Chapter 1 What Is Sports and Entertainment Marketing?
Download
Report
Transcript Chapter 1 What Is Sports and Entertainment Marketing?
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
CHAPTER
1
What Is Sports and
Entertainment Marketing?
1.1 Management Basics
1.2 Sports Marketing
1.3 Entertainment Marketing
1.4 Recreation Marketing
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 1
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
LESSON 1.1
Marketing Basics
GOALS
Describe the basic concepts of
marketing.
Define the seven key marketing
functions.
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 2
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Marketing Concepts
What is marketing?
Marketing mix
Satisfying customer needs
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 3
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
What Is Marketing?
Marketing—the creation and
maintenance of satisfying exchange
relationships
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 4
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Marketing Mix
Marketing mix—describes how a business
blends the four marketing elements
Product—what a business offers customers to
satisfy needs
Distribution—the locations and methods used to
make products available to customers
Price—the amount that customers pay for products
Promotion—ways to encourage customers to
purchase products and increase customer
satisfaction
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 5
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Satisfying Customer Needs
Primary focus
Identify customer needs
Develop products
Operate a business profitably
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 6
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
Key Marketing
Functions
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Product/service management
Distribution
Selling
Marketing-information management
Financing
Pricing
Promotion
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 7
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
LESSON 1.2
Sports Marketing
GOALS
Define sports marketing, and
understand the importance of target
markets.
Identify sports marketing strategies.
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 8
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
What Is Sports Marketing?
Sports marketing—using sports to
market products
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 9
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Determine
the Target Market
Target market—a specific group of
people you want to reach
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 10
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
How to Find
a Target Market
Disposable income—income that can
be spent freely
Demographics—specific customer
information
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 11
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Spending Habits of Fans
Tickets
Clothing or equipment
Food
Travel
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 12
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Marketing Strategies
Sports logos on clothing
New sports, new opportunities
Gross impression
Timing
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 13
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Sports Logos on Clothing
Fan loyalty
Increased value
Feeling of success
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 14
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
New Sports,
New Opportunities
Arena football
Television broadcasts
Sponsorships
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 15
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Gross Impression
Gross impression—the number of
times per advertisement, game, or show
that a product or service is associated
with an athlete, team, or entertainer
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 16
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
LESSON 1.3
Entertainment Marketing
GOALS
Understand why marketing must relate to the
specific audience.
Relate advances in entertainment technology
to changes in distribution.
Recognize the power of television and the
Internet as marketing tools.
Understand feedback from the customer.
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 17
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Entertainment for Sale
What exactly is entertainment?
Entertainment—whatever people are
willing to spend their money and spare time
viewing rather than participating in
Entertainment can include sports or the arts.
Sports—games of athletic skill
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 18
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Sports or Entertainment?
Is a distinction required for successful
marketing?
Marketing-information management
Specific product promotions
Knowing customer needs
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 19
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Modern Entertainment
Marketing
The beginning of change
Change accelerated
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 20
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
The Beginning of Change
Louis Le Prince—first moving pictures (1888)
Lumiere brothers—first to present a projected
movie to a paying audience (1895)
The Jazz Singer—first movie with sound
(1927)
Mickey Mouse—animation arrived (1928)
Disneyland—theme park a new approach to
the marketing mix of entertainment (1955)
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 21
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Change Accelerated
Improvement of technology
Ease of distribution to the masses
Evolution of entertainment media
The Internet
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 22
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
The Big Eye in Every Room
The early days of television and
marketing
Television’s increasing influence
Entertaining the customer
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 23
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
The Early Days of
Television and Marketing
The first demonstration of TV in 1945
The American Association of Advertising
Agencies encouraged start of television
advertising
NBC and the Gillette Company staged
the first television sports spectacular in
1946
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 24
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Television’s
Increasing Influence
Major national corporations began to
advertise
Ad pricing tied to ratings or number of
viewers
Appeal to a mass audience
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 25
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Entertaining the Customer
Instant feedback from the customer
Marketing mix of reality shows is unique
Marketing mix fine-tuned based on
customer input
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 26
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
LESSON 1.4
Recreation Marketing
GOALS
Apply the marketing mix to recreation
marketing.
Describe marketing for the travel and
tourism consumer.
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 27
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Recreational Sports
Recreation—renewing or rejuvenating
our body or mind with play or amusing
activity
Recreational activities—travel,
tourism, and amateur sports that are not
associated with education institutions
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 28
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Not for the Couch Potato
Time and money
Lessons
Practice
Equipment
Travel
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 29
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
A Better Image
Ladies Professional Golf Association
(LPGA)
Promotion of a strong image to draw
sponsors and a broader audience
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 30
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON
SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT MARKETING
Travel and Tourism
Tourism—traveling for pleasure
Data mining
Relax and smell the roses
Niche travel—recreational travel or tours
planned around a special interest
Complete travel packages/tours
CHAPTER 1
SLIDE 31
© SOUTH-WESTERN/THOMSON