mktg 4320 sport marketing

35
MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing STP, Research, Pricing

Upload: clinton-sullivan

Post on 02-Jan-2016

61 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing. STP, Research, Pricing. Product Development. How do sport marketers help sport product succeed economically?. Strategic Differentiation:. Segmentation. Targeting. Positioning. Market Segmentation. Divides a heterogeneous group into smaller homogenous segments. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

MKTG 4320Sport Marketing

STP, Research, Pricing

Page 2: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

How do sport marketers help sport product succeed economically?

Product Development

Segmentation

Positioning

Targeting

Strategic Differentiation:

Page 3: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Market Segmentation

Divides a heterogeneous group into smaller homogenous segments

Groups have similar wants and similar responses

Page 4: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Ex.: The “women’s market”

What do you do when you are: NASCAR NFL team NHL team MLS team

Page 5: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

NASCAR

Allstate "Girls Day Out II"

Number of titles: 21. Currently in print: 1 million

Page 6: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

NFL

Football 101 Raven’s “Club Purple”

Page 7: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Other Initiatives:

MLB: Mother’s Day community outreach with Charity Component (e.g., Fight Breast Cancer).

MLS: Put features of their players in women’s magazine (education about players and game). Team level efforts include ads targeting “moms”.

NHL with Reebok launch line of women’s apparel.

Page 8: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Why do sport marketers care about product’s position on product-space map?

Where do sport consumers see you, based on important attributes?

Product Position

How the product is positioned in consumers’ minds

Page 9: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Positioning for Media, Sponsors, Spectators: The US Open Series

Page 10: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

The Role of Research in

Sport Marketing

Page 11: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

You need to:

Appreciate marketing information system

Understand research methods

Recognize available internal and external data sources

Page 12: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Marketing Research

Basic data are essential to good decision making

Key is ongoing and systematic research

Challenge is taking data collected, analyzing it, and making sense of it

A marketing information system (MIS) is integral

Page 13: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Marketing Information System (MIS)

Can range from index cards to a fully integrated database

Complexity depends on:

Size, geographic dispersion of market

Availability of data

Budget

Organization leadership

Page 14: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

What question should sport marketers ask? Why?

Information From MIS

Who consumes our product?Who decides on the purchase?Who consumes our competitors’ products?

What products compete with ours?What products complement ours?What are the key benefits sought by consumers?

When do consumers buy?

How do consumers consume our product?

Page 15: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Information From MIS

Size of market

General Market Data

Market demographics

Purchase behaviors

Spectatorship or participation level

Future trends

Page 16: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Information From MIS

Contact names and numbers of all consumers

Product usage behavior (e.g., frequency)

Individual Consumer Data

Method of payment

Market’s chosen media

Pattern of consumption

Page 17: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Information From MIS

Competitor

An organization offering similar products

Usually located within 30-minute drive

Competitor Data

Visit competitors to gather data

Hire “mystery shoppers”

Page 18: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Data Sources for MIS

Internal—within-organization information

External—information from outside the organization

Page 19: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Internal MIS Data Sources

Sales records

Inquiries

Communications of praise/complaint

Page 20: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

External MIS Data Sources

Census reports

State agencies

Secondary Sources

Public libraries

Chambers of commerce

Trade associations

Professional research services

Trade and scholarly press

Page 21: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

External MIS Data Sources

Communicate with target market

Primary Sources

Importance of primary research

Initiate data-based marketing efforts

Page 22: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Types of Primary Market Research in Sport

Observation

Focus groups

Surveys and questionnaires

On-site, mail, telephone, computerized, Internet

Personal interviews

Panels of experts

Mystery shoppers

Page 23: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

You were just hired as assistant marketing director for the Toronto Argonauts. During the first meeting you impress your boss by saying that what you guys need is to enter the 21st century with a sleek customer database. Your boss asks:

What information do you want in there?

What will you do with it?

Team work: What do you do with a customer database?

Page 24: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Pricing Strategies

Page 25: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

The Basics of PricingWhat needs to be priced?

Tickets

Memberships

Signage

Apparel

Concessions

Price according to location, image, and time (why time?).

Page 26: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

The Basics of Pricing

Easily changed

Effective with elastic demand

Highly visible

Important to consumers

Page 27: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Core Issues

Fan Cost Index (FCI)

Cost From Consumer’s Perspective

Page 28: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Fan Cost Index (FCI)

Reported annually

Includes all price elements for professional event

4 average-priced tickets

2 beers (small)

4 sodas (small)

4 hot dogs

2 game programs

2 game caps

Parking

Page 29: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Example: NHL

“The Toronto Maple Leafs have the most expensive tickets at $76.15 (USD)* and the priciest FCI at $411.30. The Montreal Canadiens are second in both categories at $64.26 and $361.25, respectively. Fellow Original Six teams, the Boston Bruins and New York Rangers, are third and fourth in FCI rankings at $352.60 and $348.84.”

Team Marketing Report 2009

Page 30: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Value and Price

High price not necessarily detrimental

Price often associated with perceived quality

Product value includes more than winning:

convenience, aesthetics, cleanliness, availability, durability

Page 31: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Standard Approaches to Pricing

Production costs

Market conditions (supply and demand)

Competitor’s price

Product and event frequency

Page 32: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

What the Market Will Bear

What could be the result of an incorrect decision?

Can you give an example?

If hunches are wrong, results can be costly

Page 33: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Would any particular group be more sensitive to price change? Why?

Special Pricing Factors to Consider

Pricing based on user group

Corporate season-ticket holder

User Segmentation

Single-ticket purchasers

Special groups

Student packages

Unbundling

Page 34: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Special Pricing Factors to Consider

Time—bundled packages

Prime vs. non-prime time

Time and Place Smoothing

Price scales in venue

Key factors—proximity, line of sight, and demand

Page 35: MKTG 4320 Sport Marketing

Note the Escalator!

Price hikes threaten to push consumers off escalator

Emphasize other features of the product