Building on its sports media metrics, Nielsen is adding a broader sports sponsorship investment measure to offer a more holistic view of sports media investments.Nielsen’s return on sponsorship investment (ROSI) solution offers what the company says will be a measure of sponsorship investments based on sales revenues and brand health over a set
period. Those selling sports sponsorships can determine potential revenue data for existing and new partners.
The measure revolves around four key areas: Sponsorship logo
exposure; sales impact attribution; fan demographics; and brand sponsorship impact, which includes awareness, consideration and purchase data.
Nielsen estimates that nearly half
of sponsorships drive 3% or more of total sales for brands, with 16% of sponsorships performing at a higher level -- 5% or more. That can result in millions or billions of dollars for large global
brands making such deals.
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Nielsen says the impetus for this measurement comes amid the COVID-19 pandemic -- now a year old. During this period, there was mass disruption of major
sports leagues and events that were cancelled or postponed around the world.
As a result, the company says the “uncertainty caused by the global COVID-19 pandemic has
resulted in even more scrupulous spending and sharper focus on return on investment measurement across all marketing activities and vehicles. Consequently, the industry is calling for a measurement
framework that validates sponsorships’ contribution to sales revenue both in the short and long term.”
Nielsen Sports already measures sponsor logo tracking and media
valuation, as well as providing marketing-mix modeling.