Episode 55 Snippets with Monique Williams of the NPGL

On episode 55 of the Digital and Social Media Sports Podcast, Neil chatted with Monique Williams, professional GRID athlete with the LA Reign of the National Pro GRID League.

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.

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Hashtag Sports #SportsFestNYC Recap

On October 20-22, 2015, Hashtag Sports held its inaugural SportsFest, a conference bringing together leading minds and organizations in sports, media, business, marketing and tech.

What follows is a collection of the best quotes, facts, and observations shared via Twitter from the event. Thanks to all whose tweets helped fuel this recap!

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Episode 54 Snippets with Bethany Cordell of Cal Athletics

On episode 54 of the Digital and Social Media Sports Podcast, Neil chatted with Bethany Cordell, Director of Digital Marketing and Social Media for Cal Athletics

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.

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Avoid the Rut of Routine: Experiment, Surprise, and Delight

stuck-in-a-rutIn the world of sports business, routine can often reign. Sure, trades and story lines and campaigns break up the daily grind, but seasons fly by. One game day routine leads to another, the preseason events, holiday campaigns, community events, and promotional nights come and go. The previews and features and highlights and contests graphics and GIFs , while fun and engaging, become part of the process, rinsed and repeated days on end.

While sports teams, leagues, and media have a leg up on all the other competitors for attention, speaking to dedicated, engaged fans, that attention and engagement cannot be taken for granted. There is value, but also peril in getting married to the routine.

This is not to say that practiced and successful tactics are not replicated nor that consistent branding should be given up so every post game graphic looks to be from a different universe. Keeping the basics of content and messaging in place is important, too.

But, with so much content and engagement each and every day, there exists ample opportunity to experiment, improve, and, the oft-repeated mantra – surprise and delight. Make it a point to try something new at least once or twice each week.

Instead of a post game infographic with stats, do one with a great post game quote. Let the full highlights live on your website and, instead of linking there on social media, cut the best scoring play or defensive play of the game. Ditch your usual pregame pics with photos of the equipment being prepared. Instead of a first goal prediction contest, have fans predict the first assist. Maybe don’t post that same GIF for the eleven-billionth time and play around with other content.

You’re in a relationship with your fans and it’s important to keep the sparks flying. Don’t become the boring old couple watching a DVR’d episode of Shark Tank that you may have already seen. Try something new, be a bit unpredictable, observe, and experiment. Keep the emotional excitement at a fever pitch. Day after day, game after game, season after season.

What have you successfully experimented with recently? Comment below or tweetme at @njh287

Monetizing All The Fans

For years, the gate was just about the entire revenue pie for pro teams. But while ticket sales still drive a ton of value for teams, the fans that come out to games represent a sliver of fans engaged with their team. Media rights deals now deliver big dollars. And activity and interaction with fans via ever-burgeoning digital, social, and mobile channels is an illustration of why that revenue stream is primed for growth. Teams are devoting more time, resources, strategy, and content to fans that may never step in their state, let alone their venue, with their eyes, ultimately, on the organization’s bottom line.

But, to borrow baseball parlance, we’re just starting to round first base. Football clubs in Europe are selling digital rights and jersey kits to businesses and fans in the Far East. The NFL is trying to figure out the best way to maximize revenue overseas, by driving up interest and hoping it leads to increased media rights and purchases of license merchandise. Teams, not just the mega-sized ones, are reaching thousands, hundreds of thousands, and millions of fans on a frequent basis. If even a puny percentage support their team with some sort of purchase, well, let’s just say the revenue pie split will change more and more.

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It’s not that fans who actually represents butts in seats will be forgotten On the contrary, they’ll be treated and targeted with greater precision and personalization than ever. It’s more that all the ‘other’ fans won’t be taken for granted and devalued. They’ll be reached with more context and personalization, too. A general expectation for such relevance will be the norm for the coming-of-age digital natives and teams’ attempts to engage and monetize fans beyond their zip codes will be more effective and efficient. Fans will see the message from their local Ford dealer, not the one from the team’s home city. They’ll hear about watch party a few miles from their home, not the event at the team’s venue.

This is the present and near-future. The most savvy sports marketers, and those with the resources to do so, are monetizing fans well beyond their borders. It will soon be a part of the standard strategic arsenal for all the others. Sports business revenue is not plateauing, its structure is just changing and, in some ways, expanding. With 650 million unique Facebook users a “fan” of a League or Team Page and sports chatter dominating Twitter and Snapchat and mobile video engagement, the opportunity is greater than ever to develop a relationship with these fans and provide an exchange of value, too.

It’s a global economy. Pretty much every pro sports teams has fans that will never buy a ticket, but will engage with the team in countless more ways. The math is starting to add up. And everyone will score in the end.

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Don’t Be Satisfied with Silos

If nothing else, every effective social media pro I meet understands one thing — success and silos are not a winning combination. In any organization, and even more so in sports, the whole is greater than the sum of the parts. And social media is the fulcrum upon which the lever can move up and down. With ticket sales, corporate sponsorships, community relations, season ticket service and sales, group sales, public relations, marketing, fan development, youth outreach, merchandise, game operations, concessions, and even team operations, it can be easy to succumb to silos and tunnel vision. The “do your job” mantra and mentality now made famous from Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots.

But Coach Belichick and his team don’t have the potentially powerful secret weapon, the performance enhancer that is social media at their disposal. We are a society of specialization. One in which athletes are starting to commit to one sport year-round, when talented musicians and dancers devote all of their free time to their craft and nothing else, and when workers strive to be the best at what their job requires. There is nothing wrong with wanting to do what you are tasked to do to the greatest degree of effectiveness possible. But not with blinders on. This is especially vital in social media.

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At the end of the day, every team and organization has business goals and its web of inter-connected and autonomous departments all affect the furthering of these goals in some way. A series of fires that, in optimal circumstances, come together in a conflagration of success. And social media is the gasoline, the lighter fluid, the element that amplifies and enhances all the rest.

The person in PR is not best-served being fatuously oblivious to what marketing, sales, and sponsorship is doing. The game operations head should be right in-step with what is going in fan development and community relations. And the social media head needs to be deeply engaged and informed in all of it. Pretty much every department’s success is ultimately tied to the fans of the team. And social media, increasingly so, is the most direct and effective line to reach the fans, in any capacity and or any purpose. Social media is no longer an afterthought, but a key ingredient to any department’s recipe.

So how come so many are seemingly happy to proceed amidst a collection of cubicles, where not every ounce of resources and effort is mobilized to help push and progress every campaign and activity? Part of it is ignorance and inertia and part of is sheer laziness or, at least, lack of effort.

An organization can and should be proactive in breaking down such silos by assuring everyone knows how their campaigns and efforts affect the path to the bottom line goals. And every department head must recognize the value of social media, even if it feels new and disrupts the old routine, by inviting the social media manager to be aware of, and contribute to, each and every campaign. This requires communication and transparency. It requires collaboration and collective effort. But, in the end, it the way to wins for everyone.

When looking at the weapons in one’s arsenal, social media is the one consistent arrow in everyone’s quiver. To leave it untouched and concealed is a lost opportunity every time. And in this age of specialization when everyone is trying to do their job the best they can, how can any bullet go left unfired?

So are you sitting in a word of silos and, even worse, naively satisfied with doing so? Take some time to understand what everyone does in the organization and how it connects to your success. And, of course, don’t leave your social media lighter fluid unused. Fan the flames and fire away. Bust down the silos and start succeeding with synergy. Sports is about teamwork — on the playing field and in the offices, too.

Episode 53 Snippets with Blake Lawrence of opendorse on #SMSports and Brand Endorsements

On episode 53 of the Digital and Social Media Sports Podcast, Neil chatted with Blake Lawrence, founder and CEO of opendorse.

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

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