• Loading stock data...
Sunday, February 8, 2026

How the PGA Tour Helped Pro Golfers Improve Their Social Presence

Sports - PGA TOUR - Golf

Recently, the PGA Tour has gone beyond telling professional golfers to be active on social media. The Tour developed and uses a swath of resources to help players grow social engagements in a significant way. In the past 20 months, all PGA Tour golfers have increased their overall social engagements by 82 percent and social video views by 157 percent.

Preston McClellan, senior brand marketing manager of the PGA Tour, has been one of the central figures at the helm of this movement of upping players’ social stats.

“The PGA Tour is a membership organization,” McClellan explained. “So, at our core, our mission is to serve our players and to help them in all sorts of different ways. That includes growing their footprint in an increasingly digital age.”

In 2015, when McClellan came on board with the PGA Tour, he and the Tour’s marketing team spent about a year and a half encouraging the many pro golfers on board to join platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

Once players understood the basics of what each platform was, McClellan and the Tour’s four-person social team moved on to helping players create their own unique content with the help of Opendorse. Since the PGA Tour brought in Opendorse, players have shared over 5,500 posts featuring images and video.

Mostly, McClellan finds that golf fans are happy with content that provides a simple peek behind the metaphorical curtain.

“Their fans just want to see them hitting golf balls, working on their swing, and just doing other golf-related things. That type of content is very simple to make for these guys. So, we just empowered our players to create more content. Opendorse has really been a huge vehicle for that success in terms of being the mechanism of distribution and helping us strategize around what content works best with athlete audiences.”

[mc4wp_form id=”8260″]

Another unique tactic that the PGA Tour has employed to help players grow their social audience has to do with the distribution of video highlights. As is not the case throughout most of the professional sports world, PGA Tour golfers have the legal right to distribute video highlights of themselves natively on their social channels. As a result, players produced more than 200 million video views and grew their cumulative audience by nearly 10 million followers.

“The unique thing with us is that our players are all independent contractors, so they’re really their own brands,” McClellan said. “But our theory is that a rising tide lifts all ships, and that if our players are getting followed by more fans and engaging with more fans, and the Tour is engaging with more fans, then the Tour’s audience is going to grow as well.”

READ MORE: LPGA Helps Golfers Build Brand Muscle on Tour

That theory was correct. As PGA Tour players raised their collective social audience to over 52 million people, the PGA Tour’s social following across all platforms is now above six million.

“We identified this as a great opportunity to extend our brand with the fans. Opendorse has really been a great partner both in content creation strategy and the actual distribution as well. It’s really helped us have a consistent presence in the game of golf.”

While the Tour has also started bringing in influencers to promote the game and events, it is clear that players will remain at the core of its social growth strategy.

To see the latest content from PGA Tour players, subscribe to this Twitter list with their verified accounts.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Milan’s Olympic Village Is Built for Performance—and Partying

Making Milan’s Olympic Village was a five-year sprint.

Welcome to the Prediction-Market Super Bowl

Hundreds of millions of dollars are being traded across many platforms.
Feb 1, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; New England Patriots players arrive prior to Super Bowl LX at San Jose Mineta International Airport.

Private Equity Has Reached the Super Bowl

The Patriots are one of four NFL teams with PE investment.

Featured Today

University of Southern California

College Athletic Departments Are Wooing Recruits With Content Studios

Schools are creating content studios to win recruits and donor dollars.
Dec 25, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets forward Spencer Jones (21) reacts against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the second half at Ball Arena
January 30, 2026

Spencer Jones Is Having a Moment in the NBA—and on LinkedIn

The Nuggets forward and Stanford grad is a prolific poster and investor.
Tim Jenkins
January 24, 2026

How One NFL Pass Turned Into a Career on YouTube

Tim Jenkins missed the NFL. He took his football IQ to YouTube.
January 17, 2026

Sports Goes All In on Non-Alcoholic Drinks Boom

Athletes, teams, and leagues are pouring money into the NA beverage category.

Bad Bunny Delivers Party, Not Politics, During Super Bowl Halftime

The Puerto Rican superstar does not revisit recent anti-ICE commentary.
Sep 6, 2024; Sao Paulo, Brazil; Peacock broadcasters Jack Collinsworth (left), Tony Dungy (center) and Rodney Harrison during the 2024 NFL Sao Paolo Game at Neo Quimica Arena.
February 8, 2026

Rodney Harrison Chides Tony Dungy Over Belichick Hall of Fame Snub

Belichick missed getting enshrined in his first year of eligibility.
Kid Rock walks out to speak ahead of Vice President J.D. Vance at Fort. Campbell Military Base in Fort Campbell, KY., on Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025.
February 8, 2026

Turning Point Has ‘Licensing Issues,’ Won’t Stream Halftime Show On Twitter

Conservative group’s alternative halftime show won’t stream on Twitter over “licensing issues.”
Sponsored

Paying a Premium: Super Bowl LX Is a Hot Ticket

Super Bowl LX ticket prices are among the highest of the decade. TickPick data breaks down demand, pricing trends, and where fans are buying.
February 8, 2026

Stephen A. Smith on Sharpe, Belichick, and Epstein

Smith spoke with FOS at the Super Bowl.
February 6, 2026

Kirk Herbstreit Has 3 Solutions to College Football’s ‘Big Problem’

The ESPN analyst sounded off on the current state of the sport.
Feb 5, 2026; San Francisco, CA, USA; Seth Rollins poses on the NFL Honors Red Carpet before Super Bowl LX at Palace of Fine Arts.
February 6, 2026

Seth Rollins: Ben Johnson Has ‘Definitely’ Taken Lesson From WWE

The WWE star says “personal stories and rivalries make everything huge.”
Dave Portnoy
February 6, 2026

Dave Portnoy’s Radio Row Un-Banning Is Part of New Barstool Era

Media “is moving towards us. It’s not moving the other way.”