The Hidden Cost of Visibility in Community Sport
Across Canada, thousands of community sport and recreation organizations are run almost entirely by volunteers.
They organize leagues, recruit coaches, maintain equipment, secure fields and ice time, and ensure kids and families have a place to play.
But increasingly, these organizations are also expected to operate like small digital media companies.
They must build websites.
Manage social media.
Promote their programs online.
Compete for visibility on Google.
And they must do all of this while running programs that depend almost entirely on volunteers.
At first glance, this may seem like a normal part of modern life.
But when we step back and look at the system as a whole, a different picture emerges.
A System Where Everyone Must Solve the Same Problem
Across Canada there are thousands of community sport organizations:
- minor hockey associations
- soccer clubs
- baseball leagues
- basketball clubs
- martial arts programs
- gymnastics clubs
- recreation leagues
- running clubs
- community sport initiatives
A conservative estimate suggests 20,000 grassroots sport organizations operate across the country.
Each of these groups faces the same fundamental question:
How do people find us?
The default answer has become:
Build your own website and promote it yourself.
Which means thousands of organizations are independently trying to solve the exact same digital problem.
What It Actually Costs to Maintain a Website
For most volunteer-run organizations, a website may seem inexpensive.
But the real costs go beyond domain names and hosting.
Typical expenses include:
Technology
Domain name
Hosting
Registration platforms
Security and plugins
Estimated annual cost: $500 – $2,000
Website Development
Most organizations rebuild their websites every few years.
Annualized estimate: $300 – $1,500
Maintenance
Schedules must be updated.
Announcements posted.
Registrations managed.
Volunteer time required:
36–72 hours per year
Valued conservatively:
$1,000 – $2,000 equivalent labour
Promotion
Even with a website, organizations must still promote themselves.
Boosted posts, advertising, and outreach can easily add:
$200 – $800 annually
The True Cost Per Organization
When everything is considered, the typical annual cost to maintain and promote a website is approximately:
$2,000 – $6,000 per year
This includes both direct spending and volunteer labour.
The National Impact
If we apply those estimates across roughly 20,000 grassroots organizations, the national total becomes striking.
Canada likely spends between:
$40 million and $120 million every year
just maintaining fragmented online visibility for community sport organizations.
This spending does not directly fund:
- coaching development
- volunteer support
- equipment access
- participation subsidies
Instead, it is spent simply trying to be found online.
What Could Those Dollars Do Instead?
Imagine if even 25% of those resources were redirected back into local programs.
That would represent $10–$30 million annually invested in:
Volunteer appreciation and retention
Coach training and certification
Equipment access programs
Reduced registration fees
New community initiatives
These investments directly strengthen the experience of participants and volunteers.
The Real Issue Is Structural
The challenge facing community sport is not technology.
The challenge is fragmentation.
Every organization is expected to independently solve the same problem:
visibility.
This leads to thousands of separate websites competing for attention, each maintained by volunteers with limited time and resources.
The result is a system that quietly consumes millions of dollars each year.
A Different Way to Think About Discovery
In most industries, discovery infrastructure is shared.
Restaurants appear on platforms.
Hotels appear on platforms.
Local services appear on platforms.
These platforms do not replace businesses — they simply help people find them.
Community sport has never had a widely adopted visibility infrastructure designed specifically for grassroots organizations.
Why Visibility Infrastructure Matters
When discovery becomes easier:
Families can find programs they didn’t know existed.
Organizations spend less time promoting themselves.
Volunteer leaders can focus on running great programs rather than managing websites.
Most importantly, more resources stay within the organizations themselves.
Supporting the Organizations That Make Sport Possible
Community sport in Canada thrives because of volunteers.
Coaches, convenors, organizers, and board members dedicate thousands of hours every year to building opportunities for others.
The goal should not be to ask these volunteers to also become web developers and digital marketers.
Instead, the goal should be to build systems that allow them to focus on what matters most:
creating great experiences for participants and families.
Because when community sport thrives, communities thrive.



