Plan multi-location eco mission rollout

What this page covers
Plan multi-location eco mission rollout
Run one ZeLoop Eco Mission across multiple locations using a shared challenge people can join in the app. This gives offices, schools, sites, or communities one clear participation format built around the same mission.
You can also support the mission with rewards to help drive engagement. ZeLoop examples include vouchers, gift cards, and prizes, which can make it easier to launch one visible campaign across a wider network.
In brief
- Use one ZeLoop Eco Mission as the shared campaign structure, then invite participants from different locations to register and join through the app.
- Support participation with rewards and recognition. ZeLoop examples include vouchers, gift cards, and prizes for champions or for people who refer friends.
- Keep the rollout visible with regular mission updates, partner news, and impact stories so each location feels part of the same sustainability effort.
What to do
A practical way to plan a multi-location rollout is to build it around one Eco Mission that participants can join in the app. This creates a recognizable challenge across your network instead of running separate local efforts that are harder to align and compare.
Rewards can help keep momentum more consistent from one location to another. ZeLoop has highlighted missions with vouchers, gift cards, and other prizes, including rewards for top performers and for referrals, giving people a clear reason to stay active.
Communication matters in a wider rollout as well. ZeLoop regularly shares mission news, partnerships, and sustainability content, which can help reinforce the campaign theme and keep participants across locations connected to the same mission over time.
What to keep in mind
Planning across multiple locations usually means coordinating several stakeholders while keeping the experience consistent. This page is best suited to organizations that want one eco mission format to work across several offices, sites, schools, or communities.
One common challenge in broader rollouts is uneven participation between locations. ZeLoop examples show that rewards and public recognition can help strengthen engagement, but local promotion and follow-up still matter at each site.
If your goal is group-level visibility, it helps to plan for shared participation tracking and location-by-location follow-up. The aim is to support local action while also giving you an aggregated view of mission activity across the wider network.
