sport marketing (2003)

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Sport Marketing October 14, 2003

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2003 presentation on Sport Marketing

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Page 1: Sport Marketing (2003)

Sport Marketing

October 14, 2003

Page 2: Sport Marketing (2003)

Sport Marketing

• Is the process of designing and implementing activities for the production, pricing, promotion, and distribution of a sport product to satisfy the needs or desires of consumers and to achieve the company’s objectives.

• **It is the most important function of a sport business.

Page 3: Sport Marketing (2003)

Sport Marketing Plan

• Comprehensive frameworks for identifying and achieving an organization’s marketing goals and objectives

Page 4: Sport Marketing (2003)

Marketing Mix

• 4 P’s– Product– Price– Place– Promotion

• Market position refers to the way a company uses its marketing mix to influence the consumer’s perception of a product.

Page 5: Sport Marketing (2003)

Product

• The centerpiece of a marketing mix

• The product is something that will satisfy something the consumer needs or wants.

• Includes:– People, places, goods, services & ideas

Page 6: Sport Marketing (2003)

Price

• Price affects the product’s success, status quo for the product, and the consumer’s perception of the product.

Page 7: Sport Marketing (2003)

Place

• Is where and how a company gets a product from its production or origination point to a place where the targeted consumer can have access to it.

• Sport activities are manufactured and consumed simultaneously.

Page 8: Sport Marketing (2003)

Promotion

• The integrated communication and public relations activities that communicate, inform, persuade, and motivate consumers to purchase the product.

• Advertising or making people aware

Page 9: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #1: Mission

• The company’s purpose may be found in its stated mission.

• Example: An intercollegiate athletics program’s mission may be “to provide athletic participation opportunities for the college student.”

• The company will offer products with the intention of meeting the company’s mission.

Page 10: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #2- Analyze the Product

• Tangible good: Shoes, apparel, sporting equipment

• Support services: Officials, trainers, sport psychologist

• Game/event: Core product, product extensions

Page 11: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #3 Projecting the Climate

• Assessing internal and external factors

• Internal factors:– Players, owners, team management, and staff

personnel

• External factors:– Media, corporate sponsors, advertisers,

spectators, regulations

Page 12: Sport Marketing (2003)

SWOT Analysis

S = Strengths

W = WeaknessesControllable Factors

Ex. Products, Services, Financial Resources

O = Opportunity

T = ThreatsUncontrollable

Factors

Ex. Competition, Demographic Shifts, the Economy, Technological

Advances

Page 13: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #4-Positioning the Product

• Objective is to differentiate the sport product from competing products by creating a distinctive image of the product.– The type of consumer– The design/benefits of the product– The price– Where the product takes place

Page 14: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #5-Analyzing & Targeting Consumers

• Involves grouping consumers according to common characteristics.– Demographics– Psychographics– Media Preferences– Purchasing behavior– -Geographics

Page 15: Sport Marketing (2003)

Market Segmentation Main Bases

•Geographic SegmentationRegion or location

Size of City

Density

Climate

Page 16: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Page 17: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

New England: Eastern Cradle

Page 18: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

North Carolina & South Carolina: Carolinas

Page 19: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Florida:

Pigskin Cult

Page 20: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

South Florida: South Florida

Page 21: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Pittsburgh & Buffalo:

Mills and Mines

Page 22: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky:

American Heartland

Page 23: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Arkansas, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska,

Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin: Sport for Sport’s Sake

Page 24: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado: Rocky Mountain High

Page 25: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Texas and Oklahoma:

Texas Southwest

Page 26: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Nevada, Utah, Arizona:

Cowboys and Mormons

Page 27: Sport Marketing (2003)

Eleven Regions of Sport Involvement

Pacific West Coast & Hawaii:

Pacific Cornucopia

Page 28: Sport Marketing (2003)

Market Segmentation Main Bases

•Geographic Segmentation

Region or location

Size of City

Density

Climate

•Demographic Segmentation

Gender

Age

Income

Nationality/Ethnicity

Page 29: Sport Marketing (2003)

The Female Market

•Women have been considered a special segment for over a century

•Female fan base in sports dominated by men is leveling•43% female fan base in the NFL

•Women purchase 70% of all NFL- licensed products

•Female market is growing

Page 30: Sport Marketing (2003)

Cohorts

•Term “cohorts” used in marketing to refer to generations (ex. Baby boomer cohort, Generation Y cohort).

Page 31: Sport Marketing (2003)

Mature’s Boomer’s 13er’s (Gen. Y)/& X’s

Diversity Uncomfortable SomewhatComfortable

VeryComfortable-May act asbridge

Leisure Reward Point of Life Relief

Work Inevitable Adventure DifficultChallenge

Education Gift Birthright A method usedto get ahead.Large number ofdropouts

Money Save Spend Hedge

Future Save for a rainyday

Now ismoreimportant

Uncertain butmanageable

Technology Difficult Challenge CompletelyComfortable andProficient

Learning Classroom/ Onthe Job

Classroomand someexperiential

Experiential-able to ParallelThink

Approach Careful, cautious Ready AimFire

Ready Aim Fire

Yacovinch as cited by Dr. Patrcia Boverie

* ‘Tweeners, share the

values of 2 groups

Page 32: Sport Marketing (2003)

Youth Market

•Often the target of sport promotions

•Today’s youth market different from years in the past

Interested in alpha brands (Nike, Levis)

Immune to tried and true brand strategies

•Companies are repackaging sport with youth market specifically in mind

Page 33: Sport Marketing (2003)

Senior Market

•By 2025, the over-50 market will grow by 75%

•By 2025, the under-50 market will grow by 1%

•More sport research about the mature market

•Grassroot organizations cashing in on this market

Page 34: Sport Marketing (2003)

Market Segmentation Main Bases•Geographic Segmentation

Region or location

Size of City

Density

Climate

•Demographic Segmentation

Gender

Age

Income

Nationality/Ethnicity

•Psychographic Segmentation

Social Class

Status

Values, Attitudes

Lifestyles (activities, opinions, interest)

Personality

•Behavioral SegmentationBenefits sought

Purchase occasion

User Status/ Usage Rate

Brand loyalty

Buyer readiness

Attitude towards the product

Page 35: Sport Marketing (2003)

An effective market segment is…

1. MeasurableSize and purchasing power

2. Accessible Can be reached and served

3. SubstantialLarge and/or profitable

4. Actionable & ResponsiveEffective programs designed to attract and serve the segment

Page 36: Sport Marketing (2003)

Strategies for Selecting Target Markets

UndifferentiatedStrategy

•One marketing mix to total market

•Mass marketing

•More competition

•Less satisfaction

Page 37: Sport Marketing (2003)

Strategies for Selecting Target Markets

MultisegmentStrategy

•Two or more segments

•Each segment has unique marketing mix

•Increased cost

•Increased profits

Production cost

Promotion cost

Research cost

Greater sales volumes

Larger market share

Page 38: Sport Marketing (2003)

Strategies for Selecting Target Markets

ConcentratedStrategy

•One segment-niche marketing

•Specialized

•Suits small firms or new entrants

Page 39: Sport Marketing (2003)

Industry Analysis Segmenting

•Purpose is competitive strategy formulation

•Identify marketing opportunities and threats

•Develop appropriate marketing mix

•Study your competitors

Page 40: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #6-Packaging

• Presenting the product in the best possible manner

Page 41: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #7-Pricing the Product

• Determine the value of the product by assigning the price.

• 4 factor’s/4 C’s:– Consumer– Competitor– Company– Climate

Page 42: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #8-Promoting the Product

• Communicate the product’s image to the selected target audiences.

• Promotional mix includes the strategy to promote the product.

Page 43: Sport Marketing (2003)

Promotional Mix

• Advertising• Publicity• Activities &

inducements• Public Relations

• Community Relations• Media Relations• Personal Selling• Sponsorship

Page 44: Sport Marketing (2003)

Sponsorship

• Sponsorship is a cash and/or in-kind fee paid to a property in return for access to the exploitable commercial potential associated with that property. (IEG Inc., 1996)

• It is not advertising. It promotes a company in association with the sponsored event.

Page 45: Sport Marketing (2003)

Development of Sponsorship

• Emerged as result of:– Advertising rates increasing– Introduction of cable TV– Identification of “minority markets”– Desire to influence baby-boomer generation

Page 46: Sport Marketing (2003)

Sponsorship Evaluation

• There are 5 areas of evaluation:– Media coverage– Awareness & attitudinal surveys– Sales– Corporate/guest feedback (hospitality)– Cost-benefit analysis

Page 47: Sport Marketing (2003)

Impression

• The exposure one receives to a sponsorship or media vehicle that communicates a message through an external influence or image, and which affects the feelings, sense or mind of the individual receiving the exposure

Page 48: Sport Marketing (2003)

Impression Influencing Factors

• Image• Availability• Geographic Region• Sheer number• Quality

• Size/impact• Target Market• Sponsor Clutter• Sponsor Package

Page 49: Sport Marketing (2003)

Measurable Categories

• On-site signage

• On-screen graphics

• Audio mentions

Page 50: Sport Marketing (2003)

CPMs

• Cost Per Thousand

• It is a tool that advertisers use to compare the price of different media

• Can be broken down to show per thousand values – Example: Households, readers, listeners

Page 51: Sport Marketing (2003)

Industry Standard Value of Impressions

Category CPM Value/Impression

Broadcast Television $5 to $35/thousand hh $.003 to $.023/imp

Cable Television $6 to $11/thousand hh $.004 to $.007/imp

Spot Television $3.03 to $10.68/thousand hh $.002 to $.007/imp

Spot Radio $3.52 to $10.78/thousand $.0035 to $.011/imp

Sports Magazines $30 to $75/thousand circ. $.015 to $.0375/imp

Web Sites $10 to $150/thousand $.01 to $.15/imp

•The average CPM for sports programming are similar to prime time programming CPMs.

•The Super Bowl earns an average rating of $24.58

(Based on 1.5 viewers per hh)

Page 52: Sport Marketing (2003)

Sporting Event Viewer’s/Household (1996)

(2+)

MLB 1.28

NBA 1.36

NFL 1.41

NCAA College Bowl Games 1.56

NHL 1.46

Summer Olympics (Prime Time) 1.51

Auto Racing 1.38

Average 1.45

Network Television Sports Programming Viewers Per Household

Page 53: Sport Marketing (2003)

How to measure a media impressions value

Step 1:

Per Thousand Value $5 per thousand hh

Number of viewers x 1000

1.5 viewers per hh x 1000

= Value per impression

= $.003

Step 2:

Number of impressionsx

Value per impressionx

Number of households

Value of media sponsorship based on impressions

30 impressionsx

$.003x

1,000,000

$90,000

Page 54: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #9-Placing the Product

• Refers to the manner the sport is distributed to the consumer

Page 55: Sport Marketing (2003)

Step #10-Promise of the Plan

• Evaluating if all goals were met