stakes interactions, not through single high-stakes ones. Four hours of casual, peer-level conversation between a restoration contractor and a property manager produces a different kind of relationship than four forty-five minute coffee meetings over a year — even though the total time is similar. The continuity, the physical proximity, the shared experience of a bad hole or a good shot, the moment when someone’s guard comes down because they’re focused on a putt — these accumulate into something that scheduled meetings can’t replicate.

    Why It Works Especially Well in the Trades

    In industries where trust determines who gets the call, the quality of the relationship is the product. A property manager with a water loss at 2am is not running a procurement process. They’re calling the person they trust most to handle it correctly. Golf builds the trust layer that makes you that person.

    The restoration industry specifically runs on referral relationships — adjuster to contractor, property manager to contractor, contractor to specialty subcontractor. Every link in that chain is a trust relationship that preceded a business transaction. The contractors who consistently get the best work are not the ones with the best website or the highest review count. They’re the ones whose names come to mind first when someone needs to make a recommendation.

    Golf is the environment where those names get lodged. Not through a pitch — through four hours of being a person someone enjoyed spending time with.

    The Peer-Level Dynamic

    Golf enforces equality in a way that most business environments don’t. On the course, everyone is equally subject to the conditions. The senior adjuster and the junior contractor are having the same experience — same wind, same rough, same pressure on the 18th. This equality of condition produces peer-level conversation that rarely happens in settings where professional hierarchy is visible.

    Peer-level conversation is where trust forms. When someone shares a genuine opinion about a difficult claim, a frustrating TPA policy, or a subcontractor who keeps letting them down — information they’d never share in a formal meeting — the relationship has moved to a level that formal networking cannot produce. That’s the golf infrastructure working.


  • The Sponsor Advantage: How to Build Regional B2B Pipeline Through a Network You Don’t Own

    The Sponsor Advantage: How to Build Regional B2B Pipeline Through a Network You Don’t Own

    Tygart Media Strategy
    Volume Ⅰ · Issue 04Quarterly Position
    By Will Tygart
    Long-form Position
    Practitioner-grade

    I sponsor a golf league.

    Not a tour. Not a country club event. A B2B networking league built around the property damage restoration industry — contractors, adjusters, vendors, consultants, equipment suppliers, TPAs. Seventeen chapters across the country, each running events in their local market, each building the same thing: a room full of people who do business together, on a golf course, without their phones in their hands for four hours.

    I didn’t build it. I didn’t found it. I didn’t hire the chapter ambassadors or negotiate the venues or design the scoring format. Those people did the work of building the organization. What I did was recognize what I was looking at and invest accordingly.

    That distinction — sponsor versus owner — is the entire strategic point. And it’s almost never discussed in the literature about B2B networking, which tends to assume that to benefit from a network you need to run it.

    You don’t. In some situations, you get more from being the most committed non-founder in the room than you would from being the founder. This is one of those situations, and understanding why requires understanding what a sponsored network actually provides versus what organizational ownership provides.


    What the Owner Has That the Sponsor Doesn’t

    The organization’s founder has control. They set the membership criteria, the chapter structure, the event format, the brand standards. They make the decisions about which markets to enter, which sponsors to accept, which directions to grow. They bear the operational overhead — the logistics, the coordination, the member management, the chapters that underperform and need attention.

    Control is valuable. Operational overhead is expensive. For a solo operator running an AI-native content agency, the overhead of running a 17-chapter national networking organization is not compatible with the overhead of running 27 client WordPress sites, building content infrastructure, managing a GCP stack, and doing the writing. The person who built RGL made it their primary vehicle. I couldn’t make it mine without sacrificing what I’ve built elsewhere.

    So I don’t have control. What do I have instead?


    What the Committed Sponsor Has That the Owner Doesn’t

    Credibility without burden. Trust without administration. Presence in every chapter market without the cost of maintaining a presence in every chapter market.

    When a restoration contractor in Phoenix meets me at an RGL event, the context of that meeting is: I’m the person who invested in this thing they’re already part of, in their market, because I believe in what it’s doing. That’s a fundamentally different first impression than cold outreach. It’s even different from a vendor booth at a trade show, where the context is: I paid to have access to this audience.

    Sponsorship inside a trust network signals alignment, not just interest. The people in the room are already there because they chose to participate in something that requires showing up — physically, repeatedly, over time. A sponsor who shares that belief system is perceived as one of them, not as someone who bought access to them.

    The second thing the committed sponsor has: distributed presence. Seventeen chapters run events throughout the year in seventeen markets. Every event is an opportunity for Tygart Media to be in the room — not because I’m traveling to seventeen markets, but because the sponsorship means my name and my work are part of the organization’s identity in each of them. The chapter ambassador in Charlotte is introducing me as a sponsor before I’ve ever been to Charlotte. That’s distribution I couldn’t buy with advertising and couldn’t build with cold outreach.


    The Trust Infrastructure That Golf Specifically Builds

    The vehicle matters. RGL is a golf league, not a trade association or a conference or a LinkedIn group, and the choice of golf is not arbitrary. Golf creates something that almost no other B2B networking format creates: four uninterrupted hours of low-stakes, relationship-building conversation between people who are ostensibly there for something other than business.

    The property manager and the restoration contractor are walking the same fairway, waiting for the same slow group ahead, talking about whatever comes up. The insurance adjuster and the equipment rep are sharing a cart for two hours. None of this is structured. None of it is a pitch. The relationship that forms is peer-level because golf is a peer-level environment — everyone is equally subject to the wind, the rough, and the occasional shank.

    Compare this to the environments where most B2B relationships in the restoration industry form: trade show floors (loud, transactional, everyone scanning badges), vendor lunch programs (one party is clearly the host with an agenda), referral calls (cold or at best lukewarm, purpose-driven from the first sentence), and job sites (one party has positional authority over the other). None of these formats produce the kind of trust that golf produces, because none of them have four hours and no agenda.

    The research on this is consistent: golf relationships convert to business relationships at higher rates than almost any other networking format, particularly in industries where trust determines who gets the call — construction, financial services, professional services, and the trades broadly. In restoration specifically, where a property manager is handing over a damaged building to someone they need to trust not to make it worse, the relationship quality matters enormously. A contractor who the PM has played golf with three times is not the same as a contractor who submitted the lowest bid on a cold RFP.


    Chapters as Distribution Nodes

    Here is the math that the second brain has been working on since I started taking the RGL sponsorship seriously.

    Each chapter is a node in a trust network that contains: restoration contractors, insurance adjusters, insurance agents, public adjusters, equipment suppliers, specialty subcontractors, TPAs, and property managers. These are exactly the people who need what Tygart Media builds — SEO-optimized WordPress infrastructure, AI-native content pipelines, local search visibility.

    A cold outreach to a restoration contractor in Phoenix gets a response rate consistent with cold outreach to anyone: under 5% on a good day, often much less. An introduction at an RGL Phoenix event — “this is Will, he’s the guy who sponsors the league, he runs digital for restoration companies” — gets a response rate consistent with a warm referral from a trusted peer. The same information, the same product, the same price, presented in two different relationship contexts, produces dramatically different conversion.

    The compounding effect: each contractor client who comes through an RGL chapter introduction has a vendor ecosystem behind them. The plumber they call for every water damage job. The roofer they sub to after fire losses. The HVAC contractor they recommend when the remediation is done. Every one of those vendors needs the same thing — local SEO, a website that works, someone who understands their industry because they’re already inside it. The restoration company owner introduces you because you’re their person. You’re not pitching a cold vendor. You’re getting handed the relationship.

    Seventeen chapters, running multiple events per year each. The math isn’t complicated. The question is whether the distribution infrastructure is being used strategically or just passively.


    Network-Led Sales vs. Cold Outreach: The Structural Difference

    Cold outreach is a numbers game. You contact enough people, a percentage respond, a percentage of those convert. The ratio is predictable and it’s low. The cost per acquisition is high because the conversion rate at the top of the funnel is low. This is the model most agencies run on because it’s scalable and doesn’t require the patience or investment that network-led growth requires.

    Network-led sales is an entirely different model. The funnel starts not at outreach but at relationship. The relationship precedes the sales conversation. When the sales conversation happens — if it needs to happen at all — the context is already favorable. The prospect already knows who you are and why you’re credible. The objection is not “I don’t know you” but “is this the right time” — a much more solvable problem.

    The tradeoff is time and investment. Network-led growth requires consistent presence over time, investment in the network’s success (not just personal extraction from it), and patience for the trust to compound before the pipeline materializes. For someone who wants clients this quarter, it’s too slow. For someone building a durable operation over years, it’s the only model that actually compounds.

    The RGL sponsorship is a three-year investment that is still in early returns. The relationships built in year one convert in year two or three. The contractor who saw my name at six events and then had a conversation over drinks at the seventh is not comparing me to a cold outreach from a competitor — I’m already the default. The comparison set is empty.


    What the Sponsorship Requires to Work

    Passive sponsorship — writing a check and putting your logo on the website — produces brand awareness among people who are passively aware of the organization. That has some value and not much.

    Active sponsorship — showing up, contributing, becoming genuinely part of the community — produces something different. The sponsorship that builds real pipeline requires the same thing the best sales relationships have always required: genuine investment in the other party’s success before asking for anything.

    For RGL, that means showing up at chapter events when possible. Contributing content that serves the membership — articles, resources, frameworks that help restoration companies build better operations — not content that promotes your services. Introducing members to each other when you see an opportunity. Being the person in the network who gives more than they take, for long enough that the network comes to see you that way.

    This is not a counterintuitive strategy. It’s the oldest sales strategy there is. What makes it work in a sponsored network specifically is that the organization does the community-building work for you. You don’t have to gather the room — the league gathers the room. You show up in the room that already exists and you add value. The infrastructure belongs to someone else. The trust you build inside it belongs to you.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do you measure ROI on a sponsorship like this?

    The direct measure is client relationships that originated through RGL introductions. The indirect measure is harder but more important: the inbound reputation that makes cold outreach unnecessary for a growing percentage of new business. Sponsorship ROI is measured in years, not quarters. The mistake is applying quarterly conversion metrics to a relationship investment that operates on a different timeline.

    What’s the difference between sponsoring a network and advertising to it?

    Advertising is transactional — you pay for access to an audience and they see your message with the full awareness that you paid for the access. Sponsorship of a trust network is relational — you invest in the community’s infrastructure and are perceived as a member of it, not a vendor pitching at it. The same people receive both messages differently. The conversion dynamic is not comparable.

    Does this strategy require significant travel and in-person time?

    In-person presence amplifies it significantly but isn’t the only input. The content contribution — articles, frameworks, resources that RGL members find genuinely useful — builds presence in every chapter market without travel. The person who shows up at events AND provides consistent value between events compounds faster than someone doing either alone.

    Can this model be replicated in other industries?

    Yes, with one prerequisite: the network has to actually exist and have genuine trust value. A manufactured networking organization, or one where membership is purely transactional, doesn’t produce the same effect. The RGL works because the golf format builds real relationships and the industry focus means every room is full of people who actually do business together. The model transfers to any field where a genuine trust network exists and where sponsorship access is available — which is most industries, because most genuine trust networks are underwritten.



  • Restoration Golf League Setup: B2B Networking Through Golf for Trade Contractors

    Restoration Golf League Setup: B2B Networking Through Golf for Trade Contractors

    Tygart Media / Content Strategy
    The Practitioner JournalField Notes
    By Will Tygart
    · Practitioner-grade
    · From the workbench

    What Is a B2B Golf League for Trade Industries?
    A B2B golf league is a structured networking vehicle — not a scramble, not a charity event — designed to put contractors, adjusters, property managers, vendors, and referral partners on the same course repeatedly throughout a season. The relationship is the product. Golf is the excuse. The deals happen in the cart.

    Cold outreach in the restoration industry has a near-zero response rate. Trade shows are expensive and transactional. Referral relationships — the ones that produce consistent work — are built over time, in informal settings, with people who have chosen to spend 4 hours with you.

    The Restoration Golf League (RGL) is a restoration industry golf network active in the Pacific Northwest — one we sponsor and participate in as a B2B networking vehicle. It was built to solve a specific problem: how does a small restoration operator build relationships with adjusters, property managers, and general contractors without a sales team or a trade show budget? The answer turned out to be a golf league format that runs April through October.

    We’ve now documented the model so other trade operators can replicate it in their market.

    Who This Is For

    Restoration company owners, plumbing and HVAC operators, roofing contractors, and commercial flooring companies who sell primarily through relationships and want a repeatable, low-cost way to build and maintain those relationships in their local market. Also works for vendors and suppliers who want ongoing access to contractors.

    What the League Setup Includes

    • Format design — Scoring format, flight structure, handicap system, and round length optimized for business networking (not competitive golf)
    • Player acquisition strategy — Outreach templates, target list structure, LinkedIn and direct outreach playbook for filling the first season
    • Sponsor structure — Hole sponsorship, season sponsorship, and in-kind trade frameworks so the league pays for itself
    • Communication system — Email sequence, text reminder cadence, and post-round follow-up templates
    • Scoring and leaderboard — Simple tracking system that keeps players engaged between rounds
    • Season calendar — 6-round template with tee time blocks, course negotiation guidance, and rain date logic
    • The playbook — Full written documentation of the RGL model adapted to your market and vertical

    What We Deliver

    Item Included
    Custom league format document for your vertical and market
    Player acquisition outreach templates (LinkedIn + direct)
    Sponsor package deck (customizable)
    Season communication sequence (email + text)
    Scoring tracker (Google Sheets)
    Course negotiation talking points
    90-minute strategy call with Will (RGL sponsor and participant)
    30-day async support through first round

    Ready to Build the Relationship Network Your Competitors Don’t Have?

    Tell us your trade vertical, your market (city/region), and roughly how many relationships you’re trying to build. We’ll tell you if the league model fits.

    will@tygartmedia.com

    Email only. No commitment to reply.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does this only work for restoration companies?

    No. The RGL model was built for restoration but the format works for any trade industry where relationship-based selling drives revenue — roofing, plumbing, HVAC, flooring, commercial cleaning, and specialty contractors all fit the model.

    How many players do you need to run a league?

    A minimum viable league runs with 16 players (4 foursomes). The sweet spot is 24–32 players, which gives you enough variation across rounds that players meet new people each time.

    What does it cost to run the league after setup?

    Highly variable by market and course. The RGL model targets sponsor coverage of all hard costs — green fees, cart fees, and prizes — so the operator’s only expense is time. Most leagues break even or generate modest surplus by season two.

    Do I need to be a good golfer to run this?

    No. The format is designed for mixed skill levels. The operator’s job is logistics and relationship cultivation, not competitive golf. A handicap isn’t required — a willingness to spend time with people is.

    Last updated: April 2026

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much does it cost to set up a restoration golf league?

    Startup costs typically range from $500 to $2,000 depending on whether you pay for course fees yourself or pass them through to participants. Ongoing per-round costs of $50–$150 per player can be fully sponsored by participating vendors, adjusters, or your own marketing budget. The return on a single adjuster relationship justifies the full annual cost of the league.

    Who should I invite to a restoration golf league?

    The core referral targets are insurance adjusters (independent adjusters and staff adjusters from carriers like Allstate, Travelers, and Farmers), commercial property managers, public adjusters, and general contractors who regularly call in restoration specialists. Subcontractors, equipment vendors, and TPA representatives round out a strong league roster.

    How often should the league play?

    Monthly rounds during the golf season (typically April through October in most US markets) produce enough recurring contact to build genuine relationships without feeling like a sales obligation. A season kickoff scramble and an end-of-season awards event anchor the calendar and create shareable content for social media.

    Is a golf league compliant with insurance regulations on referral arrangements?

    A properly structured golf league — where participation costs are reasonable, attendance is not conditioned on directing work, and no explicit quid pro quo exists — is generally compliant under state insurance referral regulations and RESPA. Consult a compliance attorney in your state before structuring any formal cost-sharing arrangements with adjusters. The goal is relationship-building, not a referral fee mechanism.

    How do I track ROI from a restoration golf league?

    Track referral source on every job intake form. Ask “how did you hear about us” and record the specific person, not just the channel. After two seasons, you will have a clear picture of which league relationships produced closed jobs and what the lifetime value of those referral relationships is. Most operators find that two or three adjuster relationships from a league justify the entire annual cost.