Posts tagged Sponsorship

Advertising experience or experience advertising?

Conventional wisdom holds that traditional media’s grip on consumers continues to slip as they increasingly turn to the internet and their peers for entertainment and purchasing recommendations. In fact, any planner worth his or her salt can reel off a stream of statistics pointing to advertising’s demise — or lack of effectiveness, at least: Prime-time continues to erode as all the major networks saw significant declines for last year’s season; 77% of U.S. consumers trust businesses less than they did a year ago; consumers trust their peers’ opinions online more than any other source and a whopping 83% of Mad Men’s supposedly ad-friendly time-shifted audience fast forwards through commercials according to Tivo. The list goes on and on.

But perhaps it’s not that advertising is failing but that brand experiences (both on and offline) are really what are capturing the imagination of today’s consumer.

For example, 65% of U.S. consumers report a digital experience changing their perception about a brand (either positively or negatively) and 97% of that group report that the same experience ultimately influenced whether or not they went on to purchase a product from that brand. In a nutshell, experience matters. A lot.

Of course, brands that were “born digital” intuitively know this. Google and Amazon are pioneering experiential brands. That’s why Amazon continues to pour money into improving its customer service rather than run traditional advertising or marketing campaigns. As Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has said, “We are not great advertisers. So we start with customers, figure out what they want, and figure out how to get it to them.” Zappos built its brand the same way, as has Facebook.

But what about more traditionally-minded marketers who weren’t born digital? Can they succeed in an experience-driven world? The answer is “yes” and here are some of the best:

Red Bull: Red Bull basically pioneered the experiential category. Not only did the brand rise to prominence by sponsoring alternative athletes and lifestyles, it went further by creating its own events, like Red Bull’s Flugtag and even its own sports like Red Bull’s Crashed Ice, which takes over old Quebec with a mix of hockey and motorcross. Even the brand’s website has morphed into a blog, much like today’s most popular publishers.

Camper: Most think of Camper as purely a comfortable yet stylish shoe brand. But the Spanish company is much more and pursues a brand ethos that’s both traditional, cultural and fashion forward simultaneously. Proof: Casa Camper, stylish (but laid back) hotels in Barcelona and Berlin that embodies the brand’s essence. Ditto for Camper Together which taps up and coming artists to create one-of-a-kind boutiques.

Guinness: Guinness may be old but it’s acting like a much, much younger marketer. The company has embraced experiential branding both literally and figuratively with its “It’s Alive Inside” positioning. For its anniversary, Guinness offered up Remarkable Experiences, including a trip into space. It also released a pub-finder iPhone application with a social media twist. More impressively, the brand created the Guinness Storehouse, a seven-story building that functions as both museum and pub, that has now become one of Ireland’s top tourist attractions. And, more recently, Guinness even wired up its rugby team with RFID tags (including balls and players) to capture a whole range of statistics about how fast, powerfully and effectively the game is played.

UNIQLO: Few companies have so used digital like Uniqlo to both build a brand and breakthrough to new consumers — and on a truly global scale. The Japanese retailer surprises and delights consumers at every turn, whether through innovative iPhone applications, calendars, e-commerce, stylebooks and microsites. Uniqlo’s experiential efforts not only express the brand, but reach new consumers who may live thousands of miles away from the nearest retail location.

Virgin America: Virgin America has gone further than most, ensuring that the experience is the marketing — and advertising in many cases. The brand targeted tech-savvy consumers early on with its Red system entertainment console and in-flight WiFi. It showed off its dramatic interiors in promotions with Diggnation and YouTube celebrities; became an early adopter of Twitter for customer service; and reinforced its brand values through its simple booking engine on VirginAmerica.com. And now, for the holidays, Virgin America is partnering with Google to offer free WiFi for travelers.

Nike: Nike, of course, has been moving in this experiential direction for a few years. ‘We’re not in the business of keeping the media companies alive,” Nike’s Trevor Edwards told the New York Times in 2007. ”We’re in the business of connecting with consumers.” And so they have. The company continually earns kudos for consumer experience breakthroughs like Nike+, its online running community; the Human Race, a global running event; and more recently the Livestrong Chalkbot which enabled users to submit a text message that would be painted (digitally) on the route of the Tour de France.

Experiences, it would seem, are the new advertising. Experiences reach and engage customers in new and more meaningful ways, they promote “trial” over simply messaging and — quite frankly — experiences are much more suited to our digital era when everything is just a click away. Our challenge now, as marketers, is to make sure that our products and brands can actually live up to the experiences that we advertise. Garrick Schmitt asks “Is advertising dying?”  It’s certainly fashionable to say so and it has a direct impact on how marketers apply the ‘experience’ to sports, sponsorship and entertainment properties.

F1 – what goes around comes around!

Team Lotus will be back in Formula One next season – and the Norfolk man draughted in is Mike Gascoyne, ex Toyota, Jordan and Tyrrell designer. Malaysian entrepreneur and new team principal Tony Fernandes is involved in the project – something which brought with it backing from the Malaysian government and a consortium of investors from the country.”It is different from what Lotus was, obviously, as the company is now owned by Proton and this is very much a Malaysian backed initiative. But that backing is exciting and great for Formula One, and to tie that in with the heritage of Lotus has a very nice synergy.” said Gascoyne.

Lotus F1 will initially be set up in the RTN centre at Hingham, a 50,000 square foot facility most recently used by Bentley for its Le Mans programme. Works will eventually move to Lotus’ new operations base at Malaysia’s Sepang circuit. Sponsorship announcements are anticipated and driver line-up is due to be revealed next month.

Lotus F1, based in Norfolk joins Manor Motorsport, based in Buckinghamshire, as two of the four new teams in Formula One in 2010 boosting the motorsport industry in the UK. The other teams are from the USA, Team US F1, and Campos from Spain – more good news is the return of Cosworth as an engine supplier. BMW Sauber also has a new owner having been sold to Swiss-based Qadbak Investments.

It seems the auto manufacturers are pulling out gradually as teams – leaving more independant teams to fill the F1 grid… isn’t this how it used to be?? What goes around comes around!

Sponsorship Spending To Rise 2.2 Percent in 2009

Sponsorship spending by North American companies is expected to grow 2.2 percent in ‘09 to $16.97 billion, according to IEG Sponsorship Report, the world’s leading authority on sponsorship.Chicago (Advertiser Talk) 26-Aug-2009 – Sponsorship spending by North American companies is expected to grow 2.2 percent in ‘09 to $16.97 billion, according to IEG Sponsorship Report, the world’s leading authority on sponsorship.

The forecast is the smallest annual growth rate in the forecast’s 24-year history. Spending in ‘08 was up 11.4 percent over ‘07, just shy of IEG SR’s projection a year ago of 12.6 percent growth.

The sports sector is expected to be the biggest victim of the recession given sponsors’ willingness to bail out of big-ticket sports deals. IEG SR expects corporate spending on sports properties to total $11.6 billion, up 1.8 percent from ‘08.

“The economy has forced many companies to keep a tighter hold on their purse springs, and big-ticket pro sports properties will take the biggest hit,” said William Chipps, IEG Sponsorship Report’s senior editor.

Projected dollar amounts for non-sports categories are entertainment tours and attractions: $1.66 billion, up 1.9 percent from $1.63 billion in ‘08; causes, $1.57 billion, up 3.1 percent from $1.52 billion; arts: $848 million, up 2.5 percent from $827 million; festivals, fairs and annual events: $786 million, up 4.4 percent from $753 million; and associations and membership organizations: $503 million, up 4.4 percent from $482 million.

As a result, sports’ share of overall North American sponsorship spending will dip a percentage point to 68 percent, while festivals, fairs and annual events increases its share from four to five percent.

While corporate spending is expected to slow considerably in the year ahead, sponsorship is expected to once again outpace traditional media buys. North American media spending is expected to decrease 3.2 percent in ‘09, according to the worldwide media and marketing forecast produced by GroupM, the global media investment management operation of WPP Group plc.

International Outlook Rosier, But Slowdown Will Occur Just as the economic crisis has taken its major toll in the U.S. with a ripple effect elsewhere in the world, the impact of the downturn on sponsorship will be felt around the globe but not yet to the same degree as on the home front.

The absence of the Beijing Olympic Games and the unprecedented spending surrounding that event also will contribute to slower growth in ‘09, although the Asia Pacific region will remain the fastest growing.

Overall, including North American spending, ‘09 global sponsorship expenditures should reach $44.8 billion, a 3.9 percent increase over the $43.1 billion spent in ‘08, a number slightly below IEG SR’s projection of $43.5 billion.

Subtracting U.S. and Canadian activity, spending by the rest of the world is expected to reach $27.8 billion, up 4.9 percent from $26.5 billion in ‘08.

Europe will remain the region whose companies spend the most on sponsorship after North America. IEG SR expects European firms to spend $12.2 billion in ‘09, up 4.3 percent from $11.7 billion in ‘08. Asia Pacific companies should increase spending 7.4 percent from $9.5 billion to $10.2 billion.

Companies based in Central and South America should see 2.9 percent growth from $3.4 billion to $3.5 billion, while companies from all other regions are expected to grow expenditures 2.6 percent from $1.9 billion to $1.94 billion.

www.sponsorship.com

Generali Group go with Ducati in MotoGP

Generali, which has also signed a deal with Ducati in the last few days, will be title sponsor of the final round of motor cycling’s top-tier MotoGP series in Valencia in November.”We are very happy that a company like Generali, with a presence in over 60 countries, has come to an agreement to use MotoGP as a promotional and communication platform,” said Dorna Sports managing director Pau Serracanta. “It is a particularly interesting agreement for us, as we welcome a new sector – that of insurance.”

A statement from Generali: “The MotoGP World Championship is an ideal sponsorship context, perfectly matching with the international scope of the Generali Group which is glad to title with its brand the highly attended final round of this season.”

Danica Patrick & Tissot launch on Twitter

Danica Patrick is the first person to launch on Twitter in conjunction with, and backed by a sponsor, Tissot watches. Danica Patrick on Twitter: http://twitter.com/danicapatrick

What makes this different, and consequently an exciting time for all parties involved, is that Danica is one of the first motorsport athletes to launch on Twitter in conjunction with a sponsor. Tissot see this and social media as a whole as an opportunity for ongoing sponsorship in a less-invasive way than traditional advertising. They’re trying to connect with consumers through social media and one of their company’s ‘faces’.

Both Danica and Tissot are well aware that they are carving new territory in terms of sponsorships on Twitter and are moving ahead cautiously and figuring it out as they go. Both parties want to execute this new venture within the cultural norms of social media.

Danica officially launched on Sunday, May 17th, but prior to her first tweet she already had 2700 followers, which illustrated the demand for her to communicate and connect with her fans in this relatively new medium. She’s already validated that her account is real by posting a Twitpic in uniform from New York.

Sports marketing trends – reaching the ‘fan in the stand’

Trends in sports marketing are shifting from the ‘traditional’ methods of communicating with a target audience – the trend is to ‘engagement and connection’ via emerging technologies… this is particularly evident in the sports marketing sector with initiatives deployed by the ’savvy’ marketers – and the athletes now tapping into the ‘Tweet Generation’. For a while behind the curve on mobile/cell SMS/Text technology the USA is now right at the bleeding edge utilizing these applications. Tony Ponturo, who for 26 years was the Vice President of global media, sports and entertainment marketing at Anheuser-Busch, Inc. and also President and CEO of Busch Media Group, has made a minority ownership investment in the Leverage Agency and will serve as Chairman.Regarded as one of sports and entertainment marketing’s most influential people, Ponturo led Anheuser-Busch’s development as a sports and entertainment juggernaut during his career with the renowned brewing company.

CNBC’s Sports Business Reporter, Darren Rovell asked Ponturo and Ben Sturner, the CEO of Leverage, to discuss the future of sports marketing. Here are some of the questions and answers.

Rovell: Leverage has negotiated deals with Kraft, Gillette, Nestle and KFC – some of the biggest companies out there – what are these companies looking for?

Sturner: These companies don’t just want signage, they want a robust platform. They require that any deal that is done touches the influencers. That it has interactivity, that it is inclusive, but has the feeling of privilege and that it cuts through the clutter.

Further to our post yesterday about social meda, the experts have no doubt.

Rovell: Over the past month, social media – especially Twitter – has exploded. How do you see the sports world embracing this?

Sturner: Something like Twitter is an amazing tool that everyone should embrace. It allows teams, leagues and athletes to spot trends, to become opinion leaders, to learn real time about how people feel about the fan experience. In the next six months, I expect teams and leagues to start hiring social media experts to allow them to monitor, initiate and integrate what is going on out there. So anyone in college who is looking for a job in sports, this position might be the easiest way in. www.yachtsponsorship.com

Sponsorship… a buyer’s market

Global companies are being swamped with sponsorship approaches from sports and arts bodies as the economic downturn transforms the business of sponsorship into a buyer’s market.

Some of the world’s biggest sponsors are cutting back on deals, although none of those contacted by the Financial Times said they were looking to terminate commitments. However, the economic outlook is prompting nervousness among rights owners who are trying to negotiate longer term deals with clients as a way of building in greater funding security to offset expected declines in sponsorship revenues.

Rights holders are gearing up for life without clients from the stricken banking and car sectors and trying to squeeze out more sponsorship dollars from others. “There is a great deal of inventory available and as in any downturn there will be a flight to quality,” said Phil Carling of Octagon, the global marketing company. “It’s a bit more of a buyers’ market,” said Keith Levy, vice-president of marketing at Anheuser-Busch and responsible for the beer company’s US sponsorship deals in baseball, basketball and American football.

According to Sports Marketing Surveys, the car and banking sectors were the leading industries of sports sponsorship, which was responsible for 79 per cent of all sponsorship last year. Between them, they signed off 253 of the 713 reported deals last year.

British Airways, a London 2012 Olympics sponsor, said it had always attracted interest from rights holders. “But increasingly so, we have noticed that third parties are looking to work with us more and more,” said Luisa Fernandez, global sponsorship manager. Calls are coming in daily to the Emirates Airlines, which sponsors football, rugby and cricket tournaments and teams. “They used to come but not at this frequency,” said Boutros Boutros, of Emirates. “We went after most of our properties but now they are coming to us.”

IEG, a sponsorship advisory arm of the advertising group WPP, expects sponsorship spending by North American companies to increase by only 3.2 per cent, following three years of double-digit growth. Globally, it will rise 3.9 per cent to $44.8bn, IEG believes.

BT, official sponsor of the London 2012 Olympics, said of the sponsorship climate that “clearly in worsening economic times, some change is inevitable”, and would be partly driven by upcoming sponsorship opportunities. “For companies like BT, this can be an appropriate time to negotiate new long-term deals cost-effectively,” BT said. Last month, it announced a four-year deal to sponsor the Paralympic World Cup. 

Germany-based rivals Adidas and Puma are not cutting back. Adidas has said it aims to spend about 13 per cent of its net revenues each year on marketing, spending €1.2bn ($1.5bn) last year. Puma spends about 15 per cent on marketing. AIG, the bailed-out US insurer, will not renew its shirt sponsorship of Manchester United while Hyundai has taken up advertising spots for the Oscars that were abandoned by General Motors.

Nortel’s financial woes threaten the telecommunications group’s sponsorship of next year’s Winter Olympics in Vancouver and the London 2012 Olympics. Its restructuring after seeking bankruptcy protection last month “does involve us taking a hard look at our sponsorships and, in some cases, decide to no longer invest in certain programmes as a sponsor”, said Nortel. But its Olympic commitments remained unchanged, it added.

Several companies made it clear they were sticking to their guns. Tsingtao said its main long-term sponsorship, with US basketball, was “not really affected by the financial crisis. It is going well”. Itau, the Brazilian bank, which spends $15m a year on the national football team, concluded that its merger plans with Unibanco meant it made sense to continue the marketing programme. The next two to three months will see fewer sponsorship announcements and activity, according to Karen Earl, chairman of the European Sponsorship Association. “People genuinely don’t quite know how things are going to pan out,” she said. www.ft.com

 

McLaren’s sponsors get nervous…

The Daily Telegraph has learnt that agents acting on behalf of key sponsors have approached the FIA and Bernie Ecclestone’s Formula One Management company to impress upon them the gravity of the situation if McLaren are suspended by the FIA’s world council at a hearing in Paris next Wednesday.McLaren have been summoned by the sport’s ruling body to answer five charges that they lied to race stewards in Australia and Malaysia – cheating Toyota out of third place – and procured world champion Lewis Hamilton into supporting that deception. The team have already been disqualified from the Australian Grand Prix and stripped of the points they won in that race, while sporting director Dave Ryan, on whom all blame was apportioned, has been sacked.

Ron Dennis, the executive chairman of McLaren Automotive, has also withdrawn from the sport in a thinly-veiled attempt to placate the FIA, with whom he has had a difficult relationship. However, the FIA are continuing to investigate the chain of events that led to Hamilton issuing an emotional apology to the world in Sepang three weeks ago.

A source close to one of McLaren’s key sponsors said: “I can say that if a disproportionately large penalty were given to McLaren on April 29 then the sponsor that I am associated with might leave. But the punishment must fit the crime. If there is an irrefutable case of corporate deception then fair enough.

“I think we all know the subtext here; the FIA wanted to oust Ron Dennis. I believe the governing body have allowed this situation to escalate and it is doing no one any good – not McLaren, not the FIA and certainly not the sport. Apart from anything else, it is dissuading other potential sponsors from entering Formula One.”

A two-race suspension similar to the one handed to BAR in 2005 could mean McLaren being ruled out of the Barcelona and Monaco grands prix. Spain is a key market for Banco de Santander, one of McLaren-Mercedes’ major sponsors, while Monaco is the most important race of the season from a sponsor’s perspective. A four-race suspension would include the British Grand Prix at Silverstone on June 21.

If McLaren are found guilty under Article 151c, it would be the second time in three years that they have been found guilty of bringing the sport into disrepute. The last time they were up before the world council, over the Ferrari-Spygate affair in 2007, they were handed a $100 million fine, the largest in sporting history.

If 151c was deemed to have been breached again, clauses in the contracts of the team’s major sponsors, such as Vodafone and Diageo, which owns the Johnnie Walker whisky label, would allow them to walk away from McLaren, leaving one of the sport’s largest teams without full financial backing during a worldwide recession.

It is understood that Vodafone’s 10-year deal with McLaren-Mercedes, signed in 2007 and with an opt-out clause after five years, is worth $800 million. Diageo’s deal is believed to be worth $45 million per year. Exxon Mobil and Banco de Santander are the team’s other major sponsors.

At jeopardy would be more than 1,000 jobs. McLaren Racing comprises roughly 600 employees, while many of the McLaren Group’s other departments, such as marketing and sponsorship acquisition, depend on the F1 operation to survive.

McLaren Automotive, which Dennis is to splinter off from the main McLaren Group, comprises another 500 employees and would also be placed in serious jeopardy if its major advertising platform was wound up.

SB:MKTG Presents ‘Sponsorship 101′ London

SB:MKTG is proud to present ‘Sponsorship 101′ in conjunction with leading yacht racing business website http://www.yachtsponsorship.com

Sponsorship 101 , London. 1st April 2009.

This event is designed to give sailors interested in raising sponsorship some basic tools to help. Whether you are a weekend sailor looking to off-set some costs, embarking on a semi-professional campaign or considering yacht racing as a platform for marketing, this event will have something for you.

David Fuller, Editor of yachtsponsorship.com, the only website dedicated to the business of yacht racing, will cover:

Proudly Sponsored by SB:MKTG

Proudly Sponsored by SB:MKTG

  • Why sailing is a good platform for sponsorship,
  • The basics of creating a sponsorship pack,
  • The value of networking,
  • Using new technology to your advantage.

The event will also feature a question and answer session where participants will be able to get the opinions of Denis Baddeley, Principal of sports marketing company SB:MKTG and other experts.

Join us for a welcome drink sponsored by SB:MKTG and networking before and after the presentations.

Event Details:

  • WHEN – Wednesday 1st April, 6:00 pm – presentations start at 7:00pm
  • WHEREEight Private Members Club, 1 Change Alley, London, EC3V 3ND (Google Maps)
  • WHO – This event is limited to 30 participants.
  • COST – £35 on the night or £24.99 if paid before 27th March.

See http://www.yachtsponsorship.com/events

Kia takes advantage in recession

Kia’s strategy: a sports-marketing blitz! Rafael Nadal won the Australian Open tennis championship on Feb. 1, but execs at the Seoul headquarters of Kia Motors couldn’t have been happier… his victory marked the culmination of Kia’s aggressive promotion of itself during the two-week tournament in Melbourne.The Australian Open is one of several sports sponsorships for Korea’s second-largest automaker. “Sponsorship of sporting events will be an important part of our marketing blitz this year,” says Lee Soon Nam, director in charge of the South Korean company’s overseas marketing. At a time when many sporting events face problems as troubled banks and corporate sponsors cut back, Kia is spending millions of dollars in sports marketing this year including National Basketball Assn., the World Cup and the Asian Games.

As the likes of GM struggle to survive, execs at Kia, which is 39% owned by Hyundai, are upbeat about their chances for 2009. “The current economic crisis is a once-in-a-century opportunity for us to expand our presence,” Lee declares. “The focus this year will be gaining bigger market share.” www.businessweek.com