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Social Media

Marketing, Sports Business

How Sports [Marketing] Has Changed

December 30, 2014

The sports game has drastically changed. Yes, fans still root for their favorite teams and wear their lucky jersey on game day, but off-the-field, sports teams have shifted from traditional marketing strategies and advertising models toward more progressive and hands-on approaches.

With an ever growing demand by consumers for engagement and relevancy, the sports industry has responded by taking marketing and creativity to new levels. As a result, the sports industry has opened up new partnership opportunities and ways to connect with fans.

Reactive and Proactive

In 2010, the top 50 advertisers in sports spent a combined $6.6 billion on sports advertising, up 27 percent over what the top 50 companies spent in 2009 and 22 percent more than 2008 (SportsBusinessJournal.) So what changed? While we may not go so far as to say everything, a clear change was the way that the sports industry approached fan engagement and the creative process.

Although social networks Twitter and Facebook started in 2004, the sports industry only began catching up with it around 2008. Although ‘late to the party,’ sports teams quickly began to turn their attention toward the digital space and social networks because of the intriguing opportunity that they offered. Prior to the ‘new digital age,’ sports advertising and marketing online revolved around advertising opportunities where success had a clear definition. From traditional advertising campaigns that focused on the PPC/CPI/CPM model and standard sponsorship titlement of web assets, sports teams played it safe when it came to online marketing and advertising, with creativity often found only in offline opportunities.

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Social Media

How Facebook Places Will Own The Mobile Market

November 20, 2011

Today, Mark Zuckerberg and the Facebook team announced their plans to gradually release Facebook Places tonight in the United States for the iPhone and touch.Facebook with a full release expected in the following days. Although Facebook Places is still in its infantile stages, it has all the makings to further Facebook’s growth in the mobile market. Taking into account the partners that Facebook introduced at the event along with their existing assets, Facebook Places threatens to not only take over the mobile space, but change the way we do business.

What is Facebook Places

Before moving any further, we should address what Facebook Places exactly is. Facebook Places is a mobile application that will allow users to do 3 things: (1) find out where their friends are/let them know where you are, (2) check-in at locations, and (3) discover new places. With development for Facebook Places starting in December 2009, Mark Zuckerberg stated that the toughest part in building the new application was “figuring out what is a good set of features” to have. As mentioned, the 3 focuses on the Facebook Places application that have been initially built will focus on enhancing the community experience and sharing it with others. With features such as geo-tagging of images as well as linking businesses to locations, Facebook continues to push envelope as far as innovation and reach.

Facebook Places Initial Partners: FourSquare, Gowalla, and Yelp

One of the common reactions that anyone learning about Facebook Places for the first time will tell you is that it reminds them of a combination of FourSquare and Yelp. In what may or may not be a shock, Facebook introduced a few of the partners that they would be working with from the start: FourSquare, Gowalla, and Yelp. While the details of these relationships are still unclear, what’s important to note is what the implications are of these potential partners.

By bringing in companies like FourSquare, Gowalla, and Yelp, Facebook is positioning themselves to be at the center of the mobile space, while FourSquare, Gowalla, and Yelp have the chance to partner with one of the largest databases in the world (500 million users worldwide.)

3 Ways Facebook Places Will Own The Market

1. The mobile transition

As mentioned, Facebook has over 500 million registered users. Off this same note, of those 500 million, nearly 150 million users access their social accounts from the Facebook mobile application. Unlike other mobile applications where early adopters played a key role in the success of mobile applications, Facebook users are no stranger to mobile applications and will see Facebook Places as more of an extension of something they are familiar with rather than something brand new.

2. The Potential

When asked about the business model behind Facebook Places, Mark Zuckerberg replied that at the moment they were focusing on the 3 core goals [(1) find out where their friends are (2) check-in and (3) discover new places] that they had initially built Facebook Places for, but that because the application has so many possibilities, there will be opportunities for them to profit off of it.

Although he didn’t say it, we can only guess that a few of the revenue generation mechanisms that Facebook Places will allow will include geolocation based deals to users, reward system for checking in, and partnerships with business to create official Facebook Places partners, similar to the relationship that Startbucks has with FourSquare. Taking into account also the brand equity that Facebook has, they should have little trouble finding businesses interested in working with them.

3. Data

The biggest reason why Facebook Places has the opportunity to take over the mobile space is in the data that they posses. Although major mobile applications like FourSquare and Gowalla have their own API available for anyone to use, Facebook Places will be backed by the 500 million registered users which will be appealing to almost every business. While Facebook Places does have permission and privacy settings in place, which will undoubtedly deter some users from using it, if Facebook Places were to get just an eigth of their 500 millions users to use it, they would still have 125 times more users than FourSquare.

Social Media

Relationship Status: It’s Complicated

April 5, 2010

“Have you heard? John and Mary broke up.”

“How do you know?”

“She just updated her Facebook”

Believe it or not, this is how many people today find out about break ups and new relationships. With just a few clicks, you can make it ‘official.’

As Facebook continues to grow in both size and influence, more and more people are making their relationships public. While by no means is it a requirement to state who you are dating or if the relationship is ‘complicated,’ Facebook users feel the need to share it with others. Continue Reading…

Personal Branding

How Big Is Your Network?

March 29, 2010

The other day I received a Facebook friend request from someone I didn’t know. While I was surprised at the request, it wasn’t the first time. When I view their profile they had over 3,500+ ‘friends,’ zero of which I knew. While there are those that use Facebook to build quality connections and meet new people, there are those that ‘collect’ friends. Like baseball cards, there are some who boast about the number of friends that they have on Facebook.

Still, this is nothing new. Long before there was LinkedIn, there was business cards, and before that, a simple handshake. For as long as ‘networking’ has been linked with ‘opportunity’ and ‘possibility,’ it seems that the common sentiment is that the larger your network is, the more opportunities you will have. With social media though, ones’ ‘network’ is evolving into more than just ‘opportunities’ and ‘possibilities,’ but ‘relationships.’ Continue Reading…