London Sports Marketing Summit: How NASCAR Does It

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Barry Bronson Director of Communications - Valvoline A Division of Ashland Inc. Lexington, Kentucky, USA Activating Sponsorship to Achieve Strategic Business Objectives A Sponsor - Owner View

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Barry Bronson 2007 presentation on NASCAR sponsors and who's leveraging what.

Transcript of London Sports Marketing Summit: How NASCAR Does It

Page 1: London Sports Marketing Summit: How NASCAR Does It

Barry Bronson Director of Communications - Valvoline

A Division of Ashland Inc.Lexington, Kentucky, USA

Activating Sponsorship to Achieve Strategic Business Objectives

A Sponsor - Owner View

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Insert SEMA video Nov. 2006Up until MaxLife commercial;Include: At Track Race shop End with logos.

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Valvoline SponsorshipGoal is to extend the Valvoline BRAND to popular sports

by achieving disproportionate exposure to dollars spent . . . and by attaching high-performance imagery to our products.

• Use motorsports for BRANDING• Use motorsports as ALTERNATIVE MEDIA• Element of our ADVERTISING• Element of our PROMOTIONS• Element of our CUSTOMER RELATIONS

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PUBLIC RELATIONS VEHICLE

SALES PROMOTION VEHICLE

PRODUCT COUPON SAMPLING

TV BRAND EXPOSURE

LICENSING APPAREL,

SOUVENIRS

BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS

DEVELOPMENT

SHOWCAR PROGRAM

HOSPITALITY VEHICLE

INCENTIVE VEHICLE

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT

NEW PRODUCTS

PRINTBRAND EXPOSURE

PRIMARY TEAM CAR

SPONSORSHIP

DRIVER, TEAM ENDORSEMENT

REGIONAL RETAILER LEVERAGE

PERFORMANCE IMAGERY

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Brand Fact-of-Life

Consumers in many cases are becoming active supporters of brands, not just buyers.

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• 30 new commercials featuring 15 drivers• Fox broadcast - 33.7 million viewers

U.S. viewership. Source: FORBES Magazine

1. Super Bowl2. Summer Olympics3. World Cup4. DAYTONA 500

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Sponsor as Owner• F1: Mercedes & McLaren. • F1: Honda buys out BAR. • F1: BMW takes over Sauber. • NASCAR & F1: Red Bull!• Valvoline was first consumer products company to own

NASCAR team.

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Integration• A car by itself is just a colorful advertisement. • It is the FIRST dollar spent. • It gives you a platform on which to spend more dollars.• Field participation.• TREND: Properties reducing or even waiving fees in

exchange for more promotional commitment.

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Who is Doing it Right?

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The Rights Fee Was Just The Beginning!The Rights Fee Was Just The Beginning!

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Crown Royal presents the Jim Stewart 400

• Team sponsor activates with:– Media Buy– Sweepstakes– Cause Marketing– Publicity

• Entitlement recognized by broadcast, media partners

• Online Essay: “Most Memorable Crown Moment?”

• 15,000 entries, nine finalists• $50,000 charity donation• Jim Stewart

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Retail Promotions

Noticing promotions while shopping NASCAR Fans Non-FansIndex NASCAR Fans vs.

Non-Fans

Store brochures / flyers 66% 54% 122 *

Signs on racks and shelves 62% 48% 129 *

Free standing display w/ product 60% 46% 130 *

Promo/displays at end of aisle 55% 43% 128 *

In-store demos 46% 35% 131 *

Video monitor displays 21% 15% 140 *

Source: Simmons National Consumer Survey (Spring 2006 – Fall 2006) * indicates statistical significance at the 95% confidence level

NASCAR fans are more likely than non-fans to notice and value a variety of promotions when shopping. Retailer to effectively reach these consumers with NASCAR-related themes.

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NASCAR Developments

• New Markets Push (1999-present)– California, Indianapolis, Chicago, Kansas City, New Hampshire– Hoping for New York, Pacific Northwest, Denver

• Lengthened Season• Los Angeles Outreach• Overseas Expansion: More Licensing than Event Strategy

– Canada – CASCAR– Mexico – Busch Series Event– China?– “Stars But Not the Cars”– NBA Model– Strong licensing, merchandising, TV packages– In-country exhibitions

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NASCAR International Expansion• International development and growth is an important long-

term strategic initiative for the industry.

• In a short period, NASCAR has expanded its reach and is now broadcast in over 150 countries and more than 30 languages.

• Expansion into Canada and Mexico represents the first stage of international development. New strategic partnerships in these markets are providing incremental growth opportunities for the industry.

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Activation Learnings -- NASCAR

• The huge run-up in NASCAR sponsorship fees makes activation very expensive.

• Companies choosing to become sponsors are placing bigger bets on more selective group of targets.

• PR is cost-effective alternative to expensive sales promotion, events.

• “Shoulder” TV programming helps.• Sponsorships increasingly multimedia.• Racetrack littered with failed sponsorships,

activation.

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Challenges to NASCAR Activation

• Networks leverage advertising for coverage.• Short-term sponsors.• Multiple sponsors per car.• International activity, but national budgets.• More scrutiny of ROI.• More non-traditional sponsors.• More interactive broadcasts, digital TV.• More “shoulder” programming.• Teams, tracks becoming more adept at negotiating

deals, making sponsorships pricier than ever before.

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Activation: Partners Help

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Leveraging Technology

• Not just marketing which is leveraged . . .

• For Valvoline, racing is laboratory for developing new consumer products.

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Insert EDITED CNBC segment on Steve Williams

Start: 00:50 End: 01:28

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