mkt 420 contemporary issues in marketing chapter 4 sports marketing

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MKT 420 Contemporary Issues in Marketing

Chapter 4

Sports Marketing

Objective

Describe the characteristics of sports marketing.

Discuss the three roles of marketing in sports organizations.

Summarize the evolution and history of sports marketing.

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Sports Marketing

Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large (AMA, 2007).

Sports Marketing is the use of marketing for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging sports experiences that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society.

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Features

Application of general marketing practices to sport-related products and services: Sporting equipment, sport events and local clubs, team advertising, promoting an athlete, selling season tickets, licensed apparel for sale.

Marketing of other consumer and industrial products or services through sport: Professional athlete endorsing a breakfast cereal, sponsorship of a sport event, beer company arranging to have exclusive rights to provide beer at a sport venue or event.

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Dimensions

1. Marketing of Sports: Pertains to products, services, leagues, teams, venues, events, and individuals.

2. Marketing through Sports: Refers to businesses using sports as part of their marketing strategy to reach and engage their target markets. Sports sponsorship is the primary channel for marketing through sports.

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“Sport Marketing is unlike conventional marketing because it also has the ability to encourage the consumption of non-sport products and services by association”.

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Characteristics of Sports

Sport is paradoxical: Professional/amateur,

individual/collective, indoor/outdoor, competitive/free, …

Sport is a service: Intangible- Except infrastructures and accessories. Perishable (Instantaneous and non-storable)-

Destroyed as soon as its produced Inseparable- Co-created by spectator/ athlete,

arena/ training gymnasium Variability- All experiences aren’t the same.

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Sport is the only industrial product that can be made with: Collaborating and competing firms (teams) Often has uncertain result (result of the match) Sometimes a rigid productivity (fixed quantity of

matches, of players)

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The sport industry is a BIG business!

Organizationof theSport Industry

Sports Motivation (Consumer Behavior Aspect)

Most outcome of planned purchases Some impulsive Desire to identify with sport Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Understanding benefits desired Can be used to identify market

segments

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Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Dr. Abraham Maslow formulated a widely

accepted theory of human motivation. Maslow's theory identifies five basic levels of human needs, which rank in order of importance from low-level (biogenic) needs to higher-level (psychogenic) needs.

Maslow’s hierarchy of needs theory suggests that individuals seek to satisfy lower-level needs before higher-level needs emerge.

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13Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Physiological Needs In the hierarchy-of-needs theory,

physiological needs are the first and most basic level of human needs.

Physiological needs are those things that are required to sustain biological life: food, water, air, shelter, clothing.

These include biogenic needs.

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Safety Needs After first level is satisfied, safety and

security needs become the driving force behind an individual’s behavior.

Safety needs are concerned with much more than physical safety. Health and the availability of health care are important safety concerns. Saving account (financial reserves), medical insurance, education for a sense of security.

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Social Needs Social needs relate to such things as need

for friends, need to give and receive love, affection, belonging, and acceptance.

People seek warm and satisfying human relationships with others.

Because of the importance of social motives in our society, advertisers of many product categories emphasize this appeal in their advertisements.

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Ego (Esteem) Needs These are needs to feel important. Can take an

inward (internal) or outward (external) orientation, or both.

Inwardly-directed ego needs reflect an individual’s need for self-acceptance, for self-esteem, achievement, and for personal satisfaction with a job well done.

Outwardly-directed needs relate to interaction with other people and include the needs for reputation, for status, and for recognition from others. 17

Need for Self-Actualization  Need for self-actualization refers to an

individual’s desire to fulfill his or her potential to become everything he or she is capable of becoming.

According to Maslow, most people do not satisfy their ego needs sufficiently to ever reach this level.

People here tend to have needs such as truth, justice, wisdom, meaning.

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Maslow’s Hierarchy and Sports Consumption Basic (Physiological) & Safety (Security):

Societies where people are starving and are without shelter aren’t interested in sports or staying fit.

Improving health and fitness is the prime motivator for sports participation.

Also not related to security needs. Social:

Spectators and participants involvement in sports is motivated by a desire to confirm a sense of identity.

Spectating in a sporting event bring varied people together and can affirm national unity or a sense of community.

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Ego or Esteem: In sports research, self esteem is holding oneself in

high regard. Involvement in physical activities leads to positive

attitude about oneself. Achievement for sports person is in terms of success

or failure; whereas for spectators it is about basking in the glory of victorious team.

Self Actualization: It refers to a man’s desire for self-fulfillment, and

become actualized in what he is capable of. Sports provide opportunities to exceed personal

expectations and express oneself.20

Summary and Discussions

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