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Financing Sport 2nd Edition

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Title: Financing Sport 2nd Edition


1
Financing Sport2nd Edition
  • CHAPTER TWO

2
Detailed Outline ofFinancing Sport
  • CHAPTER 2
  • The Challenges Facing College and Professional
    Sports
  • The Financial Status of Intercollegiate
    Athletics
  • The Financial Status of Professional Sports
  • The Leagues Declining Health
  • Controlling Player Costs

3
COLLEGIATE SPORTS
4
The Financial Status of Intercollegiate Athletics
  • 1. The high degree of commercialization in
    college sports is evident in
  • A. High salaries of coaches
  • B. Television contracts
  • C. Corporate sponsorship
  • D. Licensing agreement
  • 2. College sport programs is no longer a game,
    its a business.
  • It is imperative to become more business
    like.
  • 3. More than 3/4th of the largest collegiate
    athletic programs are losing
  • money.
  • 4. NCAA study of the financial condition of its
    member reported only 16 of the division one and
    two had more revenue than expenses.

5
The Financial Status of Intercollegiate Athletics
(continued)
  • 5. Athletic programs are receiving direct
    subsidies from state legislation.
  • 6. Athletic programs are receiving mandatory
    raised in student fees each
  • year.
  • 7. Over 70 of division one schools reported in
    the NCAA survey that the football program
    operated in the surplus.
  • 8. In an elite athletic programs(UT, Penn State,
    and etc.) generated 70 or
  • more of the athletic departments budget.
  • Football pays for everything.

6
Collegiate Sports
7
RISING COST OF SPORTS
  • Cost control becomes overwhelming in college
    sports because
  • 1. The rising cost of travel, equipment,
    scholarships, and etc.
  • 2. Investing in athletic stadium, playing
    fields, athletic grounds, and
  • marketing campaigns.
  • 3. Title IX compliance.

8
TITLE IX MYTHS/FACTS
  • MYTH Title IX has done its job and is no longer
    needed. FACT In the past five years, the gap
    between male and female athletic participation at
    the high school level has grown.
  • Female high school athletes receive 1.3 million
    fewer athletic participation opportunities than
    their male counterparts (3.2 million female vs.
    4.5 million male). 
  • MYTH Title IX has resulted in the loss of
    athletic opportunities for men's sports. FACT
    Overall, men's athletic opportunities since Title
    IX's passage have increased. Title IX has been
    wrongly blamed by its critics for cuts to some
    men's sports teams at some educational
    institutions.
  • Opponents of Title IX have tried to mislead the
    public into believing that the loss of men's
    wrestling and a few other sports at some schools
    is a sign of massive loss of men's participation
    opportunities overall when exactly the opposite
    is true men's sports participation continues to
    grow. Athletic programs add and drop teams all
    the time. Men are not losing. 

9
TITLE IX MYTHS/FACTS
  • MYTH Title IX's three-part test imposes a strict
    quota.
  • FACT The three-part test imposes no numerical
    requirement even remotely analogous to quotas.
  • A three-part test for participation opportunities
    determines if institutions provide female and
    male students with equal athletic opportunities.
    In order to comply, institutions must pass one of
    these three tests a) Proportionality-male and
    females participate in athletics in numbers
    substantially proportional to their respective
    enrollments in school, or
  • b) History and Continued Practice of Program
    Expansion-the institution shows a history and
    continuing practice of program expansion which is
    demonstrably responsive to the developing
    interests and abilities of members of the
    underrepresented sex, or
  • c) Full Accommodation of Interests and
    Abilities- the institution demonstrates that the
    interests and abilities of the underrepresented
    sex (females) are fully and effectively
    accommodated by the existing programs. 

10
TITLE IX MYTHS/FACTS
  • MYTH It is not fair that Title IX requires equal
    spending on men's and women's programs because
    the men's programs bring in all of the school's
    money.
  • FACT Title IX does NOT require equal spending on
    men's and women's programs, and less than 12 of
    college athletic programs actually make a profit.
  •  
  • MYTH Football should be taken out of the Title
    IX equation because women do not play football.
  • FACT No matter how you cut it, football players
    are male participation opportunities, not a third
    sex. They must count.
  • www.womenssportfoundation.org

11
  • Female Collegiate Programs Benefited From Title
    IX.

12
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13
The Financial Status of Professional Sports
  • Major growth is occurring on the secondary level,
    the minor leagues in baseball, basketball, and
    hockey.
  • New leagues were launched in the past decade,
    the soccer professional leagues, Arena Football
    Team and the WNBA.
  • A. Baseball had more new minor league teams than
    any other sport.
  • B. Arena Football League has one of the most
    successful launch.
  • 1. It expanded from one single league to two
    league.

14
The Globalization of Professional Sports
  • 1. The NFL sponsored European Leagues and played
    early games in countries like Japan, Mexico and
    others.
  • 2. The NBA aligned itself with European club by
  • A. taking over existing leagues
  • B. form alliance with European clubs
  • C. formed new leagues with existing teams
  • D. awarded franchises to European cities that
    would become a member of NBA.
  • E. Draft players from the foreign market ( Yao
    Ming Li Tie).

15
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16
Globalization of Sport
  • Baseball becomes an Olympic sport.
  • It has players from Latin American, and Caribbean
    that increases their market base.

17
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18
WOMENS PROFESSIONAL LEAGUE
  • Women make 80 of the decisions in the household.
  • Women are serious consumer of sports.
  • Half of the women in the U.S. engage in some form
    of exercise.
  • One-third of all high school girls participate in
    one or more varsity sports.
  • WNBA- - Basketball
  • WUSA Soccer
  • WPSL - - Softball

19
The Leagues Declining Health
  • 1. Falling Attendance- the number of no-shows are
    increasing.
  • 2. Declining Ratings with four major networks
    have increased programming to sports, viewers are
    not watching.
  • 3. Economic Disconnect- attending a live game is
    now beyond most fans reach. No longer a family
    affair.
  • 4. Players Salaries efforts to control
    salaries by owners are resisted by players.

20
Top Ten Reasons for Non-attendance (p. 39)
  • 1. Total cost to attend- 57
  • 2. Comfort of watching games at home 41
  • 3. Players behavior during games 41
  • 4. Traffic Parking 38
  • 5. Increase in sports on TV 35
  • 6. Lateness of game 26
  • 7. TV replay and analysis 22
  • 8. Unlikelihood of getting good seats 19
  • 9. Change in how local team is doing
  • 10. Change in familys interest in game.

21
Structure of Sport Business
  • Different structures offers different benefits
  • Types of Structures
  • A. Governmental
  • B. Non-profit/for profit
  • C. Sole Proprietorship
  • D. Partnership
  • E. Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)

22
Single Owner (Private Investor Model)
  • This is when one person, independently wealthy.
    Owner can be hands on or hands off.
  • Example Dallas Mavericks owner, Mark Cuban plays
    an active role in the basketball operation.

23
Multiple Owner (Private Investment Model)
  • This is a common model because of two reason
  • A. the value of the franchise rises so high that
    no individual can afford to buy it.
  • B. the public model has man disadvantage versus
    the private model.
  • In some cases, the ownership group will have a
    dominate individual who appear to be a single
    owner.
  • Example
  • George Steinbrenner was viewed as a sole owner of
    the New York Yankees.

24
Multiple Owners (Publicly Traded Corp Model
  • With the exception of the Green Bay Packers, this
    is not used in the U.S.
  • In this model, the franchise is covered by a
    board of directors who are elected by shareholder
    vote.

25
Controlling Players Salaries
  • Facts
  • 1. The single greatest operational expense for
    pro teams are player salaries.
  • 2. Player payroll costs is about two-thirds of
    the total operational expenses.
  • 3. Owners are largely responsible for this.
  • 4. Strategies used are
  • a. salary caps
  • b. free agency constraints
  • c. luxury taxes
  • d. resisting the resistance from collective
    bargaining unit or
  • player association
  • e. player lockouts

26
DISCUSSION
  • What is the 1 challenge in collegiate sports in
    your opinion to-date?
  • How much of an impact has Title IX made in
    sports?
  • What sport on the professional level are having
    more problems with attendance? And why?
  • How can player salaries be control?

27
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28
Detailed Outline of Financing Sport
  • CHAPTER 14
  • Soliciting Sponsorships From Business
    Organizations
  • Developing a Set of Potential Company
    Packaging Sponsorships
  • Pricing Sponsorships
  • Preparation of Proposals
  • Communicating the Proposal
  • Criteria Used by Companies to Screen
    Proposals
  • Handling Rejections
  • The Contract
  • Working Together to Make It Happen
  • Post-Event Followup
  • Summary

29
Detailed Outline of Financing Sport
  • CHAPTER 15
  • Measuring the Impact of Sponsorship
  • Linking Sponsorship to the Communications
    Process
  • Measuring Media Equivalencies
  • Measuring Impact on Awareness
  • Measuring Impact on Image
  • Measuring Impact on Intent to Purchase
  • Measuring Impact on Sales
  • Summary

30
Detailed Outline of Financing Sport
  • CHAPTER 16
  • Fundraising
  • Fundraising and Intercollegiate Athletics
  • Annual Donor Programs
  • Major Gifts
  • Systematic Approach to Soliciting Major Gifts
  • Anatomy of a Major Gift Campaign UNLVs
    Vision Project
  • Cause-Related Marketing
  • Summary

31
Chapter 1
  • Sport in the New Millenium

32
How Big Is the Sport Industry?
  • Estimates vary widely. Sport is not recognized as
    an official industry in the Census Bureaus North
    American Industrial Classification System. This
    classification divides the economy into 20
    sectors or major economic activities. Sport is
    not designated as one of these major economic
    activities and sport-related activities are
    scattered across 8 of the 20 sectors.

33
The Alternative Sports Boom
  • The newly emergent extreme or lifestyle sports
    form the fastest growing segment of sport
    spending in the 21st century. They are highly
    individualistic, free-spirited, adrenaline-rush
    activities
  • BMX biking bungee jumping
  • downhill mountain biking in-line skating
  • Skateboarding sky surfing
  • Snowboarding street luge
  • whitewater kayaking windsurfing

34
The 90s Boom
  • The sports industry was a major beneficiary of
    the longest sustained period of growth in U.S.
    history. The most notable features of that decade
    included the following
  • sports facility construction boom
  • proliferation of professional sports
    leagues and teams
  • increased corporate investment in sport
  • annual sporting goods sales near 75
    billion.

35
The Challenges Ahead
  • As we enter the new decade, there are many more
    modern and sophisticated venues, much more sport
    product, and unprecedented levels of corporate
    support. However, at the same time, there are a
    number of serious challenges confronting
    managers
  • saturated marketplace
  • taking advantage of emerging technology
  • doing more with less
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