TeamWork Online: Open Jobs in "Corporate Sponsorship Sales"
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Dodger Stadium - creating a year-round retail destination
In order to ensure the continued vitality of Dodger Stadium, the Los Angeles Dodgers announced a multi-faceted stadium improvement plan that will bring the most modern amenities to Dodger fans while preserving the tradition of the historic venue, first opened in 1962.
Now they need an outstanding sponsorship agency with retail experience. hmmm. I wonder who that might be?
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Navigating the Blogging Waters
Blogging is a great tool for communicating. So is Sponsorship.
As I am working through my learning curve on best practices for blogging on sponsorships, I found a couple of great blogs and picked the brains of their owners.
Jason Peck does a blog on Sports Marketing and Frank Reed does one for small businesses on enhancing their web presence. Both are smart guys. I encourage you to check out their blogs.
They have both recommended that I switch from a site-hosted blog using blogger to wordpress.
Therefore, I am moving sites, but it is not hard to find me.
So, click here to see all of my latest postings moving forward.
For archived and older postings, stay here.
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.
Renewing Sponsorships?
We are always evaluating how we can be more effective and efficient.
We are all trying to buy or sell sponsorships or thinking about it, right?
I think I found a pretty good solution to professionalize recaps and use them as sales tools.
Sponsorship Insights Group member, Tom Stipes, has a great software product and special deal for Sponsorship Insights Group members.
SponsorshipPRO+ Demo
This easy-to-use, interactive Flash Demo takes only a few short minutes to view and will introduce you to many of the integrated features that have been built into SponsorshipPRO+. It requires no registration and is intended as an entertaining overview, not a step-by-step tutorial. Please make sure your sound is turned on.
To join our group, please click here.
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.
Monday, January 12, 2009
Canadian Sponsorship Learning Opportunities
For our Canadian members and readers, we highly recommend his work and his in depth knowledge of the Canadian sponsorship marketplace. For a special discount, use SPONSORHIPINSIGHTS, when registering.
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Developing New Sponsorship Strategies in Challenging Times
By Kevin Bartram
Principal, Bartram Sponsorship Strategies
We all know this fact - the state of the nation’s economy has not been this bad for generations and the conditions are not likely to improve any time soon. Corporations are reducing spending, particularly in any areas deemed discretionary, which is how many would classify sponsorships.
So how can an organization develop new sponsors in these tough times? The answer is to work on principle, establish a solid foundation and offer true value that will resonate with the companies deemed most desirable for partnership. Be authentic and professional in your approach while truly focusing on the needs of the companies being approached. It’s easy to say that you’re committed to establishing partnerships – it’s another thing to truly act like a partner. Remember that, regardless of the type of organization you represent, your sponsors are most likely looking at your organization as a channel for driving business, however directly or indirectly.
While one might be tempted to simply have a fire sale and cut any deal possible, now is the time to get buttoned down, revisit and update your sponsorship plan and make sure that the information being taken to prospective sponsors reflects the reality of the market and speaks to the unique needs of the corporate audience. Here are some actions to consider as you look ahead to a challenging 2009 (and beyond) in your effort to secure sponsorship revenue to fund your endeavor.
Ø Have a formal plan and defined sponsorship program that shows the prospect that you mean business, that your organization is stable with a low risk factor. Corporations are generally risk averse but, in times like these, risk is often the biggest influencer in making spending decisions.
Ø Present your offering not from the position of how wonderful your organization is (aren’t they all?) but how association with your group and access to its offerings can help companies do what they are in the business of doing.
Ø Consider approaching your sponsorship packaging from the perspective of identifying and providing access to your assets. What a company is actually purchasing when investing in a sponsorship is access to the unique assets of the sponsored organization, whether brand affinity, a unique audience, events, media or direct business opportunities.
Ø Don’t come off as desperate or fearful – potential sponsors can sense this from a mile away and won’t likely provide funds to an organization whose financial viability is strongly in question. Fear and desperation will drive away the risk averse in droves.
Ø Take advantage of the tough times by clearly positioning your offering as a business solution – as a means to drive business, generate sales and deepen relationships with potential new customers. As with all of these tools, one must apply them authentically, in a way that reflects the true nature of the organization seeking sponsorship. Be sure that what you are offering can truly be delivered.
Ø Offer your business whenever possible. Be ready to act like a true partner and make business commitments to the companies from which you are seeking sponsorship funds. And, by extension, be sure to approach those companies with which you do business with your sponsorship offering and seek quid pro quo from them as well.
Ø Consider pursuing sponsors for your organization’s “green” efforts but only if truly committed to taking actual measures to address environmental matters. Of course, many companies are jumping on the green bandwagon and sponsored organizations have adjusted to take a green position, whether genuine or not. This is a fertile area in which to seek sponsorship and will likely be so for years to come but the pretenders are easily weeded out and reputations can be damaged by making claims that do not hold up when scrutinized.
Ø Always have a professional presentation, a clean website, and take a respectful, consultative approach when recruiting sponsors. This may seem second nature and go without saying but, having sat on the corporate side for the past year, I can state first-hand that there are still many seeking sponsorship with poorly crafted, unprofessional offerings that come primarily from a position of need. Lead by clearly stating the strengths of your organization and how your assets can help prospective sponsors enhance their businesses and you should at least get some attention, the first step toward generating new sponsorships in tough – or any – times.
As a means for helping organizations develop or enhance their sponsorship offerings, I am making available my CD training courses, Sponsorship 101 and Sponsorship 201 to Dan Beeman’s Linkedin Sponsorship Insights Group at a special low rate. Designed to guide sponsorship professionals, new or experienced, in the art of sponsorship development, each CD is comprised of a one hour training program, led by yours truly, with presentations and bonus materials that provide access to intelligence gleaned over more than 15 years in the business. The programs are based on my successful webinar series administered with Sponsorwise and contain a wide range of valuable practices I have used in developing major sponsorships on behalf of both corporate and property clients.
Regularly priced at $149 each, we are making each program available to this group for $119. A package with both 101 and 201 can be purchased for $219. We are also sharing revenues with Sponsorship Insights to help fund this valuable networking and information service. Oh, and shipping is free. The contents of these programs would cost thousands of dollars if delivered by way of a consulting relationship and each contain many practices that, if properly deployed, will generate a direct ROI many times greater than the programs cost.
Please click on this link for more information on our training programs. (link) Type in the promotion code (need) and place your order. You’ll have your CDs in a week or so to help you in your quest.
Good luck and here’s to a prosperous and positively event-ful 2009.
Kevin Bartram Bio
In his near-20 year career as a marketing executive and sponsorship consultant, Kevin Bartram has developed programs, events and partnerships for several Fortune 200 companies as well as nonprofit and government agencies. The marketing-based alliances Kevin has created will generate over one billion dollars in economic impact for the communities and organizations served. His personal mission is to support social change through the facilitation of creative, mutually beneficial partnerships.
Kevin’s recent focus has been on green-related sponsorships and developing alliances to address environmental issues, while working on behalf of Pacific Gas and Electric and dozens of partner organizations. In working to help PG&E make a difference in fighting climate change by driving adoption of renewable energy, energy efficiency and carbon offset programs, Kevin is partnering with a unique blend of non-profits, sport and entertainment properties, government agencies and entrepreneurs to establish new programs.
Kevin’s clients have included Cisco Systems (for which he created NetAid with the UN), NASA, the National Geographic Society, Wells Fargo, the Golden Gate Bridge District, SunPower, the University of California and dozens of others. He has developed major naming rights deals, created new cause–based events, led a technology marketing consortium and consulted entities as diverse as the Esalen Institute and the Vatican. Kevin speaks on effective cause marketing and sponsorship development and has recently introduced a CD-based training series.
For more information, visit http://www.sponsorshipstrategies.com/.
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
StareWays - an effective way to reach consumers
Spoonsorship Insights Group member, Brian Gainor recently blogged about StareWays. StareWays has the exclusive distribution rights the patented adStep® system for stair graphicsMedia.
Check this out.
Contact me to learn more about their products or provide your feedback.
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.
Friday, January 9, 2009
Appliance Zone & NFL Stadium Sponsorship????
"We think we've kind of taken it to a new level," says Pete Ward, svp of the Indianapolis Colts football team, in a New York Times piece by Stephanie Clifford (12/11/08). Pete is talking about the many sponsorship deals bringing millions to the Colts and making possible its new (Lucas Oil) stadium. Many of these sponsorships are garden-variety. They've got a law firm sponsoring club lounges to the west, and a health-care provider taking care of the lounges to the east. A telecommunications company sponsors one entrance while a bank sponsors the other.
But in a bit of a twist, an Indianapolis-based appliance retailer, Hhgregg, has built out a 26,000 square foot store in a stadium hallway. David Abrutyn of IMG Worldwide explains: "In today's world of a very crowded advertising marketplace, it's very important for facilities to provide the brands and companies they're associating with a lot more than just signs and tickets." So, David doesn't see anything wrong with an appliance store in a football stadium, other than it might be irrelevant to fans.
"Are people going to a stadium to buy a washer and dryer? Probably not, but you're reaching an audience," David says. It's really not all that different from Chevy parking cars in the stadium's northeast corner. Or AirTran Airways installing airplane seats in the stadium's food court. Hhgregg's Jeff Pearson says so far nobody has complained. "It's trying to showcase these appliances in a way that relates to football," he says, adding, "I think the reception's been very positive." No complaint from the Colts, either. Such deals will pay for all but about $100 million of the stadium's $719 million in construction costs.
This is an example of what my company does for retail properties – bring brands to the common areas where the foot traffic exists and quality interactions are more possible. This drives new revenue streams for property owners and more effective promotions for brands.
The thing is, this venue, a sports stadium, is not as appropriate or effective as a shopping destination. With a sports venue, they are reaching the wrong audience and the brand play is ancillary to the desired experience (watching the game).
At a shopping destination, people (mostly women who control the majority of domestic spending) are more inclined to spend, are open to brand messages and wouldn’t look at it is an intrusion or inauthentic.
These posts are opinions, insights and links to marketing and sponsorship news. They are meant to inspire and provoke thought. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed and visit my website at www.sponsorshipinsights.com to learn about our services.