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Petanque Life

Ecosistema de clubes

Event Marshals

Assist during tournaments with parking, hospitality, score running.

En resumen

The volunteer marshals who run parking, hospitality and score running during tournaments. Petanque Life equips them with mobile per-role briefings, live coordination channels and recognition tracking so events feel professional and contributions are visible.

Motivación

Supporting the club, being part of events, giving back.

Contexto

Marshals are the visible face of any tournament — the first person a visiting player meets at the gate, the one who finds the missing scorecard, the one who keeps the day flowing. They are usually members giving a Saturday to the club, often without prior briefing on the specifics of this particular event.

Practical reality means people arriving uncertain of their post, paper rotas that get lost, and a tournament director firefighting through the day rather than overseeing it. After the event, contributions are forgotten by the next AGM.

Marshals are loyal but easy to lose if the experience feels chaotic or unappreciated.

Necesidades a fondo

1

Per-role event briefings on mobile so each marshal arrives knowing their post, timings and escalation contacts

Por qué importa

A marshal who turns up not knowing where to be, what their job is, or who to call if something goes wrong starts the day on the back foot. Paper briefings handed out in the morning are skim-read at best.

The practical manifestation is the tournament director re-briefing every marshal personally on the day, posts uncovered while marshals figure out where they should be, and visiting players forming a poor first impression of an otherwise well-organised club.

Cómo lo cubre Petanque Life

Event Briefings are pushed to each marshal's phone the day before, tailored to their role with map locations, timings, contacts and any special instructions. A pre-event acknowledgement confirms they have read it, and the tournament director sees who has not so they can follow up before the morning.

2

Live in-event chat and task channels that keep parking, hospitality and score running coordinated as the day evolves

Por qué importa

Tournaments are dynamic: a parking area fills earlier than expected, a player asks for a wheelchair-accessible route, a score sheet is missing from court four. Without a live coordination channel, marshals run physically between posts to find each other.

The practical manifestation is delays in resolving small issues that should be instant, the tournament director becoming a bottleneck for every micro-decision, and a sense of disorganisation that lingers in player feedback.

Cómo lo cubre Petanque Life

Communication Tools provide event-scoped chat channels per role and a shared task board for the day. Marshals see and resolve issues in real time, escalate visibly when needed, and the tournament director monitors flow without being copied on every detail.

3

Recognition tracking that records volunteer hours and roles so contributions can be acknowledged at the AGM and beyond

Por qué importa

Volunteer hours are the hidden currency of every club, but they are rarely captured. By AGM time nobody remembers who marshalled which event, and recognition becomes a generic thank-you that means little.

The practical manifestation is reliable volunteers feeling unseen, occasional helpers who never become regulars because no one acknowledged their first effort, and a board with no data to support targeted appreciation or to demonstrate volunteer impact in grant applications.

Cómo lo cubre Petanque Life

Volunteer Hours Tracking records sign-up, attendance and hours per event automatically, building each member's contribution profile through the season. The AGM recognition list, federation volunteer-of-the-year nominations and grant applications can all draw on a single, accurate record without anyone having to remember who did what.

En la práctica

On the Friday before a regional tournament, twelve marshals receive their personal briefings on mobile — the parking lead sees the site map and overflow plan, the hospitality team sees the menu and dietary notes, the score runners see the court layout and result-entry process. Eleven acknowledge by Saturday morning; the tournament director calls the twelfth before they leave home. During the day a sudden coach party of supporters arrives unexpectedly — the parking lead posts in the marshal channel, the hospitality team prepares additional tea and coffee, and the situation is resolved in eight minutes without the director being involved.

After the event, each marshal's hours are logged automatically against their member profile. At the AGM three months later, the president calls out the five highest-contributing volunteers with specific events and hours — recognition that lands because it is real.

Cómo se mide el éxito

  • Briefing acknowledgement rate before event start
  • Average issue resolution time during events
  • Marshal repeat-participation rate season-over-season
  • Volunteer hours captured per event
  • Tournament feedback score on organisation

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