Title: Sponsorship: Creating meanings
1Sponsorship Creating meanings delivering
value
- Professor Pascale G. Quester
2Overview
- An historical perspective on sponsorship
- The effects of sponsorship from the consumer side
- Different models of persuasion apply
- The need for a measure of sponsorship congruence
- The purpose of sponsorship from the management
side - Objectives, relationship marketing and evaluation
issues - Sponsorship as a marketing relationship or a
co-branding alliance - Guidelines for sponsorship that works
- Can the higher education sector benefit from
industry sponsorship? Can Industry also benefit
from sponsoring higher education?
3An historical perspective on sponsorship
- Sponsorship is as old as ancient Rome where it
already involved the financial support of sports
and/or arts for the purpose of gaining public
support (and election to key offices by the
grateful crowds) - Philanthropy and sponsorship have long been
understood as being one and the same
(patronage/parrainat/sponsoring in French). The
difference is one of intent, not of form. - The emergence of modern commercial sponsorship,
however, is relatively recent (as evidenced by
the creation only 15 years ago, of a special
chapter of the American Marketing Association,
and the publication of special issues of top
journals).
4Commercial sponsorship
- Commercial sponsorship can be defined as an
investment in cash or kind in an event, sport,
person or idea, in exchange for access to the
commercial exploitation of that event, sport,
person or idea. - Why has sponsorship grown so much since the mid
70s? - Tobacco and liquor advertising bans in many
countries have dictated a redirection of
promotional budgets to substitute outlets. - Increase in consumer leisure time and spectator
sports - Increase in the commercialisation of sports,
requiring more funding - Decreasing public funding of sports and arts
organisations - Increase in advertising clutter and the so called
Death of advertising - Emerging Corporate Social Responsibility concerns
5Commercial sponsorship
- How big is it today?
- Latest figures show that in 2008, the year of the
Beijing Olympics, US 43.5 billion will be
invested worldwide in sponsorship (rights only
and does not include leveraging costs), up 14.8
over 2007. - Asia Pacific is growing faster (25) but from a
lower base, and expected to reach US9.5 billion
in 2008. - How far does it reach?
- A truly global reach, including India, Pakistan,
South America - From community-based grass root program to major
strategic global positioning instrument (Coca
Cola and Soccer) - What are its different current forms?
- Sports (single event, teams, athletes,
competitions) dominate (70) - Arts (single event, companies, programs) (3)
- Social/Cause-based (also known as cause-related
marketing) (9) - Television broadcast sponsorship blurs the
boundaries with advertising
6The effects of sponsorship from the consumer
behaviour perspective
- Awareness was the first measure of effectiveness
used in research (measured with recall or
recognition scores) - Early research aimed at determining whether
consumers remembered or recognised sponsors (some
research is still looking at this) - More recently, attitudes towards the sponsor or
even intentions to purchase (including shares as
opposed to products) have been examined. - To this day, however, there has not been a
definitive study linking behaviour (sales) to
sponsorship effects.
7Findings from the consumer research on
sponsorship
- Awareness, measured as recognition and/or recall
is generally highly inaccurate (eg. Grand Prix
study or Sydney survey) - Attitude change is often determined by additional
promotional support (eg. Festival of the Arts
study), which involve additional investment by
sponsors. - Awareness and Attitude change appear to be
influenced by other factors than sponsorship per
se - Market prominence (market leaders always win)
- Media exposure (other than sponsorship messages)
- Product category congruence or relatedness
(related product categories win)
8Findings from the consumer research on sponsorship
- Why do consumers get it wrong?
- Heuristics are used for recall (incidental
ambush) eg. SGIC - Associative learning (Classical conditioning)
introduces a time lag, such that past sponsors
continue to be perceived as official sponsors
long after they stop (eg. Fosters for the
Australian Grand Prix) - Cognitive consistency/balance theory leads
consumers to link events/sports they like to
brands they like (and more people like and buy
brands with higher market shares) - The path to persuasion for sponsorship is more
emotional/affective than cognitive - What does it say about sponsorship effects?
- A lot of the sponsorship investment may be
wasted!
9Two paths to marketing persuasion
Message
Peripheral or affective path (based on
advertising messages or emotive association)
Attribute evaluation Information processing
central or cognitive path (based on relatedness
and logical deduction)
Consumers attitudes
10An example of consumer study Sydney 2000 In the
case of related brands
Purchase intentions
Attitude towards product
Congruency
Relatedness
Behaviour
History
Consumer product category involvement
This model fits for Nike (sponsor in 2000) but
also for Adidas (non-sponsor in 2000)
11In the case of non related brands
Purchase Intentions
Brand attitude
Ad intensity
TV exposure
Behaviour
Brand Exposure
Consumer product category involvement
This model fits for Panasonic, Visa and Westpac
(sponsors in 2000) but also for Tooheys (not a
sponsor)
12Consumer findings
- For some brands, there are simply no significant
effects in terms of consumer response (eg. Coca
Cola, Fosters). - Therefore, a lot of investment in sponsorship is
wasted (perhaps even more than the 50 famously
estimated by Ogilvy in the case of advertising). - Unless there is congruence and good preliminary
research, the choice of a sponsorship may be a
BIG gamble. - This highlights the importance of evaluation and
measurements of results and calls for a measure
of congruence. - Despite statements to the contrary in the
literature, sponsorship does appear to work best
(and selectively, from a sponsors perspective)
as advertising, given that congruence can be
claimed equally by ambushing brands. - However, it is a specific type of advertising,
with no scripted message and an intense emotional
component. - Media support of the sponsorship tends to be
critical for success. - These findings should warn smaller firms and
non-market leaders against rushing to sponsorship
as a panacea for their marketing problems
13Sponsorship congruence
- Described in the literature under several names
(fit, relatedness), it is recognised as an
essential factor determining the effectiveness of
sponsorship - Only consumer perceived congruence matters.
Objective congruence is not so important. - Two dimensions contribute to perceived
congruence - Whether the association is expected or surprising
(history may contribute to making an association
expected, even if it is irrelevant eg. Coca Cola
and the Olympics) - Whether the association is relevant or meaningful
(the product category of the brand tends to
determines this logical link between event and
brand, eg. a brand of engine oil sponsoring the
Australian Formula 1 GP) - We have now developed a measure for it and tested
its validity across cultural contexts (France and
Australia).
14The emotional power of sponsorship
- Despite recognition of the emotional content of
the sponsorship message, past studies have
focused on consumers cognitive interpretation - Memory, attitudes, beliefs or even purchase
intentions are all cognitive constructs - Much work remains in the area of emotional
responses and the likely impact of consumers. - Does a consumer who feels good about an event
also feel good about the brand? - What is the consequences of losing a game,
given the negative emotions this may induce in
consumers? - Do emotions work implicitly or explicitly? Do
they interact with cognitive responses?
15The impact of ambush marketing
- A direct consequence of the success of marketing,
Ambush Marketing involves non sponsors aiming to
gain similar benefits as sponsors by seeking to
misrepresent their role in consumers minds. - Advertising around the event
- Using sport or art related themes in their
marketing communications - Using indirect means to claim official status (eg
Qantas during the 2000 Sydney Olympics) - Some consumers may penalise ambushers, but many
do not care. - Increased legal protection around sponsorship
agreements but the best defence is a good
understanding of how to manage sponsorships
strategically, yet there is much less research on
this aspect of sponsorship...
16The purpose of sponsorship from the management
side
- A limited amount of research has been conducted
on the management aspects of sponsorship. - Objectives, purposes and aims
- Level of decision-making
- The relationship between sponsors and their
properties - Implementation and evaluation issues
- Only few studies have looked at the potential of
sponsorships to serve as platforms for long terms
strategic relationships or alliances. - Increased concerns about Return-on-Investment as
sponsorship costs escalate.
17Findings from research on sponsorship management
- A wide variety of objectives, often combinedbut
not always legitimate - Awareness, image building, sales, staff morale,
hospitality opportunities, or ....
self-actualisation of the CEO! - An increasing level of strategic thinking
- Comparative research shows this is more so in
Australia than in the US - Leading to the concept of sponsorship-linked
marketing (Cornwell, 1995) - But a paucity of rigorous evaluation
- Large investments are backed up by confidential
assessment, if any!
18Findings from research on sponsorship management
- Relationship Marketing is a theoretical framework
developed in the B2B context. - It advocates that relationships must be managed
as a mutually beneficial dyadic process or they
will fail. - Research examining the sponsor/property
relationship show that Trust and Commitment are
both important predictors of renewal. - At the same time, economic and non-economic
satisfaction are not! - Many sponsorship agreements are not renewed or
are renewed without adequate evaluation.
19An example of management study the AFL
Market Orientation (sponsor)
Commitment (leverage)
Renewal (by sponsor)
Economic Satisfaction
Non Economic Satisfaction
Trust
Market Orientation (property)
20Case study Credit Lyonnais and the Tour de
France
- Over 100 years of history for this event and over
50 years partnership between Credit Lyonnais and
the Tour. - The initial strategic aim was to position the
bank as popular in the 1950s (a consumer related
objective) - An outstanding capacity to leverage the
sponsorship into the business - The yellow jersey matches the banks livery
- The tour visits many small cities where LCL
branches are located each year - Local branch managers can invite and reward staff
and key clients (HR and relationship building
objectives) to follow in dedicated cars or at the
branch on arrival of the daily leg. - The Tour is an opportunity for staff involvement
and volunteering and induces great loyalty
(internal marketing benefit) - The drug scandals and the banks predicament
Stay or go? - The future generation and LCLs choice of Judo.
21Guidelines for sponsors
- What should sponsors do?
- Define clear objectives for their sponsorship
- Resist plunging into it simply because it is the
done thing or we should get into it before the
competition does - Select a sponsorship carefully and strategically,
with due consideration for congruence, market
position and competition. - Evaluate the results and build long term
relationships with properties, with the aim of
creating mutual value in the process (in what
becomes a marriage of their brands).
22Guidelines for properties
- Important to define a value proposition, from the
sponsors perspective. - Do the homework to identify potential sponsors
The most obvious sponsor may not be the best. - Invest part of the sponsorship money to ensure
that it is evaluated, leveraged and extended for
the benefit of both partners. - Be prepared to learn as much about the sponsors
consumers as you would do about your own. - Explore the opportunities for co-branding and
strategic alliances. - Adapt and respond to issues as they arise and
dont run from sponsor to sponsor.
23The future of sponsorship
- Sponsorship is both an antecedent and an outcome
of globalisation/cultural homogenisation - A non-verbal/ emotion based means of
communication, so easier to standardise than
traditional advertising. - Global sponsors are not resented, even by
ethnocentric consumers (eg. Salt Lake city
study), as global advertisers can be, so the
emergence of a global consumer segment augurs
well for sponsorship. - A strategic rather than tactical tool
- Can be used as the foundation for positioning
brands, for building their relevance to local or
international markets or for establishing a
differentiation with competitors. - A possible basis for competitive advantage by the
signing of exclusive rights and the
implementation of elaborate (and expensive) long
term leveraging programs. - A key resource and valuable asset of the firm
which can be used to achieve other desirable
alliances with partners seeking to align with the
same or compatible values.
24The future of sponsorship
- Some issues may limit the growth of sponsorship
- realisation by companies/managers that it does
not answer all problems and that it takes a lot
of effort and energy. - increasing sponsorship clutter and overlap to
match the current advertising clutter-- the
initial incentive for sponsorship. - increased confusion and legal complexities
involved in contracts, especially in relation to
ambush marketing (eg new rules of IOC stipulates
that unintentional ambush will be punished but
when it is incidental, due to consumer use of
heuristics , how can it be so?). - lower potential returns are likely as the best
(ie most visible and market orientated)
properties raise their sponsorship fees.
25Could the higher education sector and industry
benefit from sponsorship?
- Whereas companies or business people used to
think about making philanthropic donations to
universities or higher education providers, their
shareholders are now holding them responsible and
accountable for every dollar invested. - Commercial sponsorship is one way by which
industry can continue (or start) to give funds to
university, provided they can identify clear
objectives and evaluate the performance of the
investment. - Corporate Social Responsibility is an
increasingly desirable attribute expected (and
rewarded) by consumers and shareholders from
industry. - An association with education and with the
support of innovation and knowledge can
contribute usefully to higher CSR ratings.
26Could the higher education sector and industry
benefit from sponsorship?
- For the higher education partner
- Important to recognise the commercial intent and
to provide commensurate value. - Important to speak the language of business and
give multiple opportunities for returns (media
releases, regular meetings, access to the
researchers, or to the scholarship students). - Must genuinely value the industry partners
contribution. - For the industry partner
- Essential to find some congruence in what is
sponsored but also to recognise the intrinsic
value of knowledge and research and not be too
directive about what is an appropriate research
topic or course assessment. - Important to comply with the rules of equity and
fairness (in the selection of scholarship
students, or of the research grants). - Expect returns which are commensurate with the
investment (this is not about maximising return
and using a scholarship student as free labour!)
27Examples of value laden sponsorships between
industry universities
- A soft drink manufacturer sponsoring orientation
week (small one off investment but repeated over
the years) or a Chair in International Business
(large commitment over 5 years, with naming
rights). - An airline sponsoring a study abroad initiative
with free or discounted airline tickets or
funding an International Visiting Scholar
program. - A car manufacturer sponsoring field trips by
biology students, or a building supply company
sponsoring field trips for architecture students. - A computer software company sponsoring a Chair in
a computer science department, or several
scholarships for deserving research students, or
research grants in the area. - A bank sponsoring a Chair in Finance, or a PhD
scholarship in the area. - In all of these cases, a strategy must underpin
it and clear objectives can be set, and
evaluated, to ensure that value has been
delivered on both sides.
28Thank you!