Analyzing the Live Nation brand needs to start with the experience customers have when they purchase tickets and attend concerts. The value of live events is in how effectively there are promoted and how easily customers can quickly gain access to tickets, ticket packages and entire entertainment packages. Live Nation's branding has concentrated more on the performers, less on the experience, and have also not paid attention to the mobility factors including having a solid smartphone and table strategy (Tabitha, Hede, Rentschler, 2009). While the actual events the company produces and delivers are exceptional, the experiences of booking them are often problematic and require personal assistance from telephone service centers and customer service representatives. The more complex the event, the more manual the process becomes within Live Nation. After analyzing their financial statement, this fact became clear; the more gross margin they generate the higher their costs of sales. The hard reality for Live Nation is that the more attractive or exclusive the event, the more challenging they become to buy from. From a branding perspective, this is exactly the opposite of what they want to achieve. The essence of entertainment branding is a solid foundation of setting accurate, realistic customer expectations and then deliberately exceeding them on every fact of the experience, beginning with ticket purchased, through getting to and attending the event and the memories that have been formed as a result (Pihlström, Brush, 2008). Entertainment brands grapple with a particularly challenging set of circumstances, as the brand must reflect the overall experience and identity of the business while also managing to define and execute against expectations effectively (Hemphill, 2003). Nowhere is this shift more apparent than in the areas of mobility platforms and support for multiple marketing and selling channels (Verkasalo, 2011). Live Nation has failed to capture the full value of mobility platforms for entertainment, and as a result is in danger of seeing their entire business model become obsolete. The advent of mobility-based branding that supersedes and becomes even more strategically important than off-line (print) and online presence via websites was predicted six years ago and is today gathering momentum quickly (Vlachos, Vrechopoulos, Pateli, 2006). For Live Nation to retain and grow its customer base and also fend off competitors, it will need to concentrate on its mobility strategy not at the event level as it does today, but from a platform perspective, just as the company has done with the Web in the past (Okazaki, Barwise, 2011). For Live Nation the future requires that they make the brand part of the experience itself; today they are disjointed in a very competitive, turbulent market.
National Basketball Association
Marketing in the Arts and Entertainment Industry
A Branding Analysis of the National Basketball Association
The National Basketball Association (NBA) continues to define best practices in the use of experiential marketing, video marketing, intensive use of integrated marketing communications (IMC) and advanced analytics in entertainment marketing. The NBA's marketing strategies are specifically focused on creating then quickly transforming passive spectators to focused experiencers. Using promotional strategies that sustain focused experiencers, the NBA has a series of IMC strategies to create absorbed identifiers, making them the most active and profitable customer segment. This progression from passive spectators to focused experiencers and on to absorbed identifiers is also supported through the continual use of analytics to measure audience and fan satisfaction.
Executive Summary
Of all professional sports leagues throughout North America, the NBA shows the greatest efficiency and focus on transforming passive spectators to focus experiencers and on to absorbed identifiers. This progression is accomplished through intelligent, highly focused use of digital and offline educational strategies, relevant promotional strategies and customer-centered informational strategies. What unifies this strategy of transforming first-time visitors or passive spectators to absorbed identifiers or committed fans is a well-orchestrated IMC campaign structure that allows for fans to define their own experience while also continually monitoring their satisfaction levels with several metrics including SERVQUAL. The use of SERVQUAL to measure the distance between expectations and experiences is very valuable for experiential marketers (Sayre, 2008). The NBA unifies all their marketing strategies together in a single integrated Web-based platform, scalable across the 30 teams in the league. The NBA excels at experiential marketing as a result.
Introduction
The NBA is comprised of 30 franchises, with 29 located in the U.S. And one in Canada. Of the many sports leagues that exist in North America, the NBA, founded in 1964, is considered to have the most affluent fan base, media revenues and licensing revenues of all North American professional sports leagues (Caudill, Mixon, 1998).
The Venue
The NBA has learned that the venues they hold their events in must have physical motivators and ease of access, including an aesthetically pleasant architecture and atmosphere. As a result, the NBA defines their venue requirements to seat at least 30,000 comfortably while also providing for easy access to public transportation, onsite parking and adjacent dining. These attributes of venues are defined by Sayre (2008) for entertiainmentscapes are also evident in NBA standards for venues. The NBA requires configurability for their facilities to support international broadcasting equipment as well (Mongeon, Winfree, 2012).
Marketing Activities
Event-based entertainment that relies heavily on experiential marketing is among the most competitive and mercurial in how quickly it must change to stay in step with customer's tastes and preferences. The NBA as a provider of experiential events must strive for consumer identity formation quickly and sustain it through the transformation of passive spectators to absorbed identifiers. The consumer identity formation process varies by type, content and duration of entertainment options for the consumer; creating a profitable base of absorbed identifiers is key to making this transformation successful (Hackley, Tiwsakul, 2006). The NBA relies heavily on an IMC-based strategy that balances digital and offline media, with the majority of their budgets going to the former as digital is more measurable. What has been particularly effective for the league's marketing strategies is the emphasis on the egalitarian nature of media across all platforms today, specifically the role of Web 2.0 social media channels (Napoli, 2010). By combining the egalitarian nature of social media and intensive use of cross-marketing, endorsement and a focus on unique, memorable experiences at their events, the NBA continues to profitable grow today. As Napoli (2010) has contended in his analysis, the greater the level of egalitarian basis of communications, the greater the clarity and precision in changing audiences, transforming them from passive spectators into absorbed identifiers or fans.
Assessment of the NBA's Marketing Activities
The NBA is one of the most forward-thinking sports leagues globally in how they use educational strategies to capture passive spectators, turning them into absorbed identifiers and eventually an active audience (Berman, Down, Hill, 2002). The marketing activities that the NBA relies on for transforming passive spectators into absorbed identifiers or an active audience are assessed in this section.
National Television Advertising
The NBA relies on broadcast television at a national level as one of its foundational educational strategies to gain passive spectators and turn them into focused experiencers. The messaging of their television campaigns focus on the NBA experience, and how it creates valuable memories shared by friends and family (Ross, 2007).
Television as a broadcast medium is ideally suited for creating a very broad, highly effective educational strategy. Research into the effectiveness of video marketing indicates that response rates are often in significant double figures, often being as high as 49% or more in some cases (Aoki, 1999). Conversion rates have been recorded as high as 23% with Return on Investment (ROI) known to exceed 1200% (Aoki, 1999).
The NBA relies on the broad reach of television to promote the experiences of being at their games, in addition to educating the passive spectators of the value of being focused experiencers. The progression of television ads throughout a given season seek to move passive spectators to focused experiencers, and on to absorbed identifiers or fans. The three-stage approach to using television to deliver an effective educational strategy can be seen in the lifecycle-based approach the league relies on. Each of the three types of dominant messaging strategies, educational, promotional and informational, are all sequenced to keep a steady stream that appeal to passive spectator, focused experiencers and absorbed identifiers. This approach to a sequenced messaging strategy on television also aligns well with their more strategic IMC framework as the call to action in all their television advertising, regardless of messaging strategy, is for the audience member to visit NBA team's websites (Mongeon, Winfree, 2012).
The NBA has been careful to also vary the content in each of their television advertisements that are purpose-built for educational strategies, promotional strategies or informational strategies as well. In the television ads created to support promotional and informational strategies, the NBA is giving the audience a chance to see what the day in the life of a typical NBA player is. The intent of this strategy is to create consumer identity formation (Hackley, Tiwsakul, 2006) with the league and its superstars, further motivating the focused experiencers to become absorbed identifiers. This has been the most effective television-based strategy in league sports in 2011 and through 2012 as the NBA superstars are known for guarding their privacy closely (Mongeon, Winfree, 2012).
In terms of evaluating this strategy, it continues to be one of the most effective in transitioning focused experiencers to absorbed identifiers in all of professional sports. By opening up their personal lives and showing how their typical days are filled with workouts, team meetings and being at home with their families, the NBA has given the focused experiencers and absorbed identifiers an opportunity to also experience the life of an NBA athlete. The results have been very powerful for creating identification between each of these audiences and the league's events.
The NBA Main Website and Microsites
The NBA uses its main website and microsites representing each of its 30 teams as the primary platform for moving passive spectators to focused experiencers through the use of site personalization, exciting video content and video marketing, and the opportunity to save money on first-time game tickets.
What makes the website and team microsite so effective is the focus on giving passive spectators an opportunity to see what the experience of attending an NBA game is like before actually going. The NBA has created an immersive video experience on their main website and microsites, all aimed at gaining the Awareness, Interest, Desire and Action (AIDA) (Sayre, 2008) within the passive spectator base of their audience. Further supporting the effectiveness of the main NBA website and its team microsites is personalization and recommendation systems specifically designed to drive attention, sustain interest, create desire and gain action. In effect the NBA has created a highly personalized AIDA framework to more quickly move passive spectators on to focused experiencers and eventually absorbed identifiers (Sayre, 2008). Integrating AIDA into their IMC strategies and having the website and microsites serve as the foundation for call to action also brings a level of analytics accuracy and precision to marketing programs the league had not had in the past (Mongeon, Winfree, 2012). By having this level of analytical precision, the league is better able to understand the effectiveness and profitability contributions of every marketing strategy they use.
The website and team microsites also function as the central hub of all IMC strategies for the league globally due to their ease of configurability and the real-time analytics they provide. The sophistication of analytics the NBA marketing team uses gives the marketing teams the ability to quantify the size, trending and potential of purchase and repurchase across passive spectators, focused experiencers and absorbed identifier audience segments (Berman, Down, Hill, 2002).
The analytics that each of the league's teams marketing departments use also pinpoint the most and least interesting aspects or content (both digitally written and video-based) delivered across the website and microsites. The league marketing teams have also experimented with more interactive experiences with passive spectators, focused experiencers and absorbed identifiers through the use of social media. This also validates the findings of Napoli with regard to the egalitarianism of content in marketing and its role in creating active audiences who become absorbed identifiers over time (Napoli, 2010). The role of social media in any experiential marketing strategy must be predicated on audience participation that is so convincing that it inspires AIDA to be attained in a marketing strategy (Bernoff, Li, 2008). Further, the role of social media can create the strongest of fall links between those evaluating an experientially-driven brand and those that choose to become an active audience (Basheer, Ibrahim, 2010).
By coordinating all of these factors into a single unified IMC strategy, the NBA is creating a very efficient progression path for moving passive spectators to focused experiencers, and on to absorbed identifiers. Using the real-time analytics that Web 2.0 technologies provide combined with social media, the NBA marketing department is able to chart the progression of passive spectators to absorbed identifiers along the AIDA Model (Sayre, 2008).
Apple iPhone and Google Android Mobile Applications
The NBA has among the most affluent sports fans in North America the core absorbed identifiers or active audience in their customer base is considered affluent by any measure in this region of the world. The median income of the typical NBA fan is over $100,000 U.S. A year, with the majority spending over $150 per ticket to attend a single game (Ross, 2007). Apple reports that the single most-watched live sport on their best-selling iPad is NBA playoff basketball games (Apple Investor Relations, 2012).
The NBA uses its mobility strategies, also segmented like microsites, to drive passive spectators to purchase their first ticket. The mobility platform has proven highly effective for moving audience members from educational to promotional strategy content, primarily using visually-based content to achieve this. The use of promotional strategies on their mobility-based sites that rely on video-based content are even more effective than couponing as a promotional strategy (Mongeon, Winfree, 2012). This is because the videos provide the focused experiencers an opportunity to see what the experience of being at a game is like before actually attending one (Ross, 2007). Mobility is quickly emerging as the most effective marketing strategy the NBA has for underscoring just how unique their experiential value proposition is. It is clear that by combining the convenience and increasingly higher levels of performance mobility platforms provide along with customization of video content is driving faster consumer identity formation in the focused experiencer segment of their audience (Hackley, Tiwsakul, 2006). Video then is emerging as a highly effective medium for driving audiences from passive spectator status to focused experiencer, as the delivery of video in real-time gives the potential Audience participant a chance to view the excitement of an NBA contents without having to forego other entertainment alternatives (Ross, 2007). This significantly reduces the cognitive dissonance that passive spectators feel when comparing the time cost of attending an NBA event relative to staying with their more familiar and often habitually attending entertainment alternatives over time (Sayre, 2008). Video marketing has continued to show above-average returns on investment for the NBA as well, which is consistent with previous studies (Aoki, 1999).
Of the two applications, the Apple iOS-based version is more popular by a factor of seven based on downloads, and the reason fro this is the dominance of the Apple iPhone and iPad throughout the NBA customer base (Mongeon, Winfree, 2012). This is fortuitous for the NBA as those consumers who are brand-loyal to Apple have higher incomes by at least 30% or more than Google Android users (Apple Investor Relations, 2012). This also provides a very effective marketing platform and co-branding segment of the broader IMC strategy for the NBA, as the iTunes store is a trusted e-commerce platform globally. The NBA can quickly create the urgency and excitement of moving from passive spectator to focused experiencer through the continual promoting and updates of their Apple iOS apps. The Google Android application has just 30% of the downloads and needs more emphasis on personalized video options to gain greater acceptance; yet the demographics and profile of the typical NBA customer align more closely with the Apple iOS customer.
Recommendation
The NBA has created and continually refines one of the most effective IMC-based strategies in professional sports globally. The combining of websites, microsites, mobility strategies and the continual use of educational strategies to gain passive spectators' attention has proven to be highly effective. The league marketing department has also been able to segment the educational strategies, promotional strategies and information strategies to the level of interest and activity of each audience member. They have done this through an innovative integration of the AIDA Model combined with the passive spectators, focused experiencers and absorbed identifiers' interests and motivators. This has all been accomplished by having the website and microsites serve as the hub of the IMC strategies, as these digital properties provide the NBA with an opportunity to quickly quantify audience member interest and also understand what content they find most and least appealing. The IMC strategy as designed is effective today, yet the pace of change in the audience base is increasing, forcing the NBA to be more finely tuned to their preferences and wants more than ever before.
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