logo
The 2025 Sports Playbook: How Brands Win With Fandom And Streaming

The 2025 Sports Playbook: How Brands Win With Fandom And Streaming

Forbes14 hours ago
As football season approaches, so too does one of the greatest annual marketing opportunities in America: sports sponsorships. For brands aiming to engage loyal, high-energy audiences, there may be no better channel than sports. From packed college stadiums to prime-time NFL slots, sports offer unique moments of community, culture, and connection.
But how can brands do more than just slap their name on a scoreboard? To understand the strategic blueprint for modern sponsorships, I spoke with Mike Proulx, Research Director at Forrester and author of Maximize the Value of Your Sports Sponsorships, along with two companion reports on case studies and activation planning tools.
Loyalty in the Age of Fandom
Proulx opened with a bold truth: 'Sports fandoms are among the most loyal and active communities that exist.' Whether it's Alabama or Ohio State, the Kansas City Chiefs or the Eagles, sports fans show up with unmatched intensity. And yet, the sports landscape is evolving. Traditional leagues like the NFL and NCAA football remain juggernauts, but emerging formats are attracting fresh and often younger demographics. Pickleball, cricket, women's leagues, and even combat sports like UFC and WWE are expanding the fan base and offering brands new playing fields.
A New Playbook: Four Phases of Sponsorship Strategy
At the heart of Proulx's research is a four-part lifecycle model for maximizing ROI: Selection, Planning, Activation, and Renewal. Each phase requires discipline—and creativity.
1. Selection: Know Your Why
Proulx emphasized that the most overlooked—but vital—starting point is alignment. Brands must ensure their identity and mission match the culture of the sport and league. One standout example? AARP's sponsorship of pro pickleball. The match was natural—Pickleball skews 50+, and AARP stands for healthy, active aging. 'It just makes sense,' Proulx said.
Other strong alignment examples include:
Even offbeat examples like Liquid Death's Eagles sponsorship show the complexity of modern deals. While the alignment may not be obvious, the brand secured pouring rights for iced tea, which helped them test new product lines in key markets like Philadelphia.
2. Planning: Don't Just Sponsor—Co-Create
Gone are the days of cookie-cutter bronze, silver, and gold packages. Today's best sponsorships involve co-creation. According to Proulx, brands should work with leagues to create ownable, meaningful moments—rather than just paying for logo placements. The best sponsorships are collaborative, bespoke, and steeped in shared storytelling.
3. Activation: Squeeze the Juice
Proulx was blunt: 'If you're only running TV ads and putting your name on a stadium, you're leaving value on the table.' Smart brands plan across three key moments: before, during, and after the event. Activation must include on-site engagement, real-time content capture, and amplification through social and digital. It's about turning presence into participation. He cited tools from his activation framework that give marketers a structured way to plan, deploy, and extend their sponsorship reach.
4. Renewal: Measurement Is the Missing Link
While brands are pouring more money into sponsorships, many still struggle to measure ROI. The default metrics—awareness and consideration—are helpful but often insufficient. To justify multi-year deals, Proulx recommends tying performance back to the original business objective, whether that's entering a new market, expanding reach, or engaging a new demo.
The Streaming Scramble: Media's New End Zone
Proulx noted that live sports are among the last bastions of must-watch TV. With over 90% of top-viewed shows being sports broadcasts, every major streamer is battling for rights.
Streaming will soon become the primary pipeline for live sports—and with it, a massive shift in advertising strategy.
As the sports sponsorship arena grows more crowded and more fragmented, brands need to be more intentional than ever. Fandom is powerful, but it must be earned. As Proulx reminded me, 'Sponsorships are more than a logo—they're a relationship.' For brands willing to do the hard work of alignment, co-creation, and activation, the reward is massive: a seat in the hearts—and rituals—of fans who rarely forget those who show up.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside the Courtland Sutton deal
Inside the Courtland Sutton deal

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Inside the Courtland Sutton deal

The Broncos have been securing their key players to long-term contracts. One such player to get a new deal was receiver Courtland Sutton. Due to make $14 million in 2025, Sutton recently signed a four-year, $92 million extension. That's a new-money average of $23 million per year. Here's the full breakdown of the contract, per a source with knowledge of the terms: 1. Signing bonus: $18.5 million. 2. 2025 base salary: $4 million, fully guaranteed. 3. 2026 option bonus: $12 million, fully guaranteed. 4. 2026 base salary: $4.735 million, fully guaranteed. 5. 2026 per-game roster bonus: $765,000 total, fully guaranteed but must be earned. 6. 2027 base salary: $19.235 million, $1 million of which is guaranteed for injury and becomes fully guaranteed on the fifth day of the 2027 league year. 8. 2027 per-game roster bonus: $765,000 total. 9. 2028 base salary: $20.735 million. 10. 2028 per-game roster bonus: $765,000 total. 11. 2029 base salary: $23.375 million. 12. 2029 per-game roster bonus: $765,000 total. The deal has $40 million fully guaranteed at signing. The other $1 million in injury guarantees vests in 2027. It's clearly a second-tier deal. Good but not among the highest-paid of all receivers. With Bengals receiver Ja'Marr Chase now north of $40 million, Sutton is at $23 million in new-money APY. From signing, the five-year deal has an annual average of $21.2 million.

Jakorian Bennett-Thomas Booker trade grades: Who won the Eagles-Raiders deal?
Jakorian Bennett-Thomas Booker trade grades: Who won the Eagles-Raiders deal?

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jakorian Bennett-Thomas Booker trade grades: Who won the Eagles-Raiders deal?

The Philadelphia Eagles and Las Vegas Raiders just pulled off a player-for-player trade, as the Raiders sent cornerback Jakorian Bennett to the Eagles for defensive tackle Thomas Booker IV. The Eagles needed a bit more depth in the secondary, and the Raiders needed a bit more depth on the defensive line. For each player, this is a chance to press for more playing time with their new teams. However, how did these teams grade out with this player-for-player swap? As you can probably expect, there is a real winner in this, and he is not the general manager for Las Vegas. Let's grade this August NFL trade and determine who got the edge on the deal. Eagles grade Yes, the Eagles won this. Of course they did. We're not sure how the Eagles got Bennett, an ascending talent who flashed real potential with the Raiders, without having to give up any draft capital. Durability has been a bit of a concern for the third-year cornerback, but he could thrive in a rotational role and could even push to start at the second outside corner spot opposite Quinyon Mitchell. It's a little trite at this point to pull out the "How did Howie Roseman get away with this?!" sign, but this is a sweet deal for a young player pressing for a higher ceiling. Giving up only Booker, squarely a role player for the Eagles, is a steal for a player who could push for a starting job. Grade: A Raiders grade The player isn't the problem. After the team's surprise release of defensive tackle Christian Wilkins, the Raiders needed more depth in the trenches. Booker earned snaps with the Eagles last year in their stacked defensive tackle room. That alone gives him a pretty good inside track to making the Las Vegas roster and earning playing time with his new team. He may well be a nice add for first-year general manager John Spytek. However, the fact that he didn't even get a low-round draft pick to go along with Booker for Bennett, the superior player who could push to start at cornerback for Philadelphia... rookie mistake. The Raiders will probably regret this deal... not for adding Booker, but for only getting a single player out of trading away a rising player on a rookie deal like Bennett. Grade: C+ This article originally appeared on For The Win: Jakorian Bennett-Thomas Booker trade grades: Who won Eagles-Raiders deal?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store