Archive for December, 2009

What’s Your Professional New Years Resolution?

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Well folks, tomorrow is the last day of 2009, which can only mean one thing… New Years resolutions.  Aside from the usual – lose weight, swear less, go to church more, be nicer to your mother-in-law – the team at U/S Sports Advisors has a few career resolutions for all you athletes out there based on industry lessons of ‘09.

  • Increase your media presence.

Get serious about frequent and positive name placement in the media.  Get out to events, make appearances, work with your favorite charity more often, and get your publicist to work on securing more interviews.  Media coverage may seem monotonous to you, but to the public and fans, seeing you in the media is extremely important.

  • Get media training or work on improving your media presence.

One bad interview can outdo all your positives.  In a second, you can turn the media off from you, making it harder to secure future media hits and extend your brand into your fan base.  Seek a media training professional who is well versed in the sports industry, so come your next interview, you’ll knock it out of the park and have the media hungry for more.

  • Increase your activity and presence on social media.

The majority of your fans are already on sites like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, and chances are they have already searched for you there too.  If you’re not on these sites yet, do it NOW!  If you’re already on there, you likely not only need to increase your number of your posts on those sites, but more importantly be sure that each and every one of your posts reflect your brand and are relevant to your fans.  Our clients ensure their message is clear and consistent across each social media site — ensuring a deeper and lasting connection with fans.

Take these resolutions to heart.  You can rest assured your competition is, and you just so happen to be fighting for the same fans, same sponsors, and same money that they are.

Happy New Year from U/S Sports Advisors!

Brands Are About Behavior: Drew Brees Edition

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

OK.   If brands are about behavior, what happens when the hottest t-shirt in New Orleans compares a winning quarterback to Jesus?

Now, That's Powerful Branding!

Now, That's Powerful Branding!

The tongue-in-cheek “Breesus” t-shirt cleary capitalizes on the popularity of winning QB Drew Brees on a winning streak.  But, is there more to Brees as “Breesus”?

According to Brett Martel of the Associated Press there is.

Brees’ foundation has contributed more than $2 million to rebuild the city ravaged by Hurricane Katrina.  And, he shows commitment to his fans by restoring a century-old house in the City of New Orleans, rather than retreating to some McMansion in a gated community.

For any pro athlete, it’s nice to see a winning season, a satirical t-shirt, and a smart way to approach your off-the-field career all come together.

I guess we’ll see if Breesus and the Saints enjoy some divine intervention come Playoff time!

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.

Too Much Change Can Be Bad for a Brand

Monday, December 14th, 2009

They say the only thing constant, is change.  “They” must have worked in professional sports.  Trades happen casually every day, players are cut, and even coaches are moved around.  These types of changes are inevitable.  So, with all this change whirling around athletes these days, you’d think they would want to keep control over any touch points they could, particularly their personal brand.

Take LeBron James, for instance, arguably the most talented and athletic player in the NBA right now.  LeBron is considering changing his number from 23 to 6 (his number in the Olympics) as a get-off-his-turf tribute to Michael Jordan, stating that no one in the league should be allowed to wear that number.michael-jordan-baseball.jpeg

Why he would decide to change it now is beyond me.  The number 23 has become part of his brand, and changing it now might not be doing himself any favors.  I mean, a good king bows to no one, right?

There are also numerous rumors floating around that LeBron is considering entering the NFL world, among other professional sports. Sure he is a freakish athlete and a fierce competitor, but would this type of change in his career be consistent with his brand?  I have always viewed LeBron’s brand to be a top-level basketball player and intelligent businessman, so in my opinion, no, it would not.lebronfootball

If he were to actually dabble in another professional sport, in some ways he’d be betraying his current fans and teammates.  Yes, he was all-star receiver in high school, but adding more physical stress onto a body that is not getting any younger means a higher risk for injury and possible shortening of his NBA career.

Sure, Bo Jackson and Dion Sanders did it, but how many other professional athletes can you name who have successfully accomplished a two-sport career?  Not even Jordan himself could really pull it off.bo-jackson-bw

Of course, all these changes could be a lavish attempt to raise his merchandise sales.  New number, new sport, new jersey all mean new stuff for hardcore fans to buy, too.

LeBron, if you do decide to try an additional sport, here are some recommendations I have for you.

First off, assess the risks.  Football is one of the more dangerous sports, so be sure you’re in the right condition to take hard hits.  Also make sure that it doesn’t interfere with your basketball schedule. Talk with your current coaches, manager and teammates to work out the kinks.

Secondly, try and keep your same number (whatever that may be) in both sports; it should make for an easier transition.

Lastly, don’t spread yourself too thin.  If it’s not working in the NFL, give it up and go back to what you’re good at.  There’s no sense in humiliating yourself or suffering a career-ending injury.

Too much change can take a serious toll on an athlete’s brand, but with proper positioning, transitions can enforce all the right points.  It’s all about touch points, where you put them, and how your fans feel about it.

Like they said…

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Well, by now we’ve all heard about Tiger…or not heard about Tiger…or…who knows what’s going on with Tiger…

Screen shot 2009-12-02 at 10.20.46 AM

When the story broke over this past weekend, I thought to myself, “I’m going to blog about that!”

But, it was Thanksgiving, full of interstate traveling and ungodly amounts of cooking and cleaning – it was Monday before I knew it!  Still, I thought it blog worthy, so I came in yesterday morning and sat down to begin my link search.

Apparently, blogging for search engine optimization really does work, because when I entered my search terms “Tiger Woods accident,” Google showed me page after page of BLOGS.  Not articles, blogs.  2.6 million results in all.

That means assumptions, advice, speculation – not facts.

PR execs, sports writers, stay-at-home moms, and regular Joe’s, all with their own scrutinous take on “what really happened,” “how many Tiger Woods crisis managers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?” “who are the other women in his life,” and general insights on how Tiger (and his PR team) should have handled this crisis better.

The rules are easy – tell it fast,  tell it all.  Everyone knows that!  Ahead of the Game even says so.  Now he’s left with the drrrrip….drrrip…..drrrip….. of alleged mistress pictures, leaked voicemails, and every other kind of media buzz you could dream of (or have nightmares about).

Which leaves me with only this to say, Tiger:

You could have told it better.  You should have told it better.  I wish you would have told it at all.  Now tighten up that leaky faucet of yours, whatever the truth is, and get it over with!

Now we’ll just have to wait and see how much water damage has already been caused to his brand, and what he and his team do to correct it.

Posted by Krissi Price