Episode 45 Snippets with Alex Kunawicz of Liverpool FC

On episode 45 of the Digital and Social Media Sports podcast, Neil chatted with Alex Kunawicz, Head of Content for Liverpool FC.

What follows are some snippets from the episode.
Click Here to listen to the full episode or check it out and subscribe in iTunes or Stitcher.

Posted by Neil Horowitz

Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn

Episode 45: Alex Kunawicz on Helping Fans Feel the Emotions and Atmosphere

Listen to episode 45 of the Digital and Social Media Sports podcast, with Alex Kunawicz, Head of Content for Liverpool Football Club

episode45

70 minute duration. Show format contains separate parts. Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or listen on Stitcher

Posted by Neil Horowitz Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn

Pinterest Presence in #SMSports

In 2015, there are a plethora of social media platforms to which sports teams devote time and resources. Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram remain the primary players, Snapchat is emerging, and even Tumblr seems to be making kind of a comeback. But is there a place for Pinterest and its ~ 73 million users, 85% of which are female (42% of ALL online adult females, in fact) for sports and social media?

Pinterest Snapshot: 72.8M users; 85% female; of all online US adults 42% of females and 13% of males use Pinterest

Based on usage and observation, most teams are deciding not to put much strategy or effort into Pinterest. While many teams have an official page, there is not a lot of consistent activity and content. There are some exceptions, of course, but a relatively dormant presence was the trend. There are some teams trying, however, to reach the loyal, largely female fan base. Like much of social media, monetization is far from a linear model and, in fact, many would consider Pinterest more a branding and awareness play, than a place for direct commerce.

The first question to ask is why the majority of those millions of users visit Pinterest. They’re there to learn, to be inspired, to discover and be delighted. Not to look at head shots of the team and peruse an online catalog of all your apparel offerings. These practices end up more lip service than effective, falling on deaf ears and blind eyes. As is the case in any social network, respecting the audience and the platform to create an engaged community is an essential step one. Here’s how some teams are doing it:

1) They’re teaching.

Team USA has long been creative in leveraging the passion of patriotic fans and engaging them across platforms in a personalized, sentimental manner. And their recently revamped Pinterest page is a tour de force. They’re putting content on there that they know works on Pinterest – food, quotes, fitness – and presenting things in a way native to the platform.

pinterest-USA

2) They’re leveraging fan content. This speaks to Pinterest users’ desire to discover a community, feel a part of it, and to be inspired by it. It is an everyday battle for myself, among others, working in sports fan engagement to make the most of all the incredible content generated by fans. Pinterest can be a place to share and preserve these displays of fan passion and can be done so in a way that is native to the platform — inciting inspiration by seeing the passion of fellow fans!

Check out a few examples of teams (Islanders, Trailblazers, Panthers) taking advantage of those fan brand evangelists – the fangelists.

pinterest-isles1pinterest-blazers3pinterest-panthers1

3) They’re putting content on Pinterest that is suitable for…well…Pinterest. Don’t try to out-think Pinterest, at least at first. Put the time into understanding what its users want and enjoy and serve that content to tie into your team. Whether it’s showing off the creative ways the team brand is used, the perfect team-themed wedding, or an inspirational quote from an athlete, this content can and does resonate. And, remember, real monetization opportunity comes only after a connected, trusting engaged community is in place.

Check out some of the fun stuff from the Oregon Ducks and Texas A&M Aggies (college sports fans are truly unreal)

pinterest-oregon

pinterest-txam

4) They’re pinning with personality. Every social media outlet is a chance to connect on a deeper level with fans. This is accomplished primarily through genuine engagement on a social media network that exposes fans to the team beyond the field of play. And it further endears the team to its fans, especially the females on Pinterest, through augmenting and reinforcing that emotional connection to the team. A lot of Pinterest is showcasing what gets one inspired and stirred up. And some sports teams are using the platform creatively, to this end.

Take a look at an example from Manchester United, who have some Pinterest boards that show off Pins selected by players, lending an air of authenticity and connection that fans appreciate, especially when the Pins are proper for the Pinterest platform.

pinterest-manu

Of course, justifying any allocation of time, effort, and resources into a polished Pinterest presence typically ends up with the all-important ROI question, which must go beyond such intangibles as fan affinity and brand awareness. But once you have a consistent, active community on Pinterest (which is a never-ending task to maintain), then possibilities open up. It doesn’t mean you plaster a merch catalog on Pinterest, but, maybe, it means linking to a place/offer to buy the hat a fan is wearing at their themed wedding, partnering with a bakery on the team “cakes” Pinterest board, working a travel/hospitality partner on relevant Pins, etc.

It’s not about trying to trick fans into being exposed to your marketing and promotions. It’s about giving them the opportunity to act on those moments of inspiration and desire, the reason they come to Pinterest in the first place. Pinterest really cannot be a priority for all teams and it’s better to stay away than half-ass things. If you’re going to do it, do it right and do it well. Because it’s not about manipulating fans, it’s about forging genuine connections and, only then, helping them act upon the inspiration your brand and pins elicit. And maybe making a purchase or two.

Is your team or brand killing it on Pinterest or do you know of a team pinning like a pro? Please tweet me at @njh287 or comment below!

Posted by Neil Horowitz Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn

A snapshot of the American Hispanic Sports Fan and their Digital Dependence

hispanics

Hispanics in the United States representing one of the fastest-growing, and highly coveted (by marketers), demographics these days. And, not only are they some of the biggest sports fans in this sports-crazed country, they also over-index in their avidity, as well as their use of mobile and digital content consumption.

The research team at ESPN recently conducted a media call to discuss their findings after studying Hispanics in the US, and their fan habits, in 2014. Here are some key takeaways:

  • There are currently 37 million Hispanic Sports fans in the US

According to an ESPN Deportes poll on Hispanic sports fans in the US:

  • 34% are avid sports fans (8-10 on 1-10 scale) Over-index on fan avidity; the ones that drive viewership, game attendance, and merchandise purchases
  •  Bilingual Hispanics are the biggest sports fans, especially. 40% of bilingual Hispanics consider themselves avid sports fans
  • The average non-Hispanic is an avid fan of 3.1 sports or leagues while an Hispanic is an avid fan of 3.6 different sports, and a bilingual Hispanic is an avid fan of 4.4 sports or leagues
    • The reasoning is that bilingual Hispanics are fans of sports of their parents and fans of sports of their American friends

Per Nielsen Ratings

  • Among the total US population and a study of all TV networks in 2014, NFL is most viewed sport with 21% of all sports viewing minutes, College Football is second at 9%, Soccer at #3 (boosted by World Cup in 2014), NBA #4, Olympics #5, College Basketball, Golf, MLB, and NHL
  • For white fans, the rankings are the same except golf, MLB, and NASCAR move up, while NBA and soccer drop down
  • For non-Hispanic blacks, NBA moves up to #2, CBB moves up, tennis enters at 9, boxing enters at 10
  • For Hispanics, soccer is tops, getting ~ 33% of sports viewing minutes, followed by NFL, NBA, and MLB. Then CFB, CBB, boxing, and wrestling
    • Spanish-speaking only Hispanics watch less NFL and NBA, but soccer, [37%] wrestling, and boxing increases
      • Most popular soccer league among Latinos is Mexican league soccer, along with other international clubs that have Mexicans on them tend to be popular, too.
  • Hispanics tend to live in larger households, over-indexing with more people and fewer TV sets in the household (0.79 TV’s/person vs. 1.2 TV’s/person), so more shared TV viewing experiences – “co-viewing.”
  • 80% of all Hispanics live in a household speaking both English and Spanish
  • ESPN reaches 20 million Hispanics/week across all platforms in the US
  • Most of the Hispanics consuming ESPN content (41%) use both English and Spanish content from ESPN and they are the heaviest users, representing 52% of all usage (further reinforcing Bilinguals are biggest sports fans)
  • 64% of ESPN Hispanic users are using more than one platform, compared to 52% of total ESPN audience (going back to fewer TV’s per person in the household)
  • The average Hispanic spends 90 hours/month online vs. 86 hours for non-Hispanics; 75% of Hispanic online time is on a mobile device
    • Hispanics on mobile devices is up 33% year-over-year
    • 46% of online Hispanics are visiting a sports site at least once/month
    • 65% of mobile online Hispanics are visiting a sports site at least once/month
  • Hispanics spent 61 billion minutes/month on desktop computers and 160 billion minutes on mobile devices (+ 39% YOY)
  • Of all Hispanics on smart phones, 6x more time is spent on apps than browsers
  • Hispanics over-index for online video, +45 minutes/month viewing online video than average American (including +61% YOY on mobile)

On sponsorship

  • From a study of one digital sponsorship, those aware of the sponsorship had higher brand favorability (64% vs. 43%) and were more likely to say the sponsorship had an impact on their purchase decision
  • Multi-platform sponosrship is most effective; looking at a specific ESPN Deportes sponsorship, those exposed on one platform were 27% more brand-aware, two platforms -> 48% aware, 3+ platforms 53% aware
    • Also more platforms led to higher consideration for the brand
    • In a study looking at English-only ads, Spanish-only ads, and a mix of content performed the best

So there you have it. Hispanics tend to be more avid fans, fans of more sports/leagues, over-index with digital and mobile, and, in general, digital sponsorship delivers results in sports business.

What are your key takeaways and actionable reaction steps from this information?

Posted by Neil Horowitz Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn

Friday 5: Quick Social Media and Sports Thoughts

On a couple of Fridays each month, I’ll throw out five brief thoughts on how to succeed in social and digital media in sports, based on experience, observation, and conversation. Examples abound (and always reach out to me via Twitter @njh287 if you want to see examples or want more info). This is meant to be a short post, so, without further adieu…the Friday 5:

Appealing to the deep, emotional sense of Nostalgia is effective in just about any industry and sports is no exception. There is a reason those ads that allude to ’90s pop culture are so share-able, why the manliest of men can’t watch the end of Field of Dreams and tear up as the Kinsellas have a catch, and an explanation for the over 500,000 #TBT tweets per week. Our deepest memories of falling in love with a team or sport, those things that stick deep in our souls, that binds us to our favorite team as not just a day-to-day distraction, but a passion and a part of a fan’s identity. Appeal to that nostalgia and enjoy the engagement from fans, while further entrenching that emotional affinity.

friday-5-listing

Go cross-platform with the good stuff. While replicating a post to all fan channels and social networks is never recommended, given the different ways fan interact on each platform, don’t be shy with your top content. If something is (predictably or unpredictably) performing well with fans, maximize the reach and post that content to all your fans. Social media is about sharing, first, and share-able content is fairly platform-agnostic. On a related note, don’t just throw that awesome content out there, pat yourself on the back, and go on with the routine. Re-post it in a different manner multiple times (for big Facebook/Twitter pages, even the best posts will still miss 70% of your fans!) and also plan how to stretch that content and repurpose it in many forms.

Maximize the good feelings. One of my favorite things that came out of my interview with the San Diego Padres’ Jesse Agler was how he explained the way the Padres capitalized on their crazy offseason of blockbuster moves by trying to keep the buzz going as long as possible. They told the story — from dropping the news, to the players arriving, getting their jersey, their introductory press conference, appearances and press after, fan Q&A, player features, and more. A single transaction turned into tons of pieces of great, engaging content.

How can you take good news and keep the buzz going as long as possible? Use different forms of media, integrate a contest, share facts and quotes a little at a time, solicit and curate fan reaction, relive the memorable moments; the feel-good vibes don’t have to be so ephemeral.

Don’t force content, but don’t shy away from good found stuff. We’ve all, at times, shaken our heads at a team finding their way into pop culture or a conversation with content, even as it racks up vanity metrics and engagement. Don’t feel shameful! If there is a relevant (enough) way to give fans fun, share-able content, especially coming from the never-ending legions of creative fans that want to be featured, do it! Sure, dressing up your mascot for Star Wars Day or asking a player for their favorite Prom memory may seem (and is) novel and gratuitous, but, if fans enjoy, it’s a win all-around! Again, don’t force it, but don’t hide from it. And, as always, pay attention to conversation and content coming from your fans!

Give fans something to share and react to (excuse my grammar). Whether it’s the actual content created, how news or content is presented, or where it is distributed, think about how you are eliciting a fan reaction and/or inclination to share. Is it something fans will scroll on by when perusing their News Feed or is it something begs a response, a screams ‘share me!’ ? (Read about “Thumbstoppers“) You have the media, social and digital media represent major distribution channels. But remember that social media is NOT intended to be a one-way broadcast tool. Keep the social front-of-mind and start every post by adopting the mindset of the fan. How they will see it, experience it, and react to it.

Posted by Neil Horowitz Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn

Episode 44 Snippets with TJ Ansley of the Portland Trailblazers

On episode 44 of the Digital and Social Media Sports podcast, Neil chatted with TJ Ansley, Director of Digital Media for the Portland Trailblazers NBA club.

What follows are some snippets from the episode.
Click Here to listen to the full episode or check it out and subscribe in iTunes.

Posted by Neil Horowitz

Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn

Episode 44: TJ Ansley on Playing to Trailblazers Fans’ Passion and Using Engagement Insights

Listen to episode 44 of the Digital and Social Media Sports podcast, with TJ Ansley, Director of Digital Media for the Portland Trailblazers.

episode44

60 minute duration. Show format contains separate parts. Subscribe to the podcast via iTunes Posted by Neil Horowitz Follow me on Twitter @njh287   Connect on LinkedIn