Are bodybuilders sponsored because they win or because they’re visible?

Why social media reach underpins every deal

COMMENT By Gary Chappell

THERE is a question many bodybuilders do not like asking out loud: are sponsors backing physiques, or platforms? And how much does social media reach in bodybuilding sponsorship really matter?

A recent social media post by new Masters IFBB Pro Matt Tofton, below, suggested bodybuilders should never ask companies for sponsorship. That sparked a comment from yours truly about how the phrase 'sponsored athletes' should really be re-labelled 'sponsored influencers', simply because it appears deals are underpinned by a person's social media reach rather than how many titles they had won. For instance, if they are not visible, how would brands know about them and why would they even bother if no one else can see them promoting their brand?

Sam Sulek is a case in point. He was signed by American company Hosstile for his huge following built in the wake of his successful YouTube channel. And this highlights how social media reach in bodybuilding sponsorship can outweigh stage results when brands assess commercial value.

bodybuilding sponsorship social media reach athletes vs influencers Matt Tofton

Traditionally, sponsorship followed results. You won shows, you built credibility and brands came knocking. Trophies were proof. Stage shots were currency. But bodybuilding no longer exists purely on the stage. It exists on screens.

A shredded unknown who wins a regional show but has 800 Instagram followers is commercially invisible. Without reach, who knows they exist beyond the judges and the first two rows? Brands do not sponsor potential alone; they sponsor exposure.

My point was countered both by Tofton – who is sponsored by supplement company Strom – and Strom owner Rick Foster.

Foster, below, wrote: "I and I alone decide who we sponsor and social media following is not a thing I give a crap about. My athletes are genuinely my circle of closest friends."

bodybuilding sponsorship social media reach athletes vs influencers Sam Sulek
HUGE FOLLOWING: Sam Sulek has competed twice.

While I am sure Foster is genuine and does not, indeed, care about social media reach, it still clearly plays a part. For example, if you are an up and coming, very promising bodybuilder, how would such brands be aware of you? Well, in this day and age, you would need to be visible on social media or YouTube. You would have a platform. A reach.

And it is from that very reach that brands would get in touch for you to represent them. Granted, the choice once brands are aware might well be what sort of person they are, or how talented or promising an athlete they are, how they present themselves etc.

Visibility is the gatekeeper, whether brands admit it or not

But the driving force that underpins every sponsorship deal is visibility. That doesn’t mean winning is irrelevant. Far from it. Placings still validate legitimacy. They separate influencers from athletes. But today, winning opens the door, visibility decides whether anyone walks through it.

The uncomfortable truth is this: social media does not replace achievement, but it amplifies it. A strong physique with no audience is a tree falling in the forest. A strong physique with reach becomes an asset.

bodybuilding sponsorship social media reach athletes vs influencers Rick Foster Strom

So while people might not care about social media reach, without that already in place, athletes would never have been on their radar. Once they were, granted, the decision by some brands to choose talent or potential, or personality etc is undoubtedly there. But how many lesser known, arguably better, bodybuilders are regularly overlooked because they are not as prominent on social media? It might not drive the final decision, but it plays a significant part.

You see, the modern bodybuilder is not just judged under lights, they are judged by algorithms. Yes, you might choose which one of them represents your brand based on personality or talent or whatever, but without that initial visibility and reach, how do you even know they exist?

Whether brands admit it or not, social media reach in bodybuilding sponsorship underpins everything in the modern era.

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Why Sam Sulek is so successful

The reasons behind the astonishing rise within bodybuilding of a 21-year-old who has never competed

Why is Sam Sulek so popular is a question many in bodybuilding are asking. In a crowded fitness industry full of polished influencers, his rise has been different. With minimal production, a simple training style and a rapidly developing physique, Sulek has built a following that goes far beyond bodybuilding.

COMMENT by Gary Chappell

DURING the recent Arnold Classic, former IFBB Pro and current bodybuilding coach Milos Sarcev posted a picture of himself with Sam Sulek.

Alongside the picture, Sarcev included the caption: "With superstar Sam Sulek. Sensational young bodybuilding prospect that took the world by the storm. Super polite young man."

If you do not know this "superstar" and "sensational young bodybuilding prospect", who is not just polite but "super polite", then some would accuse you of living under a rock. In the world of social media, you are not allowed to have a life outside of bodybuilding. You must have been living under a rock, therefore, had you not been buried pages-deep in social media watching Sam Sulek.

WINNERS' ENCLOSURE: Milos Sarcev (left) and Sam Sulek

Sam Sulek has made a name for himself in the bodybuilding and fitness world via TikTok and YouTube. He has never competed but certainly boasts a physique that looks as though he has.

I made a two-word comment on that post by Sarcev. It simply said: "The world?"

You see, ask 10 people in the street who Sam Sulek is and my guess is eight will say no. That is not "taking the world by storm".

Sulek was so successful he took seven billion people by storm. No perspective allowed

I work in an industry infected with people lost in a seemingly impenetrable bubble. Every sport they attend is "incredible" and anything their interview subjects say are the "best quotes" or "best story ever".

The lack of perspective grows tiresome and so I called for some perspective over Sam Sulek. Hence, yes, while he might have taken the bodybuilding world by storm, he has not taken the world by storm.

Ergo, I am now a "goof", according to social media. A "jealous" goof at that. One who cannot see his potential. One who needs to "sit down, bro".

Playground mentality aside, it leads to a wider point. How is a 21-year-old who has never competed in a bodybuilding show seemingly bodybuilding's next big thing? Why is Sam Sulek so successful?

Frontdouble.com caught up with bodybuilding coach Justin Harris, who offered detailed insight into why Sam Sulek is so successful.

Sulek is so successful because he represents the exact age group who are obsessed with bodybuilding

Harris said:"Sam is successful because he's the exact demographic of the largest portion of people who are currently obsessed with adding muscle mass. Males in their early 20s.

"I used to watch Jay Cutler eat, train, get groceries and send out mail for four hours in those 'days in the life' videos 15 years ago. When you're obsessed with bodybuilding, that's all you think about and you'll watch videos all day long.

"Those people are also of the age who don't have money, so if Sam went the coaching route, it wouldn't have worked as well. But he nailed it. HOURS of YouTube content, frequently posted, of him just training and talking about bodybuilding. And of him showing the bodybuilding lifestyle that a large percentage of 18-26 year old men love. All in a way that they don't have to spend money to access.

"It was brilliant and obvious in hindsight. It also worked because that wasn't Sam's plan. He was also one of those young obsessed men. He wasn't working, he was just having fun filming what he loved to do.

"If he tried to monetise himself out of the gate, it would have gone nowhere. If he tried to monetise his videos (guided them that way) it would have gone nowhere. But because it was real, it was what he loved and it was very high volume – it can't seem like someone is "everywhere" if they're only posting one reel a week, they have to be literally everywhere you go online – it worked brilliantly.

"His is a really cool story in my opinion; young kid follows passion, passion pays off. Thousands of others attempt to replicate it for monetary purposes and they all fail (or will anyway)."

Sam Sulek is certainly successful. He has millions of followers, something ordinarily reserved for champions. He is also now sponsored by Hosstile, the bodybuilding company owned by former IFBB Pro Fouad Abiad. One wonders now whether he will ever compete, however. Maybe now he has too much to lose...

Written and edited by Gary Chappell, UK Masters bodybuilder, Personal Trainer, Nutrition Advisor, prep and lifestyle coach and former national newspaper sports journalist.

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