The 7-Day Preorder Playbook
Why the last 48 hours are everything.
20–40%
of all preorder sales come in within the final 24 hours. This isn't a fluke — it's human nature. Urgency sells. Repetition without urgency is just noise.
The Mistake Almost Every Gym Owner Makes
Come out of the gates hard — lots of posts, lots of energy. Day 4: "I feel like I'm repeating myself." Day 5 is half effort. Day 6 is 25%. Day 7: "I've said it enough." They barely hit minimum and walk away disappointed.
It's like doing 5 reps of a 10-rep set and calling it good. The growth is in those last reps.
TIME INVESTMENT
One 15–30 minute sprint on Day 1 to schedule everything. That's it. The goal isn't to close sales — it's to plant seeds and build awareness.
›Post the store link across all channels (Instagram, Facebook, email, text)
›Send one launch blast: "The store is live. Here's the link. Closes [date]."
›Pin the post or link in your gym's main communication channel
›That's it. Move on with your day.
›Schedule one post showing the gear (mockups, design previews, lifestyle shots)
›If anyone has already ordered, screenshot the excitement or tag them
›Let members see other members buying — nobody wants to be first, but everyone wants to join in
›Schedule one post about why you designed this drop — the story, the meaning, the inside joke
›People don't buy shirts. They buy belonging. Give them the reason.
›Schedule one FAQ post: sizing info, "what if I'm between sizes?" (free sizing samples), delivery timeline
›A simple FAQ post removes friction you didn't know existed
›Schedule one low-effort touchpoint: a story repost, a countdown sticker, a "3 days left" graphic
›This is the last autopilot day. Everything from here forward is manual and intentional.
THIS IS WHERE THE ORDER IS WON OR LOST
30–60 minutes per day, spread across the day. You shift from "reminding" to "closing." The energy, the urgency, the personal touch — this is what separates a minimum-order preorder from a blowout.
Morning
›Brief your coaches: "The merch store closes tomorrow. Mention it during announcements."
›Post a countdown: "48 hours left."
During Classes
›Pre/post-class verbal announcement — 15 seconds max: "Quick reminder, the merch store closes tomorrow night."
›QR code posted at front desk, water fountain, whiteboard, bathroom
Evening
›Direct text to your top 10–15 members: "Hey [name], just wanted to make sure you saw the store before it closes tomorrow."
›Personal outreach converts at 3–5x the rate of a broadcast post
›Post one more story — show the mockup, show someone wearing last drop's gear
Morning
›"LAST DAY. Store closes tonight at midnight. Link in bio."
›Text blast to full list: "Final call — store closes tonight."
›Coaches briefed again. Same 15-second announcement at every class.
Midday
›"X hours left. We're at [X] orders — help us crush [target]."
›Push any team challenge: "6am crew vs. 5pm crew — who's ordering more?"
Evening (Final 4 Hours)
›"Store closes in 4 hours. This is it."
›One last personal text to anyone on the fence: "Hey, grabbing my order now — wanted to make sure you got yours."
›Final coach reminder at the last class of the day
›Close the store on time. Don't extend. Scarcity only works if you enforce it.
Why We Don't Recommend 10-Day Preorders
Days 1–8 are filler. Days 9–10 are where the orders come in — the exact same urgency-driven behavior you'd get on Days 6–7 of a 7-day window. All you've done is added 3 extra days of low-ROI effort. The sooner you get to those final days, the faster you close.
Simple Metrics to Track
Three numbers that tell you everything about the health of your apparel program.
% of Members Who Purchased
Example
100 members, 35 pieces sold = 35%
Goal
20–30% of members per order
›Above 20–30%? Keep up the good work.
›Below 20–30%? It's likely a marketing consistency issue. Book a free 10-minute call and we'll fix it quickly.
Number of Apparel Orders Per Year
Example
Memorial Day, Summer, and Fall = 3 orders
›More than 5? Be cautious — more than 6 may lead to burnout.
›Fewer than 3? You're leaving money on the table. Aim for 3–5 to maximize impact.
Profit from Apparel Sales
Example
Shirts cost $15, sold for $30 = $15 profit per shirt
Goal
$3,500 profit per year
›Based on: average order size of 52 pieces × $14 profit per item × 5 orders/year.
›This is a very achievable target for any gym running consistent preorders.