Title: Sports Philanthropy Workshop
1- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
Emerging Trends in Sports Philanthropy
Research Kathy Babiak, University of
Michigan Aubrey Kent, Florida State University
2- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Session Overview
- Value of research
- Growing academic interest in this area
- Our work in the sport industry
- Future opportunities
3- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Value of Research
- Scholar perspective
- Practitioner perspective
- Creating a WIN-WIN
4- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Academic work
- CSR
- Philanthropy
5i. CSR Defined
Sports Philanthropy Workshop (Presented by SPP
and NASSM) Wednesday, May 28, 2008 Toronto,
Ontario
- CSR represents a set of actions that
- appear to further some social good,
- extend beyond the explicit pecuniary interests
of the firm, - and are not required by law
- (McWilliams Siegel, 2000)
- refers to company activities voluntary by
definition demonstrating the inclusion of
social and environmental concerns in business
operations and in interactions with stakeholders - (Van Marrewijk, 2003)
6i. The CSR literature
Sports Philanthropy Workshop (Presented by SPP
and NASSM) Wednesday, May 28, 2008 Toronto,
Ontario
- Friedman (1962) an organizations
responsibility is to its shareholders--to make
money (through products and/or services). - Stakeholder perspective not just responsible to
shareholders but to stakeholders that can affect
/ be affected by an organization (Donaldson
Preston, 1995 Freeman, 1984) - CSR as strategic response / good business
practice (Hess Warren, 2005 Porter Kramer,
2006) or as insurance for future misdeeds
(Gardberg Fombrun, 2006 Godfrey, 2005) - Cause-Marketing / Cause Branding (Gupta Pirsh,
2006 Irwin, Lachowetz, Cornwell, 2003 McGlone
Martin, 2006 Roy Graeff, 2003)
7ii. Strategic Philanthropy Defined
Sports Philanthropy Workshop (Presented by SPP
and NASSM) Wednesday, May 28, 2008 Toronto,
Ontario
- Synergistic use of organizational resources and
core competencies to address key stakeholders
interests and to achieve both organizational and
social benefits. - (McAllister Ferrell, 2002)
8- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Philanthropy
- Corporate philanthropy encompasses activities
ranging from public relations, advertising,
promoting a companys image or brand through
cause-marketing, or other high profile
sponsorship (Porter Kramer, 2002, p. 92). -
- Strategic Philanthropy Has been conceptualized
as being at the opposite end of the corporate
philanthropy continuum from altruism which is
giving without concern for reward (Burlingame
Frishkoff, 1996). - Ricks (2005) typology of philanthropy
9ii. Philanthropy Literature
Sports Philanthropy Workshop (Presented by SPP
and NASSM) Wednesday, May 28, 2008 Toronto,
Ontario
- Strategic Philanthropy (Bruch Walter, 2005)
- Corporate philanthropy goes beyond donations
Should use charitable activities to create a
win-win situation for company and beneficiaries
of philanthropy - Werbel Wartman (2000) found that companies
philanthropic donations tend to increase
following negative media exposure. Suggests that
companies may use corporate philanthropy as a
strategic tool to remedy negative portrayals of
their social responsibility in the media.
10Strategic CSR / PhilanthropyA Conceptual Model
Peripheral CSR
Strategic CSR
Low High
AdHoc CSR
Narrow CSR
Stakeholder / Market Orientation
Low High
Resource / Competence Orientation
(Adapted from Bruch Walter, 2005)
11Convergence of InterestsPorter Kramer (2002)
Pure Philanthropy
Social Benefit
Combined Social Economic Benefit
Pure Business
Economic Benefit
12Porter and Kramer (2006)
13- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Our Work - Aubrey
- Focused on Strategic Philanthropy and
communication - Outcomes
- Reputation, Patronage, Sacrifice
- Atlanta Falcons, PGA Tour, NASCAR, NHL
14- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- iii. Our Work - Kathy
- Forces influencing / defining sport CSR /
philanthropy - Teams
- Professional Athletes
- Impact and perceptions of CSR programs on
participants Minnesota Twins RBI program
15- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- SPORT is an excellent research context since
- CSR is very prevalent in sport
- All professional sport teams / leagues have
community outreach programs / foundations. - Smith Westerbeek (2007)
- Studying organizational phenomena within sport
provides rare research advantages due to
availability of performance data, clarity of
outcomes, transparency of intended and unintended
behaviors
16- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Margolis and Walsh (2003) called for a change in
empirical research away from justifying CSR to
examination of the impacts of CSR on recipients
and society at large (e.g., reductions in
poverty, increases in health). Research heeding
that call has yet to reach the publication stage.
- Research complex problems that span disciplinary
boundaries (e.g., public policy, management,
public health, education, economics, corporate
governance, social work) - Engaged scholarship produce actionable
knowledge
17- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- Future Opportunities
- Issues ahead that we see
- Issues that you see?
- Discussion
18- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- As recommended by SPP
-
- Efforts at community relations, fan development,
and business development may be related to but
do not substitute for quality sports philanthropy - Measurement is not very useful when made
in reductionist terms exclusively involving 990
filings, administrative overhead/revenue ratios,
grant size, etc. - Truly successful sports philanthropy can best be
understood in terms of evaluating impact, which
requires understanding in-kind value, the focus
of the effort, and the quality of the outcome of
the effort
19- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- SAMPLE RESEARCH QUESTIONS?
- Examining outcome variables i.e., to what extent
do particular programs address the social issues
e.g., how much has the reading of students
attending NBA Read-To-Achieve sessions improved? - Other outcome variables may include to what
extent have such programs had corporate
reputational benefits? - How do these programs affect team (fan) loyalty
and other rewards an organization may expect to
receive from socially responsible efforts? - And on a broader scale, how much does a community
benefit from a professional sport teams CSR
related efforts?
20- Sports Philanthropy Workshop
- (Presented by SPP and NASSM)
- Wednesday, May 28, 2008
- Toronto, Ontario
- SAMPLE RESEARCH QUESTIONS?
- How can / do managers substitute involvement in
some CSR activities for lack of involvement in
others? - How are sporting organizations (players and
coaches, teams and unions, and sport governing
bodies) responding to (both reactively and
proactively) ethical blowback? (e.g., performance
enhancing drug scandal) - In terms of the natural environment, what
effective measures can sports organizations take
to reduce levels of pollution, congestion, and
garbage around their venues? - Partnerships to maximize social benefits how
are they formed? And how are socially responsible
initiatives enacted? - How will the expanding global nature of sport
influence CSR initiatives?