If you want to grow you have to think big, but what if you lack the numbers to measure growth, or don't know where growth potential lies? It's no secret online video is booming -- North American
marketers are expected to boost video advertising by more than 60% -- and this is especially big news for organizations still learning the value of well placed and timely short-form video highlights.
Strategic distribution is enabling sports content providers to dissect and understand their fans to a degree previously unimaginable. It's also helping them think in much bigger terms about the
market reach of their sport and potential for increased advertising and sponsorship revenues.
For example, one professional league had strong, grassroots local market penetration, but
lacked both a thorough understanding of its fan base and an ability to gauge potential for growth that would attract premium national and international brand attention. Besides bums in seats,
benchmarks were few. When the league began distributing video highlights, it proved to be a game-changer. Following video highlight distribution, broadcast impressions went from 0 to more
than 56 million, a whopping 850% yearly increase in exposure. That's a video metric that matters and one that the league can take to the bank.
Sophisticated metrics reveal much more
about viewership than counting eyeballs; a treasure of data can be mined for surprising nuances about sports fan behavior. For example, quick turnaround of highlights is proving more effective for
league teams than producing HD-quality content with slow motion and other effects. In one case, a team that failed to make the post season received 558% more impressions than a play-off caliber
competitor. The difference was in the average highlight turnaround time: 58 minutes, or 59% faster than the higher performing team. The conclusion: Timeliness trumps production quality when it comes
to highlight impressions.
Here's another example. By uploading period-by-period highlights, teams can distribute content on prime-time evening news slots between 5:00 pm and 6:30 p.m. even
while play is underway. For one team, this resulted in 190,000 views for the combined evening newscasts, 62% more than the late night and early morning newscast views. The lesson: Sports fans want
highlights fresh, even though the referee may not have blown the final whistle.
Sports are already considered brand-safe, but when leagues drill deep into viewership data, value grows. On the
macro level, the league is able to think well beyond its traditional grassroots base. That's why short-form video is like an overlooked gold vein for sports leagues and organizations; mine it and
they'll start leveraging the full value of their brand.