Experify has shut down. Your advocacy program has a new home.

Turn Sim Owners Into Your Best Sales Team

A golf simulator is a $10,000–$50,000 build, not a cart purchase. Before anyone wires that, they need to know it fits their ceiling, the launch monitor reads true, and the install won’t turn into a months-long project. Reviews can’t promise that. An owner who’s already swinging in their garage can.

Interactive map showing real golf simulator owners a prospective buyer can message near them

Reviews Can't Answer the $30,000 Question

“Will this fit in a garage with a 9-foot ceiling?” “Is the launch monitor accurate enough that my data isn’t lying to me?” “How brutal was the install — did you need a contractor?” These are the questions that stall a five-figure simulator build. No spec sheet or hero video answers them honestly. A real owner will.

Buyers Find Real Owners With Their Setup

Your interactive advocate map lets a prospective buyer find real owners — filtered by space (garage, basement, dedicated room), ceiling height, or launch monitor model. They pick the person whose build looks most like the one they’re trying to talk themselves into.

Map of verified golf simulator owners filtered by space type and launch monitor
SMS conversation between a buyer asking about ceiling height and a real golf simulator owner

Real Conversations via SMS

Buyers text your owners directly — asking about ceiling clearance for a full driver swing, whether the launch monitor reads accurately indoors, how long the install actually took, and what they’d buy differently. A privacy proxy keeps both sides safe. 90% of conversations are fully self-serve.

Fewer Stalled Carts, More Confident Builds

A $30,000 simulator doesn’t sell on impulse — it sells when the buyer finally believes it’ll work in their actual space. When they talk to an owner who solved the same ceiling and install problems, the hesitation drops and the deposit goes through. Track every conversation to conversion in one dashboard.

Admin dashboard showing advocacy-driven sales and conversation tracking for a golf simulator brand

Real Results from Premium DTC Brands

Bunch Bikes — a premium DTC brand at a similar high-consideration price point — switched to Stoked and saw these results.

40 %

of sales driven by advocates

70 min

daily admin time saved

90 %

conversations fully self-serve

See What Your Owners Could Drive

At a $10,000+ build price, it only takes a handful of owner-driven sales a month to pay for the program many times over. Book a demo to see the math for your AOV, or compare plans first. Selling something else high-ticket? See every vertical we support, including e-bikes and cold plunges.

Golf Simulator Brand FAQs

Common questions from golf simulator brands considering Stoked.

01

Most brands start with 25–50 of their happiest owners. That’s enough to cover a range of setups — garage, basement, dedicated room — and keep a steady flow of conversations going. You grow the roster as your install base grows.
02

It helps. Space anxiety is the single biggest thing that kills a simulator sale, and it’s exactly what an owner can settle in two texts — “I’ve got 9-foot ceilings and a left-handed swing, here’s my room” lands far harder than any clearance diagram on your spec page.
03

That’s the point. Buyers want to hear an owner say the data matches their range session, or that they tweaked the lighting to get clean reads. Real, specific answers about accuracy build more trust than any marketing claim — and confident buyers don’t bounce to a competitor.
04

The opposite. Buyers are already scared of the install. Hearing an owner say “it took a weekend and one trip to the hardware store” or “honestly, hire the electrician, I didn’t and regretted it” removes the unknown. Certainty closes five-figure builds; mystery stalls them.
05

Reviews answer “is this a good simulator?” Stoked answers “is this simulator right for my garage, my ceiling, my swing, my budget?” A five-star review can’t have that back-and-forth. A real owner can — and for a $30,000 decision, that conversation is what tips the buyer over.