This page lets you preview the complete Wired Edge flow — from program setup to coach onboarding to athlete intake to dashboards/reports — using realistic example data. Nothing is saved. Nothing is submitted. It’s a guided walk-through you can experience in under 2 minutes.
You’ll see the exact screens coaches and athletes fill out, and how that converts into usable insight on the dashboard.
This is what a school or club admin fills out to create the program profile.
Program admins share a setup link with coaches to onboard teams. (This is the “share link” moment.)
Coaches answer a quick team setup plus coaching tendency questions — so the system understands how they lead and communicate.
This is what players/parents complete. In the live product, this attaches the athlete to the coach’s roster and generates the insight report. In this demo, nothing is saved — it’s just a preview.
This is what the coach sees: athlete intake link + roster + a “Report Lenses” viewer.
Coach Avery Thompson — “Calm Systems Builder”
Leadership under pressure: Stabilizes quickly, simplifies messaging, and restores structure.
Communication default: Teaching-focused, calm tone, best with clear “why + what next.”
Coaching notes
- Use consistent cue language (“role, spacing, next action”).
- When energy drops: reset with structure before emotion.
- Best performance weeks happen when expectations are explicit and repeatable.
Wired Edge Coach Profile — Avery Thompson
Top pattern: Calm leadership + high clarity. Athletes respond best when cues are simple and repeatable.
How you lead under pressure
- Reduces chaos by narrowing focus to 1–2 priorities.
- Raises standards through structure (roles, routines, accountability).
Communication style
- Best: short teaching points + one actionable correction.
- Avoid: too much information mid-moment (overloads athlete processing).
| Athlete | Sport / Position | Reports |
|---|---|---|
| Mia Carter | Soccer — Center Midfield |
Mia Carter — “Connector Competitor”
Pressure style: Locks in when the stakes rise, but performs best with clear roles.
Communication: Encouraging, quick to support teammates, helps stabilize energy.
Coaching notes
- Give 1–2 specific cues, then let her self-correct.
- Use “mission language” (role clarity) to reduce overthinking.
- Natural on-field translator between coach intent and teammate execution.
PARENT LENS
How Mia is wired at home
- Responds best to calm, specific direction (one step at a time).
- Wants to do things the "right way" and can take responsibility personally.
What helps most
- Clear expectations + a simple routine before events.
- Praise effort + follow-through, not just results.
If stress shows up
- She may get quiet, take things on, or feel responsible for team outcomes.
- Help by resetting: "What’s your one job right now?"
COMPETITIVE LENS
What you’ll see in big moments
- She sharpens focus when stakes rise.
- Performs best when role is crystal clear.
Competitive edge
- Strong decision-making when structure is present.
- Natural stabilizer when teammates get chaotic.
Coaching leverage
- Give one priority cue + let her execute.
- Use role language: "Win your space. Be the connector."
VOLUNTEER COACH LENS
Simple ways to support her
- Keep feedback short and specific.
- Reinforce the routine: role → spacing → next action.
What to avoid
- Too much instruction mid-play.
- Emotional pile-on after mistakes.
Best quick cue
- "One job. Next action."
Wired Edge Profile — Mia Carter
Top pattern: High trust builder + calm intensity. When she knows her job, she becomes the team’s stabilizer under pressure.
Performance under pressure
- Responds best to structure and clear responsibilities.
- Can over-carry responsibility if teammates are scattered.
Motivation
- Driven by team standards and doing things “the right way.”
- Plays her best when the group feels aligned.
Coach communication style
- Specific, calm feedback lands best.
- Short correction + one action step = fastest improvement.
This is what an AD / club director sees: which coaches are onboarded, the teams, and athlete counts.
| Coach | Team | Sport | Athletes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coach Avery Thompson | Fremont Tigers — Varsity Girls Soccer | Soccer | 22 |
| Coach Marcus Lee | Fremont Tigers — JV Volleyball | Volleyball | 14 |
| Coach Dana Brooks | Fremont Tigers — Varsity Boys Basketball | Basketball | 13 |