SportsTravel

The Madness of Sponsorship Make‐Goods

How brands and properties are navigating the ever‐shifting sports and entertainment landscape

Posted On: August 13, 2020 By : Matt Traub

There are clauses in sponsorship agreements that normally gather dust after the contracts are signed, namely force majeure and substitution.

As we’re all well aware, there is nothing normal about 2020 and the dust has been shaken off of those typically skimmed-over clauses. Force majeure and substitution, the terms as we know them, have had their time in the sun over the past five months and it’s not surprising that daily make-good conversations abound in the sponsorship business.

While most properties were proactive in the second quarter of 2020 to address force majeure and get right into substitution or make-good discussions with brands, the bumps in the road are far from over.

Just when we think things are moving in the right direction with a substitute benefits plan, another bump appears and adjustments need to be made. Postponed or canceled events, league policy shifts, brand strategy adjustments — the list goes on. The best-laid plans continue to evolve and change.

In a previous article, I said that 2020 would be a year of contingency planning, optionality, resilience and innovation. Knowing what we know now, I would also add patience to that list. Believe me, it’s a muscle I’m developing more and more each day as I navigate the ever-changing landscape of sports and entertainment.

Let’s dig into the details a bit, shall we?

Due to the number of make-goods happening in sports, there is a general lack of inventory in team–controlled media, digital and social assets. Most properties have hit a saturation point. With that said, innovative team marketers and agencies are working together to find new platforms that will deliver value to clients.

To support the make-good process, professional leagues are working with teams to add incremental TV-visible signage placements as well as access to limited media inventory and licensed content. This has been invaluable for teams in supporting and maintaining their most significant signage and entitlement partners.

Here is a snapshot on how the leagues are supporting teams so far.

As TV ratings begin to roll in, we will see if this inventory delivers enough value to cover partner losses. In many cases, I think this new league-approved inventory becomes part of the team’s permanent offering.

Agencies like ours are working hard to redefine social activation during the pandemic. Some of the executions may even survive and become a new platform for the post‐pandemic world — a silver lining perhaps.

A few things for properties to keep in mind:

How did we get here, and where are we headed next?

Before the pandemic, brands invested with properties because they believed in the value of the IP affiliation and event-marketing assets. After the pandemic, that will continue. The key to success is in how the two parties agree to work together during these strange times. The result of our tireless planning (and re‐planning) will set the stage for the future.

As my mother always told me, be kind and treat others as you would like to be treated.


Molly Arbogast is a sports marketing expert with more than 25 years of experience on the team/property side of the business. Her firm, POV Sports Marketing, specializes in working with brands and properties to secure sports sponsorships. Over her sports career, she has worked in sponsorship development for the Philadelphia Eagles/Lincoln Financial Field, Learfield, NBA/WNBA, Palace Sports & Entertainment and International Management Group (IMG).

Posted in: Expert Advice, Major League Baseball, NHL, Perspectives, Sports Sponsorship


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