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Aims of the presentation. To examine the impact the recession is having on sportTo assess whether or not sport is recession-resistantTo identify the impact recession is having on sportTo establish whether or not the recession is killing sport. . Editor of books including: The Business of Sport Management, The Marketing of Sport, International Cases in the Business of Sport and Managing Football: An International PerspectiveEditor of Henry Stewart Sport Marketing talk seriesEditor of Butterw1142
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1. IS THE RECESSION KILLING SPORT? Professor Simon Chadwick
Chair in Sport Business Strategy
Director of CIBS
2. Aims of the presentation To examine the impact the recession is having on sport
To assess whether or not sport is recession-resistant
To identify the impact recession is having on sport
To establish whether or not the recession is killing sport
3. Editor of books including: The Business of Sport Management, The Marketing of Sport, International Cases in the Business of Sport and Managing Football: An International Perspective
Editor of Henry Stewart Sport Marketing talk series
Editor of Butterworth Heinemann Sport Marketing book series
Former editor of the International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship
Consulted with and/or advised organisations including FC Barcelona, Atletico Madrid, UEFA, International Tennis Federation, four Grand Slam tennis tournaments, Mastercard, The Economist, European Sponsorship Association
Written for, or been quoted in/by, outlets including Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Financial Times, Business Week, Time Magazine, BBC, CNN, ESPN, Reuters
4. Please note All numerical data is drawn from secondary sources
For further details of these sources, participants are asked to directly contact the presenter
5. The story so far.... Honda, Kawasaki and Subaru withdrawn from motorsport
Manchester United lose Ł56 million AIG shirt sponsorship
US National Football League indicates it will cut workforce by 10%
Tiger Woods loses five year $8 million endorsement contract with Buick
Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games takes out additional $800 million loan to cover financial shortfall
2009 Indian Masters golf tournament cancelled
Arena Football League in US cancelled for the season
Liverpool FC new stadium building project put on hold
6. But.... In UK, following Beijing Olympics, sales of bicycles up 20%; sports bras up 27%; energy bars and sports drinks up 155%; swimming equipment up 36%;
Superbowl 2009: TV viewership up 1 million (97.4m to 98.4m); advertising investment up $20 million (from $186 million to $206 million)
Manchester City sold for Ł200million+ in summer 2008
Premier League signs new live TV rights deal for Ł1.78 billion, surpassing previous deal
Badminton England signs record-breaking sponsorship deal with Yonex; rumours persist that Manchesters United and City will both sign lucrative, record-breaking shirt sponsorship deals
7. Is sport in recession? We actually don’t know because the value of the sport economy is not measured
Sense that the world sport economy worth 3% of GDP; in EU between 1% and 2% of GDP; in UK between 2% and 3% of GDP
General economic downturn is impacting upon sport
Differential effects
8. A geo-political dimension? Is this a Western sporting recession?
Is it a global sporting recession?
Will the recession be an international tipping point?
Is the balance of sporting power shifting eastwards?
Are we seeing a move away from socio-cultural and commercial sport?
To nation-state sport?
9. Is sport recession resistant? A unique product
A superior product
A necessity product
A socio-culturally embedded product
A commercially-driven product
A nation-state product
10. Consumption in crisis times Escapism
Self-esteem
Eustress
Aesthetic
Economic
Entertainment
Group affiliation
Family activity
11. Previous recessions Case of F1 motor racing
1925 season: World Champions Alfa Romeo pulled out of F1
1926 French Grand Prix only three cars started
1927 Delage team won all four Grand Prix and then withdrew from championship
1928 motorsport infrastructure that was in place led to series of team start-ups
Smaller, flexible, responsive, teams joined the championship
Despite economic gloom, teams increased and sport grew in popularity
12. Nature of impact Sport is not immune
Sport is more recession-resistant than other industries
Some sports more recession-resistant than others
Some athletes, teams and clubs are more recession-resistant than others
Downturn is polarising sport – prospering minority v struggling majority
Ticket sales, broadcasting revenues, commercial revenues are on the frontline
13. Those who likely to suffer The ‘Debt Devils’
The ‘Distantly Doomed’
The ‘Financially Fallible’
The ‘Selling Slaves’
The ‘Knee-Jerkers’
The ‘Management Malcontents’
The ‘High Street High-Jacked’
14. Those likely to benefit The ‘Bling Brigade’
The ‘Glory Givers’
The ‘Nifty Nichers’
The ‘Fearless Friendlies’
The ‘Guarantee Grafters’
The ‘Loyalty Lovers’
The ‘Price Promoters’
15. Conclusions The recession is not killing sport
But it is changing it
Sport more recession-resistant than most
Some better equipped to deal with it than others
Some organisations will have to ‘change or die’
Asking serious questions about way sport is run
Changing balance of global sporting power
Polarising sport
16. Thank you for being with us today
17. Further information
CIBS website: www.coventry.ac.uk/cibs
Coventry University website: www.coventry.ac.uk
E-mail: Simon.Chadwick@coventry.ac.uk