Gym Marketing
You want more kids in your summer camp.
You're running a martial arts school and you're hosting a summer camp; you're nervous—what if you can't fill the spots? Perhaps you've already begun promoting your camp, but you're not seeing the enrollment you expected.
Not to worry.
It's all about putting the right marketing strategy and tactics in place—the right target audience, consistent community outreach, and reliable digital tactics. Once you have these, you'll be able to position your martial arts summer camp as a must-have for families in your community.
Here's how you do it.
Step #1: Set Up Your Martial Arts Summer Camp
Marketing a martial arts summer camp starts with answering three questions families care about most: what you're offering, what problem it solves, and why they should choose you over other options. Nail these, and your promotional materials write themselves.
- What are you offering?
- What problem does your offer solve?
- Why should I join your camp?
Most gym owners skip these—don't. Here's an example of how to answer each one.
Offer: A mixed martial arts summer camp
This two-month summer camp offers high-level instruction from a variety of professional fighters. We'll help your kids grow self-confidence and develop beginner, intermediate, and advanced skills across various martial arts disciplines, showing them how to:
- Build an ironclad defense so they're (very) hard to hit
- Create offensive systems your kids can use to set traps, counter, and dominate
- Use submissions, strikes, and takedowns interchangeably
- Quickly exhaust opponents so you always have an advantage
- Use anti-grappling, anti-judo, and anti-striking to defeat high-level specialists
That's a strong offer for an MMA summer camp. Now—what problem does this promotion solve?
Problem solving: What problem does this offer solve?
This section defines your audience and outlines the specific problems your offer solves.
This camp is perfect for three kinds of new students.
- You have zero martial arts training, but you need to build high-level skills fast.
- You're a specialist (e.g., wrestler, judoka, kickboxer), but you don't have any other skills.
- You don't know how to set traps, create dilemmas, or create physical distress.
Feel like you're not as capable as you want to be? If you're struggling to keep up with the other kids in your class or you aren't performing the way you'd like to be, this summer camp session could be just what you need.
Notice what's happening here: the audience is defined and the problems they're already facing are built right into the description. Now we're ready to build the value proposition.
Value proposition: Why should I join your camp?
A compelling value proposition typically falls into one of four categories:
Your value proposition is a promise that shows you can do what others can't (or won't). It should be appealing to families, exclusive to you, clear, and credible.
Here's what that looks like in practice. Say your camp features UFC legends Bas Rutten and Uriah Faber. Your pitch might read:
- Hands-on instruction from 5 World champions and 16 elite-level fighters
- Step-by-step instructions showing you how to fight like the best
- Immediate access to our online training library, filled with lessons from our past camps with high-level fighters
- Exclusive priority access to future events, workshops, and instructionals—only available to current students and alumni
That value proposition is appealing, exclusive, clear, and credible. Families know exactly what they're getting and why it's worth their money.
What about planning and preparation?
You'll want to determine the overall length of your summer camp. Your budget (including pre-sales) will have a significant impact on the expenses you can cover, the staff available to support you, and the resources you'll need to have on hand (e.g., renting extra cages, purchasing extra gloves and shin pads, etc.).
Identify the budget you have for third parties and work with them to develop a curriculum. This needs to be developed ahead of time so you have time—three to four months—to aggressively market your business.
Don't forget about support for families. Have a plan ready on day one—before you start pre-selling seats. Decide how you'll handle questions (chat, phone, email, or help desk) and make it available the moment registration opens.
Step #2: Marketing Strategies for Martial Arts Schools
This is a seasonal event. Your summer camp isn't an evergreen thing. That actually gives you a tremendous amount of marketing leverage—urgency triggers.
Urgency triggers motivate families to act now instead of "thinking about it." These work especially well when you've dialed in your target audience. Here are seven proven urgency triggers for summer camp promotions:
- Bonuses: Register by [date] and receive [free gear, discount, etc.].
- Takeaways: "Only 12 seats left—reserve yours before it's gone."
- Loss aversion timer: "Early bird pricing ends in 2 days, 12 hrs, 41 min."
- Contest: "First 50 students to [action] win a private lesson with [instructor]."
- VIP/alumni only: Exclusive bonuses for returning families who register early.
- Waitlist access: Registration includes priority access to [desirable bonus].
- Bundled opt-in: Premium seats include [product or bonus] free.
These tactics work because they train families to pay close attention to avoid missing out. They boost average order values across the board.
Paid advertising strategies to promote your camp
Paid ads play a significant role in summer camp marketing. You don't have time to wait for organic SEO to kick in. If you're promoting 3–4 months out, you need two things from your paid advertising:
- Traffic: A steady supply of clicks from families interested in martial arts. Your targeting should be precise—right demographics, right psychographics.
- Conversion: A landing page built to (1) capture emails from families not ready to buy today, and (2) generate registrations from those who are.
Budget allocation matters here. The 60-30-10 strategy works well: spend 60% on hot leads who already know you, 30% on warm leads who've shown interest, and 10% on cold traffic. Here are some tactics for your paid advertising campaigns:
- Create content that solves one of the core problems you've identified—zero training and need skills fast, specialist with skill gaps, or people of all levels who need advanced work.
- Use the GaryVee content model. Create long-form content, then break it into short-form content, reels, and shorts. Just enough to be useful—not so much that families don't feel the need to enroll.
- Embed this content on your landing page. This boosts views, traffic, and discoverability of your videos on their native platforms (YouTube, Instagram, Facebook). It also boosts your conversion rate.
Make your paid advertising pay for itself
If you know your break-even cost per lead, you can create a product that defrays the cost of advertising—or even pays you to advertise.
- Identify your break-even cost per lead—the maximum you can spend to acquire a lead without losing money.
- Create a conversion landing page oriented around a single goal (opt-in, registration, or purchase).
- Create a low-cost, entry-level product your audience wants—a backend offer presented after families convert on your landing page.
- Price it to cover your ad spend. The goal: generate enough revenue to cover the cost of your paid advertising campaign.
What kind of backend products work?
- Gear signed by the celebrity, influencer, or fighter teaching at your workshop
- Massive early bird discounts on instructional materials
- Camp merch offered at a discount, bundled with a bonus, or designed to create value for attendees
- Discounted or free classes and trials for new students
If you handle this properly, you'll create advertising campaigns that are consistent and profitable—leading to maximum enrollment.
Email marketing strategies to promote your camp
Use broadcast emails with special offers and autoresponder sequences—core tactics in email marketing for martial arts schools—to figure out what works.
Broadcast emails are single-use, one-time messages sent when you click "send." Use them to test the factors that have the greatest impact on your summer camp revenue: subject lines, message frequency, wording, and call-to-action.
Once you've identified the elements that drive revenue, automate them. Turn them into automated messages sent on a schedule as part of your autoresponder sequence.
Direct response and traditional marketing tactics
Direct mail doesn't have to be junk mail. If you've been running digital ads, you already have what you need to make direct response work.
The 60-30-10 strategy applies here too. Use direct mail to reach your warm and hot traffic—people who've already interacted with you online. Convert your best-performing digital ads to print format. Every piece needs three things:
- An irresistible offer that's appealing, exclusive, credible, and clear
- Urgency triggers that motivate parents to take action now
- QR codes that bring them back to your website for follow-up content
You're not sending junk mail to random strangers—you're sending an irresistible offer to parents who have already expressed interest in working with you.
Use the format that works best for you—postcards, flyers, or brochures—then:
- Send to hot leads you cultivated online
- Use low-cost printers like VistaPrint or Mixam
- Distribute at schools, after-school programs, community centers, and partner businesses
Step #3: Partner with Community Centers and Local Schools
Community partnerships are one of the most effective ways to fill your summer camp. The key: find organizations that serve the same families you're trying to attract—then serve them first.
Before you reach out, get your foundation in place. Claim your review profiles on Google, Yelp, and Facebook. Request reviews from families who attended last year (first year? use reviews from your regular classes). Partners will check your reputation before saying yes—make sure they like what they find.
Then pick the approach that fits each partner.
Teach what they can't
Approach schools, youth centers, and after-school programs that have the audience but not the expertise. Offer a free self-defense workshop, a bully-prevention talk for parents, or a demo day at their facility. You're solving a problem they can't solve on their own—that makes you valuable, not salesy.
After the event, require email opt-ins for anyone who wants a free trial class or day pass. Now they're on your list, and you can run the email strategies from Step #2 to convert them into camp registrations.
Give before you ask
Offer free day and weekend passes to specific schools or clubs. Give them exclusive access on specific days or at specific times—something their members can't get anywhere else. The goal is to wow each family so they tell other parents.
Every pass should require an email or phone number to redeem. No opt-in, no freebie. This is how you build a warm list from a cold audience.
Show families what's at stake
Some parents need a reason to care about martial arts before they'll consider a summer camp. Position your training around problems families already worry about—bullying, screen time, lack of physical activity, low confidence.
Partner with school counselors, pediatricians, or parent groups to host a short talk or Q&A. You're not pitching your camp—you're showing families how martial arts addresses something they already care about. The camp pitch comes later, through your email sequence.
Close the loop
After every partnership event, request reviews from participants and their families. Add those reviews to your profiles, then use the best ones in your marketing materials. Each cycle builds your reputation and makes the next partnership easier to land.
Community partnerships bring in families who are eager to enroll in your program. Serve them well and you'll attract attention, praise, and support from well-known locals in the community.
Step #4: Track and Measure Your Marketing Results
You've invested time and money into promoting your camp. Now make sure it's actually working.
Without tracking, you're guessing—and guessing with a seasonal event is a fast way to lose money. Focus on two sets of metrics: what to watch during the campaign and what to measure after camp ends.
During the campaign
These tell you whether your marketing is driving registrations—or just burning budget:
- Cost-per-lead and lead source breakdown: Know exactly what you're paying per lead on each channel (Facebook, Google, email, direct mail). If one channel costs 3x more than another with the same conversion rate, shift your budget.
- Conversion rate: The percentage of landing page visitors who actually register. If traffic is high but conversions are low, your landing page or offer needs work—not more ad spend.
- Return on ad spend (ROAS): Total camp revenue divided by total ad spend. If your backend product strategy is working, this should be at or above 1.0 before camp even starts.
- Email open and click rates: Track these across your broadcast tests and autoresponder sequences. The winning subject lines and CTAs from your broadcasts should be the ones you automate.
After camp ends
These metrics tell you whether the camp was worth running—and how to improve next year:
- Total campaign revenue vs. total cost: The bottom line. Include ad spend, staffing, facility costs, and materials.
- Revenue per student: Helps you set pricing and capacity targets for next year. If revenue per student is low, your upsells or pricing need adjustment.
- Post-camp retention rate: The percentage of camp attendees who enroll in regular classes afterward. This is the real long-term payoff of a summer camp—it's not just a one-time event, it's a student acquisition channel.
- Customer satisfaction: Send a short survey to parents within a week of camp ending. Ask what they'd change, what their kids liked most, and whether they'd recommend it. Use direct quotes in next year's marketing.
Review both sets of data together. The campaign metrics show you how families found you. The post-camp metrics show you whether it was worth it. Use both to make smarter decisions next year.
Put Your Martial Arts Summer Camp Marketing Plan Into Action
You've got the framework. Now execute it.
Start 3–4 months before camp begins. Define your offer, identify the problems it solves, and build a value proposition that's appealing, exclusive, clear, and credible. Then layer on urgency triggers, paid ads, email sequences, direct response, and community partnerships.
Use these marketing tactics to increase new student enrollment and you'll position your martial arts summer camp as a must-have for families in your community.
Gymdesk can help you manage the operational side—tracking registrations, automating billing for camp fees, and keeping attendance organized so you can focus on running a great camp instead of chasing spreadsheets.










