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Sunday, November 17, 2013

Sponsorships and Financials


Sponsorships and Financials

The new ASP World Tour infrastructure will be designed to meet the Global Sports League model (management, sponsorship, and broadcasting rights will now be centralized).

ESPN, YouTube, and Facebook partnerships are the first national and global media deals in surfing history.

ESPN deal is for three years (allows fans to watch highlights immediately after events)

(Document below contains past CFB TV deals, which a much lengthier).

Past TV Concerns:
A multi-day weather dependent sport (bowling has more TV coverage).

Doesn’t fit nicely into a 1-hour TV event.

However, Speaker says more than 100 million global fans either surf or watch pro surfing.
           
YouTube channel via ASP website will provide fans with 3,000 hours of content (26 live streamed events)
Surfing fans use social media more than any other sports fans.

The individual nature of surfing makes it tough to sell, so the goal is to sell the surfer’s stories.
Past image problems (fights, arrests, death due to drug overdose)

Quiksilver reduced sponsorship (cuts?), Nike canceled an event. New York debacle, or so-called debacle.
NY was considered a success yet the event never really took place (sad that’s how bad this has become)
                        -Weather challenges

“Not all surf brands enjoyed the promised revolution. Billabong and Quiksilver raised their green flags, while Vans and Rip Curl showed the red card.”


(((((The global research firm Repucom recently found surfer fans are the number one sports fans for sponsor consideration and loyalty in the U.S.)))))




Want to sell the surfers’ stories – how easy will they be to follow with all these widespread events?

New ownership for the first time in 30 years

Is there a lack of transparency? Is what should be accessible not accessible? Is there a clear vision for the future other than simply having a deal?

More brands that target women than men, so how do they better advertise for men?

The other hot-button topic surrounding 2014 and beyond is whether taking surfing mainstream will see the Tour back on city beaches, in shitty surf. So far, no one has got rich holding surf contests in the tropics. “The product itself will revolve around the best surfers and the best waves,” says Speaker using a familiar catchphrase, “and that’s the Commissioner’s part of it. We’ll make sure the broadcast is best of class and the interaction with fans is best of class and we’ll never sacrifice any of that for bad waves.” HHHMMMMMMMMMM

Per ASP World Tour 2014 website:
Sponsorship Marketing and Media Opportunities include:
            Tour-Wide Presenting
            Category Exclusives
            Regional Partners
            Event Title Packages

Dirk Ziff’s involvement?
            Bankrolling 25 million over 3 years. Can the ASP monetize the sport in that time?



They want to sell the surfers’ stories, so how can we incorporate this article and video?

The impact of injuries on surfers’ earnings? There are surfers who are ranked yet have ridiculously low earnings, which is perhaps the result of injury.

Should they be marketing the females to a larger extent?
The actual locations and not just the event?
The adventurousness?

E-mail people at surfermag?
Quiksilver cuts…

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Hey Guys,
Here are some videos we may want to use

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceTtZL2q3Sk
Quik Pro France
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AV6EKD_AwE
Jordy Smith personal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iAjWsjSwv0
US Open Teaser
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bedONIG4z4
Slater on Chelsea Lately- non-traditional way he has marketed himself
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1WhOUz3SU10
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Pdi2j0KgW4
2 clips of Slater from "Real Sports" with Bryant Gumbel

Thursday, November 7, 2013

history



The Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) is the governing body for professional surfers and is dedicated to showcasing the world’s best talent in a variety of progressive formats.

In the 1960s structured competitions were newly introduced to the athletic sector of surfing, it first began with girls and boys surfing for the love and ego. There was no surfing industry, it was teenagers who gathered and used their skills against one another. Many perceive this time as the amateur era, which makes it difficult to think that people like Midget Farrelly, Joey Cabell, Mike Doyle and Bob McTavish as amateurs. Unlike other sports, there were no prize money and minimum monetary compensation from endorsements.

Surfing was well established in California as it was newly developing in other countries such as Australia, Hawaii and Japan.

Tom Carroll and Tom Curren soon pushed to the forefront of the sport and their contribution, plus a booming surf industry, paved the way for enormous growth. With over 60 pro events worldwide, the ASP introduced a two-tiered system of ratings in 1992, incorporating the Top 44, who automatically qualified for what was then called the World Championship Tour (WCT)

The ASP industry caught on quickly by landing the big-name labels and as part of there global promotion strategy they began to stage events in exotic locations such as Grajagan in Java Indonesia, Jeffreys Bay in South Africa, Mundaka in the Basque Country, Tavarua in Fiji, Teahupoo in Tahiti and Trestles in California. This new ere brought the emergance and dominance of 11 time ASP world champion Kelly Slater. Also Lisa Anderson and Layne Beachley brought women’s surfing to new heights.

The present mantra of ASP International: WORLD’S BEST SURFERS, WORLD’S BEST WAVES.

Ian Cairns watched the fall of the International Professional Surfers (IPS) in 1982. In January 1983, Cairns launched the ASP and lured the world circuit organizers to the new organization, which over time effectively pushed IPS aside.

The ASP first world champions were Tom Carroll for men and Kim Mearig for women in 1983.

ASP Prime event - is held at premium venues with a restricted field and offers Prime ASP World Rankings points.

ASP Star event - is a lower level of competition, compared to an ASP Prime event, with their importance indicated by how many stars they are assigned: more stars means generally better competition and prize money.

ASP took a turn in a dynamic direction. Drifting away from the 1980s and early 1990s tour look, to staging top tour events at ideal surf locations.

Kelly Slater (mens) = 11 championships
Layne Beachley (Female) = 7 championships

Paul Speaker- CEO

·         Experience

o   Director of Marketing and Ideas at the National Football League,

o   President of Time Inc. Studios- Division of Time Warner: possible TV Deal down the road?

o   President of RKO Studios where he has been responsible for the organizations’ creative development, advertising and organization-wide integration of marketing strategies.

o   Lead Independent Director for Quiksilver as part of the organization’s board of directors.

·         Goals

o   "We want a 40-year-old father/ lifelong surfer who's introducing his six-year-old son to the sport for the first time at an event will get an experience equivalent to that of other professional sports," Speaker envisions. "That he remembers the experience and creates a family legacy that will mature over generations."
Here's what else he had to say:


o   ON 2013: "Everybody's expecting a dramatic, quick change. Having closed the acquisition in December, this is really a data year. We're spending a tremendous amount of time with surfers, brands, event management teams and the partnerships that already exist on the ground. We'll fix small stuff, going around with notepads and taking pictures at events, but we're not moving closer to population at the cost of the wave. We're investing in these events so the fan's experience is at par or better than what they've become accustomed to in other sports leagues, but don't expect a lot of changes to occur in 2013. We're configuring what tomorrow will look like and ramping up for a bigger launch in 2014."


o   ON NEW BLOOD: "With a centralized global position for the first time in professional surfing, we'll be announcing key hires, the best and the brightest. We're excited that surfing's enticed people from other walks of life -- from the sports world to the technology world -- to come on as full-time ASP employees and change our perspective on both the broadcast and online sides. Once they're in place, we'll bring their key assets to the table. We understand there's a nuance to professional surfing, a heritage and legacy that's important to keep intact. There's no fundamental change other than a move to California. All the regional offices will be able to continue their jobs, but also given a voice to move this sport forward. They all understand surfing, understand broadcasting, and are working diligently to deliver the best fan experience."


o   ON FANS: "Our primary objective is to mature our relationship with the fans. That starts with understanding the DNA that makes individuals enjoy the sport: their likes and dislikes, where they engage with us across the board and where we can create connectivity between them and the athletes. We've probably initiated the largest fan segmentation/research ever done and are committed to understanding the existing core surf fan -- making sure we manufacture an experience that doesn't insult, confuse or alienate them. But at the same time, we're welcoming a new fan that might've thought about professional surfing in the past, but wasn't marketed to properly. The deeper penetration you have with your fan base and the larger distribution you have for your sport, the more appealing you are for global brands."


o   ON BRANDS: "The endemic brands have supported this sport for a long time; it's time to give them a bit of relief and look at non-endemic brands. That supports not only the sport, but also the athletes, and in many ways activates the fans. We've been closing deals with existing sponsors so their event legacy remains. Taking more of a sponsor position and less as an event owner allows them to concentrate on their core business more deeply, and participate with others we bring to the table, so our events become much more meaningful. Across the zeitgeist of marketing and advertising, surfing's more prevalent than ever before. So brands that have never been involved with surfing are using our images, and in some cases doing deals with our athletes. This is the first time there's a global opportunity to sponsor professional surfing. It's a seismic change in the dialogue brands will be having; how they position their brands around this active global consumer; and how they'll budget against those initiatives."

 

o   "Our primary objective is to mature our relationship with the fans. That starts with understanding the DNA that makes individuals enjoy the sport."-- Paul Speaker

 

o   ON BROADCASTING: "In the last five years the landscape has changed dramatically. Online is as powerful as broadcast in linear television. So we're interviewing and educating broadcast and online partners to figure out the best way to deliver the experience globally. In previous years, it's run as a disparate collection of events with a governing body that has only the limitations of sanctioning and understanding rules and regulations. This will be a more dynamic-centralized focused business. Our team moving from event to event will be married up with freelancers, shooters and producers that have worked with the ASP in the past. We're evaluating commentary, which we believe will be one fixed team. We'll be getting rid of the wrinkles some broadcasts have had, with deep vigor. We'll work with those who've been loyal in the past -- certainly regional television broadcasters in Australia, Portugal and Brazil that preempt programming because surfing is such a major part of their culture -- while looking for global partners that allow us to manufacture massive reach. The ASP has done a wonderful job of inviting many different languages to the table. We want to make sure our distribution works as hard as that initiative has, and we're about two or three months away from closing the broadcast deal and making that announcement."


o   ON THE SURFERS: "Our key constituencies are the surfers. We want to celebrate those athletes, highlight how this sport is actually more globally far-reaching, and certainly more exciting, than other sports. A world-class sport needs to be positioned properly, and accoutrements that go along with that need to be put in place: everything from the event experience to the media training to understanding the surfers as individuals and characterizing them properly. We're delivering them to their audience, so we must make sure their day-to-day health and life experience is secure."


o   ON WAVES: "We're committed to the fan experience, which is completely about the best surfers on the best waves. All the other stuff about interactivity and engagement, we have to create drama in the water and the best way to yield that is to be where the best athlete can get on the best waves."

 

 

Matt McCabe- COO

·         Experience:

·         Chief Operating Officer


o    Association of Surfing Professionals

o   March 2013 – Present (8 months)Santa Monica, CA

·         Director, Advanced Services


o    Cisco Systems

o   March 2010 – March 2013 (3 years 1 month)

·         Senior Manager, Customer and Professional Services


o    Cisco Systems Inc

o   September 2004 – January 2011 (6 years 5 months)

·         VP, Customer Service


o    dynamicsoft

o   May 2000 – September 2004 (4 years 5 months)

·         Director, Global Support


o    QAD

o   March 1995 – May 2000 (5 years 3 months)

·         Education:

o   Villanova University

§  BS, Business, 1982-1986

·         University of Hartford

o   MBA, Finance, 1987-1990

Michael Lynch- CMO/CRO

·         Experience

o   During his nearly 17 years with Visa, Lynch led the company’s global sponsorship marketing/management strategy and execution including activations with the Olympic and Paralympic Games, FIFA World Cup, NFL and numerous other properties.

o   He and the organizations he led, have received numerous industry awards and recognition including, tabbed by The Sporting News magazine as one of the “100 Most Powerful People in Sports”, “Sports Sponsor of the Year” by the Sports Business Journal, and “The 25 Best Sponsors in America” by Event Marketer Magazine.

Kieren Perrow- Interim Commissioner

·         Veteran Surfer

·         Still Active on Tour


 

Rob Hammer- VP Post Production

·         Vice President of Post Production


o    Association of Surfing Professionals

o   February 2013 – Present (9 months)

o   http://www.aspworldtour.com/

·         Director of Post Production


o    Time Inc. Studios

o   March 2007 – February 2013 (6 years)Greater New York City Area

o   http://video.timeincstudios.com

·         Film/Video Editor


o    Freelance

o   March 2003 – March 2007 (4 years 1 month)

o   Video Editorial for Commercials, TV, Film, Web.

·         Senior Editor


o    Stolen Car Productions

o   May 1999 – February 2005 (5 years 10 months)

o   Commercial Editor.

·         Syracuse University


·         BS, Producing for Electronic Media

·         1995 – 1999

Al Hunt- World Tour Manager, Voice of the Old Regime

·         Attended over 1000 events

·         Helped develop current scoring system

·         “Retired” an passed on most of responsibility to Renato Hickel

Kelly Slater- The Future

·         Face of Pro Surfing and Quiksilver

·         11 Time World Champion

·         ZoSea Media

o   Run by Paul Speaker (New CEO) and Terry Hardy (Slater’s Agent)

·         Commissioner role seems to have been built for him when he retires

·         Turned down a $10 million bonus from Quiksilver and took 3% ownership instead

 

Sponsorships and Financials


Sponsorships and Financials

The new ASP World Tour infrastructure will be designed to meet the Global Sports League model (management, sponsorship, and broadcasting rights will now be centralized).

ESPN, YouTube, and Facebook partnerships are the first national and global media deals in surfing history.

ESPN deal is for three years (allows fans to watch highlights immediately after events)

(Document below contains past CFB TV deals, which a much lengthier).

Past TV Concerns:
A multi-day weather dependent sport (bowling has more TV coverage).

Doesn’t fit nicely into a 1-hour TV event.

However, Speaker says more than 100 million global fans either surf or watch pro surfing.
           
YouTube channel via ASP website will provide fans with 3,000 hours of content (26 live streamed events)
Surfing fans use social media more than any other sports fans.

The individual nature of surfing makes it tough to sell, so the goal is to sell the surfer’s stories.
Past image problems (fights, arrests, death due to drug overdose)

Quiksilver reduced sponsorship (cuts?), Nike canceled an event. New York debacle, or so-called debacle.
NY was considered a success yet the event never really took place (sad that’s how bad this has become)
                        -Weather challenges

“Not all surf brands enjoyed the promised revolution. Billabong and Quiksilver raised their green flags, while Vans and Rip Curl showed the red card.”


(((((The global research firm Repucom recently found surfer fans are the number one sports fans for sponsor consideration and loyalty in the U.S.)))))




Want to sell the surfers’ stories – how easy will they be to follow with all these widespread events?

New ownership for the first time in 30 years

Is there a lack of transparency? Is what should be accessible not accessible? Is there a clear vision for the future other than simply having a deal?

More brands that target women than men, so how do they better advertise for men?

The other hot-button topic surrounding 2014 and beyond is whether taking surfing mainstream will see the Tour back on city beaches, in shitty surf. So far, no one has got rich holding surf contests in the tropics. “The product itself will revolve around the best surfers and the best waves,” says Speaker using a familiar catchphrase, “and that’s the Commissioner’s part of it. We’ll make sure the broadcast is best of class and the interaction with fans is best of class and we’ll never sacrifice any of that for bad waves.” HHHMMMMMMMMMM

Per ASP World Tour 2014 website:
Sponsorship Marketing and Media Opportunities include:
            Tour-Wide Presenting
            Category Exclusives
            Regional Partners
            Event Title Packages

Dirk Ziff’s involvement?
            Bankrolling 25 million over 3 years. Can the ASP monetize the sport in that time?
Paolo Ciferri

ASP Vision


·      New CEO in Paul Speaker
·      2013 key year for data collection on multiple fronts
·      Three pronged approach
1.)  Improving fan experience
2.)  Increasing professionalism
3.)  Developing more effective broadcasting initiative
·      Recognition of wave quality and “Drama in the water”
·      Need to involve professionalism within and outside the spor.
Ie. Major players in the technology and media worlds
·      More involvement of non-endemic sponsors
·      Possibility of major broadcasting deals to make sure of a premium global experience
·      Change in employee and athlete policies


·      ZoSea media
·      Involving other sports and entertainment such as skate, music, moto, and art
·      New pension plan along with more prize money
·      View of the new ASP being a sport.
·      Approach the league as “a global centralized sports league”
·      Essential for people in ASP and people being welcomed in to view surfing as one of the premier global sports in the world
·      The new ASP will be a business “Centralized broadcast, centralized management, centralized sponsorship,” 
·      Women’s side will benefit as well. Women’s surfing attracts brands that men’s does not.
·      New viewing system for fans such as online streaming or digital, linear television.
·      Change “bro-cast to broadcast,” changing the announcers for the streams
·      They will center the product around “the best surfers and the best waves,” meaning that the tour will not go to cities to increase attendance but lower the quality of the waves.
·      Help of billionaire Dirk Ziff whose involvement has been noted at 20 to 30 million
·      97% of NFL fans never played in a football game. Same could happen in surfing
·      Kelly Slater key for the future of the ASP