McCain Foods to Partner with London Irish End of Season Party 21st April, 2011

McCain Foods & London Irish partner to encourage more families to get more active more often.

The last London Irish Big 5 game, End of Season Party, will kick off on April 23rd promising to be another wonderful day for families with activities and live entertainment alongside the last league game – London Irish vs. Northampton Saints.  To provide a unique experience for London Irish fans, The Big 5 event series combines activities and entertainment to support the exhilarating rugby games held throughout the year.  Many brands have been taking advantage of the opportunity, activating experiential campaigns and reaching an engaged audience of London Irish rugby fans and young families.

McCain Foods, principal partner of UK Athletics, has signed a partnership deal with the event and will be bringing its interactive McCain Track and Field road show experience to the London Irish End of Season Party. The McCain Track and Field roadshow will give youngsters the unique opportunity to try out the different basic elements of athletics in a fun environment. McCain ambassador and 400m hurdler Perri Shakes-Drayton, who won bronze at the European Championships last August and is a 2012 hopeful, will be on hand throughout the day to offer tips to youngsters taking part in the day.  

 The London Irish End of Season Party promises to be a great family day out and we are pleased to be bringing a taste of athletics to the event. As principal partner of UK Athletics we are committed to getting more families more active more often, and the McCain Track and Field Roadshow experience is an ideal introduction to the sport.

Bill Bartlett, Corporate Affairs Director at McCain

With an event expecting over 12,000 supporters in attendance, the last home Premiership rugby game is set to be a memorable one.  Additional brands involved with End of Season Party include Grosvenor Casinos, EA Sports, Equifax and Hilton Hotels.

The deal was secured through Slingshot Sponsorship.

End of Season Party tickets are selling fast, be sure to book your ticket today! 

Call the Ticket Hotline on 0844 249 1871 or click here to buy tickets.

Is Barcelona Football Club Selling Out? 1st March, 2011

In a season where we have seen Torres leave Liverpool for Chelsea (not before he had ‘You’ll never walk alone’ tattooed on his arm) and Rooney demand a transfer only to reconsider once he had an upgrade, football fans would be forgiven in thinking that the game had finally lost its soul.

With all the cash being pumped into the Premier League and numerous new owners buying their way into the hype, as a fan you can’t help but feel less engaged with the game.

Barcelona Football Club is a great example of the shift in football sponsorship funding.  For years, Catalan purists raved about 111 years without a sponsor.   The positioning showcased their love of the game and created fan loyalty to their brand.  This year, they provided the main shirt sponsorship spot to UNICEF – providing this charity a fantastic opportunity to drive awareness and raise much needed funds to the cause.  Through this sponsorship, Barcelona was able to create an emotional response from their fans by supporting UNICEF in this way – further increasing their fan loyalty.  It also provided a stepping stone for the club into brand sponsorship ensuring that they didn’t isolate their die hard supporters.

The introduction of UNICEF’s sponsorship has helped pave the way for the Qatar Foundation to come on board as an official sponsor through a 5 year deal for a total cost of £125 million. The non-profit foundation funded by the Al-Thani family, has splashed out on one of the most lucrative sponsorship opportunities available.  This raised further issues with the winning bid for the 2022 World Cup with many of the rival bids believing the deal was in place before, as the Barcelona team had such an influential part to play in their selection.  

Speculation indeed, but whatever the answer this is certainly one of the most far reaching and eye catching sponsorship deals this year. Manchester United’s sponsorship deal worth £80 million over 4 years with AON in 2009 now seems like a distant memory.

Sport Sponsorship Rights for a Fraction of the Cost 31st January, 2011

London Irish Rugby Club, the legendary rugby team, will this year expand the popular St. Patrick’s Day Party to five big events.  These include a total of five games with experiential activity known as The Big 5 – five games of world class rugby combined with live entertainment, creating a fan experience beyond ‘just another rugby game’.

Experiential Marketing: Creating the Experience

Slingshot Sponsorship came on board to help London Irish Rugby club take these events to the next level.  We developed an experiential sponsorship offering for brands which created value for both the brands involved as well as the fans.  Not only did this create an experience, it also helped London Irish create synergy of marketing activity, a new revenue stream, as well as some exciting experiences.  By providing flexibility and a low entry cost, London Irish enabled brands to leverage their best assets ensuring brand fit through their experiential activity.

Case Study: Global Action Plan

One partner involved is Global Action Plan, an award winning environmental charity based in London.  Global Action Plan has created the Climate Squad with their wide-reaching environmental initiative Pump It Up.  Pump It Up involves young volunteers pumping car tyres and explaining to car owners how keeping your car tyres pumped at the recommended levels can save money and the environment.  As the Madjeski stadium car park is a prime location for car tyres, this provided Global Action Plan a fantastic opportunity to get involved in sport sponsorship, whilst also accessing a prime audience to their initiative. 

In addition, the involvement of London Irish Rugby Club provides an incentive for Global Action Plan to recruit volunteers to both The Big 5 and introduce other volunteer opportunities with Global Action Plan in the future.  And best of all, London Irish fans get their tyres pumped and learn how to start saving the environment!

Through these additional events running alongside the most well attended London Irish games, The Big 5 creates an unrivalled opportunity for consumer brands to engage and associate with London Irish fans and the London Irish brand.  This can help current premier rugby league sponsors enhance their sponsorship rights as well as new brands to ‘get their feet wet’ with rugby sponsorship for a fraction of the cost of shirt sponsorship rights.

Sponsorship resurges in the Marketing Mix 23rd January, 2011

Sponsorship, once a symbol of corporate excess and indulgence, is resurgent as marketers find a new place for it within the marketing mix.

As sports fans will be all too aware, many leading companies and brands are pulling out of their sponsorship deals with major sporting events, high-profile teams and sports stars as they look to shore up their marketing budgets. Prominent sponsorship deals such as Honda’s Formula 1 racing team, Vodafone’s long relationship with the English Cricket Board and the Derby, and GM’s endorsement deal with Tiger Woods are just a few of the notable examples of the lucrative partnerships that have bitten the dust as embattled companies rein in their marketing spend.

The hundreds of column inches given over to these tales of woe has created the impression that the golden age of the sponsorship deal has been dealt a severe blow by the Credit Crunch. However, while many of these multi-million pound sponsorship deals are drying up, there is surging interest among marketers to find new sponsorship vehicles. This has seen the integration of brands that are not natural competitors, but nonetheless share the same target audience. Thomas Cook has just signed up to sponsor Kiss FM’s Saturday night ‘Kissalicious’ show, their very first media spend on their Club 18-30 brand in four years.  The Co-operative is the new sponsor of the next instalment of the High School Musical franchise, their second deal with a Disney-owned series.

 Why include sponsorship in the marketing mix?

Sponsorship is a powerful way to engage with consumers. At a time when people are constantly marketed to through an increasing number of channels, engagement is vital for marketers to get their message across to their target audiences. Sponsorship is a medium which can facilitate this by creating tangible ‘touchpoints’ for the consumer to come into contact with and interact with a brand. Entering into a sponsor partnership can give a brand access to a space outside the reach of regular marketing channels, as well as create unique touchpoint opportunities through which to build brand awareness.

 Sponsoring a sporting spectacle, team or cultural event is also a way to foster within the target audience positive feelings towards a brand. Aligning a brand with something about which the target audience feels passionate can serve to create goodwill. It is an age old fact that people tend to favour others who like the same things as they do; this dynamic is no less true when it comes to forming a relationship between brand and audience.

This engagement between brand and audience is vital to engendering ‘receptivity’ in consumers, which is especially useful for a company trying to launch a new product or break into a new market. Even if a brand has been successfully established in one field, it can still find it difficult to penetrate a new market because of a lack of audience familiarity. Through sponsorship, the target audience can be ‘primed’ to be receptive to the brand, which means that they will be more likely to pay attention to specific marketing messages. 

Finding the right sponsorship deal

Sponsorship is usually classed as an ‘above the line’ activity because of its mass engagement between a brand and a broad audience. However, while the essential marketing principles of sponsorship are common to every sponsorship deal, marketers are now unlocking its ability to deliver the benefits normally associated with ‘below the line’ marketing channels. Traditionally, the grand sponsorship deal was as much about the kudos of being seen to be a patron of prestigious sports and arts spectacles, as it was an exercise in engagement. Nowadays, finding the right sponsorship vehicle, as opposed to the most illustrious, is vital for measurability and demonstrating ROI.

Integrating sponsorship into the marketing mix means that the targeting strategy behind a sponsorship programme should be no different to that for any other form of direct marketing campaign. Outside of sport and entertainment, marketers are now turning their attention to sponsoring non-traditional vehicles that lack a broad public profile, but are nonetheless the right medium for reaching their exact target market. Recent sponsorship deals we have done for the Direct Marketing Association (UK) (DMA) with sponsors Royal Mail, ITV, Equifax, VisitScotland and other major brands, show how effective these partnerships can be.

For example, Equifax, a global leader in credit and business information, recently signed a deal to become the official data sponsor of the DMA to promote its ‘Heart of Data Intelligence’ campaign to the UK marketing industry. As many of the DMA’s 900 corporate members are prime users and suppliers of data, this was the exact market Equifax wanted to target. The sponsorship deal has enabled Equifax to engage with its target market through having a strong brand presence at the DMA’s 2009 and 2010 DMA Awards, regional and networking events, data-focused seminars, conferences and symposia, and the Young Spark Award organised by DMA Scotland. Equifax has integrated this sponsorship into its marketing campaign and reach potential customers in ways that are not possible through other channels.

As this partnership shows, sponsorship is a versatile marketing channel that is well suited to B2B brands, not just B2C brands. While sport and the arts may be the first sponsorship vehicles that come to mind, there are many more opportunities available for the marketer to consider. Sponsorship can actually work better for B2B brands than B2C as there is more flexibility to the relationship and the audience is highly targeted.  If you have not yet thought about integrating sponsorship into your marketing mix, or felt it wasn’t useful to your type of business, take a look at your current market and what your competitors are doing – it may surprise you.


Sachin Tendulkar: the last ethical man in sport? 16th December, 2010

So, with the England team about to complete a historic victory over the Australians in their own back yard, I read with interest a cricket story making slightly fewer headlines.

The darling of India, “The Little Master” and a genuinely good guy, Sachin has once again underpinned his iconic status both on and off the cricket pitch. As quoted on Cricinfo, the popular Indian saying goes; “Cricket is my religion and Sachin is my God”.

The integrity of sponsorship and the importance of picking both a spokesperson and a target sport is crucial. Getting someone like Tendulkar on board to promote any product to the huge Indian market, would provide any potential company with a huge new clientele. Unfortunately for whoever was trying to get Tendulkars endorsement misjudged the maestro and were left with less impressive options.

Before he made it, Sachin was given a piece of advice by his father; “Never accept endorsements for alcohol or cigarettes, no matter what they offer”. It would now seem that these words have been fully adhered to. Reports say that this recent offer would have been the biggest deal for any Indian sportsman (No mean feat considering the package that MS Dhoni has just received!), but Tendulkar stood true to his morals and turned it down.

So far we don’t know the exact brand of alcohol that he declined to sponsor, but his agents (World Sports Group) did offer the following; “He did get an offer but we are not in a position to name the company or give details of the offer”.

What else would you expect from a character that has been in the spotlight since his introduction as the saviour of Indian cricket? The first man to deliver a double century in one day international cricket and now turning down a well paid (albeit moral bending) offer, Sachin can do no wrong and fully deserves the adulation of his adoring fanbase. That includes me if you hadn’t noticed!


Celebrity Endorsement in Sponsorship 13th December, 2010

Celebrities used to be fantastic opportunities for sponsorship and brand endorsement.  Not only did they look the part, they had massive fan followings and innumerable opportunities to endorse the brand through paparazzi shots and interviews.  However, I anticipate that gravy train will soon run dry.  With the numerous scandals affecting some of the leading brands, how could anyone risk millions of dollars on one single individual anymore?

The celebrity endorsement fallout that led the pack was the infamous Tiger Woods scandal.  The slow leaking of women coming out of the woodwork led a fallout from sponsors Gillete, Accenture, AT&T, and even Gatorade, which didn’t even have a sponsorship relationship with Tiger Woods. 

With the recent allegations that Wayne Rooney has cheated on childhood sweetheart with a prostitute, this is the final nail in the coffin.  Celebrities are not worth the pain, hassle and fan fallout that their ‘private’ lives bring with their endorsement.

As such, we have seen an influx of sponsors supporting festivals rather than individual musicians and of government initiatives rather than sports stars.

I can’t imagine Wayne Rooney will maintain his sponsors throughout the backlash that will soon ensue.  Nor can I imagine the Marketing Directors will ever be able to get through the red tape.


Sports Integrity with iGaming Sponsorship 18th November, 2010

I was recently asked to sit on a panel at the Sport Business Group’s event: Sport & iGaming.  Our panel topic was about how to maintain integrity in sport with the inclusion of iGaming sponsors.

After a lively debate, I realised I completely forgot to add some of the key points I wanted to say so thought I’d blog them down instead.

Benefits of iGaming Sponsorship into Sport

  1. iGaming has helped fill a revenue gap in the market for sport rights holders.  With the decline in sport sponsorship funding, iGaming has not only helped fill this, but have drastically added to the sport itself.  Many of the iGaming companies have utilised the concept of partnership and have introduced many sport related offers, games, and betting options for their customers.  Betfair even goes as far as providing any 5-a-side and 11-a-side football kit if they play at Betfair.
  2. iGaming sponsor companies illustrate how the right sponsorship ‘fit’ can create synergies.  One of the most important decisions on whether or not to sponsor is the audience fit.  As sport typically attracts a demographic of males aged 30-50 and this is the iGaming target market, this has allowed iGaming sponsors to really build brand awareness cost-effectively by tapping into their target market in a way that is meaningful to them.
  3. iGaming companies lead digital marketing resource and expertise to sponsorship activations.  In my opinion, I believe that the sponsorship industry lacks the innovation that is seen in some other marketing brand campaigns.  This is due to the traditional sponsorship rights and being able to contract only what is available.  However, with the introduction of the most state of the art platforms, forums, and e-commerce within iGaming sites, this has provided a much needed surge for sponsorship activation to this outside the box.

For more information on sport and iGaming, be sure to check out the video of the event here.


Slingshot Sponsorship signs London Irish Rugby 10th November, 2010

London Irish has hired Slingshot Sponsorship to handle their Big 5 sponsorship campaign – five legendary parties in association with five great London Irish home games in 2011.

The London Irish St Patrick’s Day party has attracted crowds of over 20,000 and this year London Irish is expanding the festivities across four other games within their home schedule.  These events will offer supporters a fantastic day out for the whole family, combining great entertainment off the pitch with world-class rugby on the pitch.  Slingshot Sponsorship will work with London Irish to strategise brand experiential campaigns alongside the Big 5 in addition to a wide-reaching communications plan.

Felicity Greenland, Marketing and Events Director for London Irish, said: “We have appointed the Slingshot Sponsorship agency because of their proven experience in building brand engagement campaigns within sponsorship.”

Match tickets are on sale now for the first of the Big 5 games against Bath on New Year’s Day, with the remainder going on sale shortly. To book tickets, visit www.london-irish.com or call the Ticket Hotline on 0844 249 1871.

To book corporate hospitality for all games, please email [email protected].

For more information on the Big 5 sponsorship opportunities please contact Jackie Fast: [email protected]


Sponsorship Prevails under Economic Downturn 11th October, 2010

One only has to look at the success rates of the sponsorships of the 2010 Fifa World Cup to see that sponsorship can still prevail in a time of economic downturn.  The official sponsors of this year’s sporting event, Budweiser, Coca-Cola and McDonalds, have lauded their sponsorships of the Fifa World Cup a resounding success, stimulating sales and increasing brand awareness on a global level.  The fact remains that in spite of a necessity of cutbacks for all companies, the only way to stimulate growth in these difficult times is to increase sales.  Brand awareness and mass exposure to your direct market remain the most effective ways to achieve exactly this. 

During the World Cup, Budweiser beer sales were up 18.6 per cent in the UK over the comparable period in 2009, while Coca-Cola observed a 7 per cent increase in sales in Latin America.  Despite already being globally recognised brands, this positive association allowed the companies to grow in spite of a spending-conscious public. By selectively sponsoring an event with great public appeal, companies such as these can increase their own appeal through association, without having to advertise why their product is better than it’s competitors.  The public’s association of it with the biggest sporting even of the year will see to that.

For a company such as Red Bull, sponsoring extreme sports allows it to remain ingrained in public consciousness as an exciting, fast-living brand.  Whether it be BMX biking or the Formula 1 Grand Prix, the message remains the same: Red Bull are the brand to go for if you aspire to live a high octane, stimulating lifestyle.  Alternatively, by sponsoring the hugely popular Reading and Leeds festivals, Vodaphone can ensure it is in good stead with a music-loving youth generation, allowing it to be seen as a brand that has it’s feet placed firmly on the most hippest of grounds.

It would be a misconception to believe that a world still recovering from a brutal recession is one without need for a ‘luxury’ such as sponsorship.  It is in actual fact one of the most cost-effective ways of generating growth, boosting sales and increasing brand awareness.  By directly exposing one’s brand to its target audience, and thus allowing for brand engagement, companies can generate the positive upswing that will help lift us out of this recession, and not flailing in it’s midst.    In an uncertain time, a strong public image is the greatest asset a company can possess, and a great affiliation through selective sponsorship can provide just this.