Looking at NBA Jersey Sponsorships
The NBA last year became the first big 4 professional sports league to permit teams to seek sponsors for their uniforms. This isn’t uncommon in sports, soccer has been doing this for years, when the soccer team, Peñarol, from Uruguay put sponsors on their uniforms in the 1950’s. That soon lead to an explosion of sponsorship in European Soccer.
With the NBA allowing advertising on jerseys it was monumental not just for basketball, but the rest of the Big Four Leagues (MLB, NFL, NHL). After one season the NBA’s decision to allow sponsorship has been paying off, in fact the inaugural season with the patches, was the first time the NBA sponsor spend was over $1 billion, at $1.12 billion, a 31% rise from previous season.
The driver for this spending is the logo patches on the front of the jersey. 82 games a year and there are 30 NBA teams that is 2,460 NBA games a year. That is a lot of television time for viewers to see those fancy new patches.
IEG/ESP, a division of ad agency WPP that tracks sponsor spending and ROI on the major US sports leagues, came out to say the jersey patches accounted for $137 million of the years total $1.12 billion, that's a small portion, but that was all just in one NBA. When this report came out, nine teams did not have sponsors on their jersey. Going into this season, only two teams (Indiana Pacers & Oklahoma City Thunder) do not have sponsors on their logos.
GumGum Sports, analyzed logo exposure on social media from the 2017-18 NBA Season determining the top five most-seen logo patches were:
GoodYear on the Cavaliers Jersey
Rakuten on the Warriors Jersey
GE on the Celtics Jersey
Wish on the Lakers Jersey
Stubhub on the 76ers Jersey
They estimated those five teams earned $250 million in exposure, so $50 million per team, just for allowing a sponsor to put their logo on their uniforms. That is a no brainer.
What I found most interesting about the results from one season of having sponsors on logo was the patch being a “social asset” because of all the exposure they were getting from social media over television broadcast. Jeff Katz, General Manager of GumGum Sports, analyzed the exposure from both platforms and discovered Social Media brought in 76% of the media value, compared to 24% from TV broadcasts. Katz explained this when he said:
“The jersey patch is just such a unique asset. Especially because during a game, the gameplay is so fast that it might be tough to pick up the jersey patch in a clear way, but on social media, typically when you’re posting about players, you include a photo that has a player wearing a game jersey, and those are often showcasing the jersey patch. Then with highlight clips as well, they often have slow-motion and close-ups of players doing spectacular things. It’s a tremendous asset that is really defined by social.
The way people consume basketball is changing as technology does. So advertisers and marketers have to realize these trends and get ahead of them, by figuring out where there best return on investment for their advertising or marketing campaigns. After the success the NBA is having, it would not surprise me at all to see the other leagues follow in the near future.