Archive for the ‘Sponsorships and Endorsements’ Category

The “Brand Power Gap”: Endorsement Success Not Automatic

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Professional athletes often assume that stellar contracts with high annual salary earnings automatically translate into mainstream popularity and equally high endorsement earnings.  The 2010 edition of Sports Illustrated’s Fortunate 50 athlete salary review once again shatters this assumption, showing little to no correlation between healthy contract salaries and endorsement (marketing) earnings.

Many of the athletes appearing on this list have become annual regulars.  Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Floyd Mayweather, Jr., LeBron James, and Alex Rodriquez claim the first five slots.  Also, it is no shock that certain athletes with strong brands have scored high endorsement revenue.  I’m looking at you, Peyton Manning.

However, like 2009 list, the 2010 edition illustrates a great divide between the contract earnings of athletes and their endorsement earnings.  While Phil Mickelson tops the list of endorsement income as a percentage of total earnings (at 84.3%), over half the Fortunate 50 bring home less than 10% of their total earnings from endorsements.  That’s quite a gap.

Some other interesting “finds” on the SI list?

  • Golf and motorsports dominate the top 5 slots of endorsement-to-total earnings;
  • Seven NFL players, all with contract earnings of over $18 million per year, earned about $75,000 in endorsements; and
  • Floyd Mayweather, Jr. ranked third in total earnings, but ranked near the bottom of endorsement-to-total earnings with 0.4% of his earnings derived from corporate sponsorships.

Why the great divide?

In our athlete-marketing guide, “Ahead of the Game,” we noted the essential differences between the underpinnings of these two athlete revenue streams.  It’s the difference between salary power and brand power.  Salary power derives from the athlete’s on-field ability; his/her ability to be a difference maker in a game’s outcome.  The bigger the difference, the more the salary.

Brand power, on the other hand, is different.  Very different.

Endorsements: Not Run on Auto-Pilot

A brand’s power, or value, comes from its ability to attract an audience.  Usually a large audience.

We call the disparity between high contract earnings and low endorsement earnings the “brand power gap.”  Athletes suffering from the brand power gap have great earning power, based on their status as a difference maker.  However, they have little value as a brand off the field.  After the final whistle blows, fans simply don’t care about “who they are” and “what they stand for.”

There are some persons who deny the existence of a brand power gap.  They point to instances where the notoriety of the athlete from on-field performance translates into brand strength.  I won’t deny that some athletes become brands by sheer muscle power.  That great Super Bowl play or the final three seconds of Game 7 of the NBA Finals.  However, fame on the field is fleeting and easily replaced by the next day’s top story on ESPN’s SportsCenter.  Real brand strength, cultivated during an entire sports career, has more power and longevity than on-field play.

We all know marquis athletes (with 7 or 8-figure annual salaries) upset, or even bitter, that their brands do not attract meaningful (i.e., 7 or 8 figure) investment from endorsement partners.  However, they generally have no idea they suffer from the brand power gap.   Their non-existent off-field brand doesn’t have the strength to compete with other athletes whose brands have value.  Athletes with valuable brands attract the notice of large audiences.  The larger the audience, the more valuable the brand, the more money earned through endorsements.

The good news for athletes with an earnings gap?  The brand power gap can be closed.

It is closed through affirmative effort by the pro athlete and his/her business team.  Real brand strength is derived from defining and positioning an authentic brand, with messages that attract a mass audience:  projecting a brand through a regular social media strategy; participation in brand-relevant promotional events; and cross-marketing outside of a sport to attract a larger audience.  These are but a few examples.

Our message to clients is simple.   The brand power gap can greatly limit your ability to maximize lifetime earnings.   You can choose to close the gap.  Or, you can leave millions of dollars on the table.

Your choice.

Posted by Ken Ungar

Tiger Woods Continuing To Do It “My Way”

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

We advise athletes in crisis-mode to heed three simple rules to manage their PR:

  1. Tell it all. Don’t let the media enjoy the drip…drip….drip… of disclosing new details by the hour or the day.
  2. Tell the truth. A lie will haunt you forever.
  3. Tell it fast. You have three to twenty-four hours to get your story out before the media vacuum is filled with garbage generated by your detractors.

Until yesterday, Tiger Woods ignored all three rules.

So, during his 14 minute statement, what lessons can we discern that he learned?

Did he tell it all?  Yes.  He shared with us as much detail as we had the right to know.  Yes, he did have affairs.  No, Elin did not hit him.  Yes, he is seeking help for himself and his marriage.  Yes, he is taking complete responsibility for his behavior.

Awesome.  Put a check mark by rule number 1.

Did he tell the truth?  We think so.  However, the staged and overly controlled nature of his statement left us scratching our heads.  He addressed a room full of supporters (friends, family, and staff….but no Elin).  No questions from the media.   It left many with the impression that he still had something to hide.

The text of his statement felt too complicated.  Isn’t an apology supposed to be simple?  I was unsure if his statement was written by a speech-writer or written from the heart.  I suspect the latter, since it rambled and contained an odd combination of apology and overt attempts to elicit sympathy (i.e.,why did an apology include the details of his foundations’ work?).

And, then there was the tone of his statement.  Why did he feel the need to lash out at the media?  (The same media he wouldn’t face in the room.)  He raised his voice several times to scold nameless accusers and the paparazzi.  It sounded like a boss yelling at a subordinate he doesn’t respect.  Is this an environment encouraging a cynical audience to believe him?  Not really.  The combination of contrition and accusation muted the intended effect:  “I’m simply sorry.”

Well, at least he got the facts out….finally.  Put a check minus by rule number 2.

Did he tell it fast?  We know the answer here.  83 days.  Now, this story has a life of its own no matter what he does or says.

Put an X by rule number 3.

Perhaps the most troubling aspect of this media saga is Tiger’s attitude towards the repair of his brand.  There’s no doubt that he’s surrounded by a highly competent team of advisors, who can help minimize the current and future damage to Brand Tiger.  However, I suspect that Tiger believes his brand is too important or powerful to play by the PR rules that every celebrity must recognize (just ask President Clinton).   Only time will tell whether Tiger will succeed in reforming a brand by managing his PR “the Tiger way.”

Posted by Ken Ungar

The Death of Athlete Endorsements? Not Quite.

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Now, They're Lovin' LeBron, Too!

Since last November when Tiger became a “Cheetah,”  sports marketing pundits ran over each other in the rush to proclaim “the death of athlete endorsements.”  Tiger Woods killed them all, right?

“Radioactive.”  “Undependable.”  “Too risky.”

Baloney!

The celebrity endorsement industry is over 100 years old.  One philandering athlete …. even of the status of Tiger Woods …. is not going to nullify the marketing value of endorsements.   And, today comes the news that McDonald’s has retained the services of LeBron James for a multi-year, multi-million dollar, multi-faceted series of sports marketing promotions.  Bravo, McDonald’s.  Congrats, LeBron.  It seems this segment of the industry is indeed alive and well.

Will endorsing companies do better due diligence about their athlete’s character?  Sure.

Will endorsing companies negotiate stronger morals clauses?  No doubt.

Will endorsing companies hesitate before committing to long term arrangements, especially those involving investment in licensed products with long shelf lives?  Yep.

As well they should.

However, even in the aftermath of Tiger, life in the athlete endorsements industry moves on.

Posted by Ken Ungar.

Brands Are About Behavior: Tiger Woods Edition

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Tiger’s personal tragedy has become the tabloid equivalent of watching a train wreck.  You want to turn your head. . . but you just can’t seem to avert your eyes.

Within the sports business community,  the “train wreck” has become “which Tiger Woods endorsement / advertising partner will pull out today?”

Gillette?  Ads pulled.   TAG Heuer?  Relationship done.  Accenture?  Over.

Now He's Definitely In The Rough

Now, He's Definitely In The Rough

Gatorade had the good fortune of announcing the end of its Tiger-named drink two days before the Escalade hit the tree.  However, Nike is sticking with Tiger and riding out this “minor blip” (in Phil Knight’s words).  After all, if you made a billion dollar bet on Tiger-branded merchandise, wouldn’t you try to ride out the “minor blip”?

No matter what happens in the coming days and weeks with Tiger’s partners, the question remains, “can he come back?”  My answers are simple.

On the golf course:  undoubtedly.  That’s great news for the PGA Tour.

In the board room:  never to the same heights as before.

We remind our pro athlete clients that brands are about behavior.  And, in regards to behavior, several key brand attributes of a professional golfer are “judgment” and “grace under pressure.”  In a discussion yesterday about the wisdom of Accenture’s decision to part ways with Tiger, a colleague said to me that Accenture’s decision was a mistake because Tiger will undoubtedly bounce back and be even more valuable as an endorsement partner than before.  I disagree.

Accenture is a business consultancy.  The brand behavior of a consultancy is about “good judgment.”  The very thing that made the Tiger Woods relationship a great thing for Accenture — Tiger’s excellent judgment on the golf course was a metaphor for Accenture’s great judgment in the Board Room — doomed the relationship with the poor judgment evidenced in Woods’ “transgressions.”  Both brands are about judgment.

Woods’ behavior raises long lasting (and perhaps permanent) doubts about his.

Posted by Ken Ungar.

He’s got a lil’ Captain in him!

Monday, November 16th, 2009

As a fairly recent college grad and an avid sports fan, this topic is one I simply have to address.  For those of you who watched the Eagles-Cowboys game last weekend, you may remember Eagles’ receiver Brent Celek’s celebration following an 11-yard touch down catch from Donovan McNabb.  Celek celebrated the TD with the widely known Captain Morgan pose (right knee up, hands on his hips, shoulders poised).nfl-captain-morgan

What you may not yet know is that this move was part of a guerrilla marketing campaign secretly put in place by Captain Morgan.

According to a spokesperson for Captain Morgan, every time an NFL player was caught on camera in the Captain Morgan pose, the company would donate to the Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund, a nonprofit organization aimed at helping retired NFL players who have fallen on hard times.

When the NFL caught wind of this campaign, they immediately banned the Captain pose.  Naturally.  An NFL spokesperson said, regarding the pose, “Whether it’s rum or soft drinks or any other commercial product, that type of promotion is prohibited.”

Penalized or not, it was a unique idea.

Personally, I am a fan of these types of guerrilla marketing tactics.  Whether this celebration was banned or not, it was an interesting outside-the-box marketing idea on Captain Morgan’s behalf.  We’ve seen a lot of similar guerrilla marketing tactics in sports, but to my knowledge, never has a player actually incorporate part of a company’s logo or “motto” in a touchdown celebration.

This is a prime example of guerilla marketing, and of how even the smallest marketing move can get a player noticed.  And remember, getting noticed is one way to get Ahead of the Game.

I am in no way encouraging players to break league rules, but sometimes you need to think outside the box as a player to get exposure.

Regardless of the penalty called on him for the celebration, I can only imagine the spike in his social media and Google stats.

Posted by Luke LaBeau