About Corso

My name is Jeremy Mancini, and I created Corso because I believe running has a powerful place in schools. As a runner, I understand how much running can teach beyond fitness. It builds consistency, resilience, confidence, discipline, and the ability to see progress through effort.

I built Corso from the belief that school running clubs should be easier to manage and more meaningful for students. A good running program is not just about who is the fastest. It is about helping every student set goals, track improvement, celebrate milestones, and feel part of something positive.

Corso helps coaches and school staff track laps, manage training, organise interschool athletics, celebrate awards, and keep families connected without creating unnecessary admin. Every lap, goal, and badge is designed to help students recognise their own progress over time.

Privacy is central to Corso. Students should only see their own profile, parents should only see their child's progress, and schools should only access their own students. Corso is being designed to avoid unnecessary student login complexity, especially for younger children. Students should not need email accounts or traditional passwords to view their progress. Access can instead be managed through school-controlled identifiers, barcode cards, and coach-managed permissions.

For schools, Corso is intended to work through separate school sites, staff access, and isolated student records, so each school manages only its own students. Admin-level control is deliberate, and coaches only access the tools they need to run their program.

Corso is currently in beta and is not yet intended for live real-student data until school approval, backend security, staff access controls, and privacy checks are fully in place. My goal is to build a practical, safe, low-cost platform that helps schools make running more organised, more visible, and more rewarding.

Built by a runner, for schools where every lap counts.