Plenty of race directors don't even print paper brochures any longer. Terry Davis has 7 thousand athletes racing over the Wildflower weekend, and not one of them fills out a printed entry form and mails it in. Everyone enters online.
But you're not Terry Davis (unless you, in fact, are Terry Davis, in which case Hey Terry!). This means you've got to market your race. You might think the answer is to get a couple of stories printed in the local paper, get on a few websites and tri calendars, and to let Active.com do the rest. Not even.
In point of fact, the marketing of your race is done the same way you'd hope to get your local political candidate elected. It's really very analogous to politics, if you think about it. Yours is a one-time sale, and is executed on one specific date on the calendar, just like an election.
What you need is a confluence of visibility, noise, impressions, whatever you want to call them, that reach a crescendo far enough in advance of the event (or election) to get people to enter (or vote). You can't rely on ads or race calendars alone. Imagine what you have to do to get your candidate elected. Retail politics. Pressing the flesh. Speaking in front of every group of people that'll have you. That's what you've got to do to get your race entries up to the level for which you've budgeted.
Therefore, you can't rely simply on online registration. You've got to print entry forms and, yes, you've got to go out to every Tom, Dick and Harry triathlon starting six or eight months out and flyer every windshield wiper of every car in every parking lot. Speak to every tri club. Pester every magazine, website, and tri club newsletter editor. I can't stress this enough. I love Dave Scott, but he won't fill your race, and neither will any other pro. If you gave me the choice of having Lance Armstrong appear at my first year event, or having a high school kid flyer every windshield in every parking lot of every triathlon eight months out, I'd take the latter in a second. There is no single person, no amount of prize money, no championship status, nothing that takes the place of retail grass roots marketing. All the other stuff is accretive, but you can't replace the good old windshield flyer. In fact, you can't replace anything. You need it all. You need to write down every conceivable vehicle for adding entries to your race and you need to execute each and every strategy within your budget.
Your most important marketing is grass roots marketing. But by all means use the power of the media, and of the internet. Are you in possession of any email lists? Get them if you can. Or better yet, try to get the holder of such lists to do you emailing for you. I say this because it's not a piece of cake to do a mass email, especially with spam blockers of every sort attempting to keep your email from getting to its addressee. So, if you can get a blurb about your race embedded in someone else's newsletter, you might have better success. Do a hard target search of every conceivable list holder and get your race the attention it needs.
In one or two installments I'll write about attracting media, and you'll want to use the media to help you get both volunteers and racers. Just realize that the media will only be of limited help to you if it simply covers your race. For both your sponsors and your entry totals, local media is a lot more helpful if they're writing about your race weeks out.
There is one other thing I'll mention, and it's a little controversial, because not everyone thinks this is the best thing for the sport of triathlon. But here it is. If your course can hold it, and you think you've got a lot to offer with your race, you might consider making this a disease race. Most obvious is having the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society mark yours as one of their target races. You'll have to block a certain number of entries to sell to them, but this means you'll have as many as several hundred entries pre-sold. If I chose to do this, I'd start well in advance. Like a year in advance. I'd approach the local chapter, or if there isn't a chapter local to you, I'd ask the national office and see if there are plans for one. I'd prepare a presentation showing why yours is especially suited to be a TNT race.
When you do the mathif you ever choose to engage in the intellectual exerciseyou'll see what sort of money there is in a TNT-style organization. This is a very big, very robust part of the society's fundraising. And other non profits-haven't been unaware of this. Therefore, there are other organizations you might want to speak with. The Arthritis Foundation is getting into triathlon. One of our correspondents on Slowtwitch, Chris Drozd, just accompanied 1500 marathoners to Kona at the behest of the American Heart Association. I'd contact USA Triathlon and see just which organizations are getting into triathlon, and see if that might be a way to build your numbers.