Sponsorship - the ties that bind
by Lorien Pilling

Above picture, Speakers on the night:
(Right to left), Greg Nichols, MD Sporting Affairs, Betfair,
Merrick Haydon, MD, Revolution Sports Marketing Group, Paul
Renney, Partner, Campbell Hooper Solicitors LLP, and Gareth
Wong, Founder of GamBond, and Gambit special interest group.
When AC Milan lifted the Champions League trophy in Athens
in May, the Italian club was not the only winner that night.
As the team's shirt sponsor, online gambling firm Bwin had
its brand name seen by a worldwide television audience running
into the hundreds of millions. But should e-gaming companies
be looking to gain more from their sponsorship deals and what
implications will the new UK Gambling Act have on future partnerships?
For its June event the Gambit e-gaming discussion group met
to discuss these sponsorship issues.
Merrick Haydon, managing director of the Revolution Sports
Marketing group, was quick
to stress that sponsorship was not the same thing as advertising.
One of the strengths that sponsorship enjoys is that it is
always at the heart of the action, whereas the traditional
television advertising market is fragmenting and new digital
technology is making it too easy to edit out adverts.
Sponsorship, Merrick argued, is becoming an increasingly
sophisticated marketing discipline, moving away from the traditional
reasons for doing deals: simple brand awareness, hospitality,
and the whim of the chairman (or chairman's wife?). Instead,
sponsorship is now being seen as a central marketing platform,
from which other activities, such as sales promotions, PR,
advertising, competitions, and even recruitment, can be launched.
A measure of this new focus on sponsorship is the forecast
that it will account for 15% of the total marketing spend
in Europe by 2012, compared to 8% currently.
For his case study Merrick talked about the Football Furlong
event, a football themed race meeting held at Haydock Park.
In 2006 the event was sponsored by 32Red.com, which was keen
to promote its association with Aston Villa and its new sports
book. He described the 360 degree activity that took place
around the basic race sponsorship: mascot races, celebrity
event ambassadors, football games, and competitions.
Merrick believes that the market will see fewer, but larger,
sponsorship deals, as it becomes harder for traditional television
advertising to succeed. There is ever increasing live sports
coverage and the emphasis should be on delivering business
opportunities through such sponsorship deals.
But as Unibet (with its cycling team) and Bwin (with AS Monaco)
have both discovered, not every partnership goes smoothly
and Paul Renney of Campbell Hooper Solicitors was on hand
to look at the legal aspects of sponsorship.
Paul
has previously worked with the British Horseracing Board to
develop rules for sponsoring jockeys' silks and he expanded
on this topic to tackle the issue of integrity when sports
teams and individuals are supported by gambling operators.
Attention inevitably turned to the Gambling Act and specifically
part 16, which covers advertising of gambling. Definitions
in the Act are very broad and recent consultation papers from
the Gambling Commission and the Committee of Advertising Practice
suggest that the new regime from September 2007 will be stringent,
particularly in the area of social responsibility in promoting
gambling services.
Away from the UK, Paul highlighted the problem faced by the
bookmaking firm Coral in its sponsorship deal as the betting
partner for rugby union's Guinness Premiership. When the English
teams played in France for the European cup games they were
forced to cover up the Coral logo on their shirts to comply
with French law.
Betting
exchange Betfair is another gambling firm that is not finding
it easy to do sponsorship deals outside of its UK market because
of local restrictions, most notably in Australia. Greg Nichols,
Betfair's managing director of sporting affairs, did maintain
that the exchange had aspirations to be recognised as a global
brand, despite these restrictions.
He went on to describe how the scale of its sponsorship in
the UK has grown as the company itself has grown. To begin
with, Betfair focused on the low level sponsorship of horseracing,
reflecting the fact that, at the time, most of its revenues
were derived from racing markets. In 2002, it became a sponsor
of Fulham FC but, as Greg admitted, failed to get the most
from the partnership because it only lasted for one season.
Betfair's more recent move into cricket sponsorship was made
because it wanted an association with a typically British
sport. As luck would have it, the deal came about at just
the right time for Betfair and the company benefited from
being linked to a winning team when England won the Ashes
battle with Australia in 2005.
For the online gambling industry, successful sponsorship
partnerships are perhaps the most important of all marketing
activities. Usually without a high-street presence and located
in off-shore jurisdictions, e-gaming firms can give a tangible
form to their business and brand by being associated with
a high-profile sporting event, team, or athlete. In an industry
where player trust and brand reputation are everything, such
links can help cement the right corporate image and enhance
customer loyalty.

Further Networking after the event:
Email us
if you have any suggestions of very senior speakers, proposing
to sponsor, or indeed want to be kept informed about
future Gambit event.
The evening's exclusive category sponsor:

Hosted by:

Gambit-Special Event media partners:
Speaker Profiles:
Greg Nichols joined Betfair in September 2006 as Managing
Director for Sporting Affairs, having spent 20 years at the
forefront of racing governance in Australia and Britain.
He was previously Chief Executive of the British Horseracing
Board from 2002 to 2006, a time of unprecedented success for
British racing. Greg presided over a transformation of racings
fortunes through a testing period of its history, with specific
focus on the monetisation of the sports intellectual
property rights, the modernisation of the sport and the successful
management of a competition law/Office of Fair Trading investigation.
His involvement in Australian racing began with appointment
as Managing Director for Racing in South Australia in 1993
leading to his appointment in 1996 as Chief Executive of the
South Australian Thoroughbred Racing Authority. He was subsequently
appointed General Manager for Racing Victoria in 1998, with
responsibility for the internationalisation of Australian
racing, specifically, the Melbourne Cup.
Prior to racing, Greg played semi-professional football (Australian
Rules) for Geelong in the Australian Football League. He is
a keen racehorse owner with interests in both Australian and
British thoroughbred horse racing.
Greg is a Non-Executive Director of Betfair Australia, a
joint venture comprising Betfair UK and James Packers
Publishing and Broadcasting Limited.
Paul Renney is a Partner in the Commercial/IP/Media
group at the Westminster-based law firm, Campbell Hooper Solicitors
LLP; he joined them in May from Addleshaw Goddard, where he
had been a Partner in the Sports Group and had advised on
a number of high profile and less high profile sponsorship
arrangements, especially in the horseracing industry; he advised
the British Horseracing Board on all its commercial arrangements
for over 13 years, in particular the Order of Merit sponsorship
with a number of racecourses, and the Owners and Jockeys sponsorship
codes, as well as other sporting sponsorship deals. He put
together and co-chaired a seminar on sponsorship and gambling
last autumn, and has recently worked on a high value/long
term sports sponsorship agreement.
He also advises on major advertising campaigns and promotions,
as well as the media side of corporate media joint ventures,
acquisitions and disposals; he also advises on gambling law,
especially in the run up to the Gambling Act coming into force
in September 2007.
Merrick Haydon is Managing Director of Revolution
Sports Marketing Group. Merrick has worked in the sports marketing
and sponsorship industry for over 14 years and has extensive
experience across many sports events and properties, working
with clients such as American Airlines, BMW, MasterCard, UBS
and Volkswagen. Merrick has worked with major international
sponsors, federations and rights holders to maximise sponsorship
programmes as well as devising and implementing sponsorship
strategies.
This site is organised by Gareth
Wong, you can email
him to discuss any aspects relating to this site.
|