Aaron Rodriguez
Dr. Mark
Nagel
Business
Development and Sales in Sports
July 7, 2020
Interview Report
Jane
Normansell is the Director of Global Partnerships at the Los Angeles Rams. She
is responsible for the team partnerships at the SoFi Stadium and Entertainment
District at Hollywood Park. When searching for a career, Ms. Normansell said,
“When I was searching for a career I did not know that a career in sports
existed.,” This is an interesting statement given that many would assume she
achieved her current position after working toward this goal for all of her
adult life. While in college she began to realize that a career in sports was
possible. While a student at Murray State University she played for the university
soccer team and interned for the baseball team which became the beginning of
her career in sport business. While in the internship she produced the in-stadium
signage for the team, executed radio promotions, and implemented campaigns
on-campus. This helped her understand the business of sport, which then helped her
land an internship with ESPN in content management systems. In that position she
developed expertise in ESPN multimedia platforms and created upfront buy for
the Jack Daniels BBQ sauce brand. Her internship ended during the recession of
2008 which led to a hiring freeze at ESPN. She began to look for a different job
and secured an assistant marketing position at Marshall University who paid for
her graduate school as well as gave her a salary. During her time at Marshall
University, she worked with coaches to get their voices heard through rights
holders, radio, and events as was exposed to the roles of an athletic director.
This experience exposed her to many areas of sports. However, this particularly
piqued her interest in sales, but she didn’t want to be stuck in college
athletics, so she pursued more opportunities in sales outside the university
campus setting. This led to her working for WME/IMG where she was managing key
accounts with Vanderbilt University as well as cross-property accounts with
other SEC schools. During this time her husband’s company bought a company in
California which allowed him to work less and make more money, but required
both of them to move to Southern California. Thankfully she was able to
transfer to Los Angeles where she managed key accounts for the Rose Bowl
Stadium and UCLA Athletics properties
Ms. Normansell continued to work for WME/IMG until 2014, until she learned
about an opportunity with the Rams in St. Louis from one of her mentors for the
position of manager of corporate partnership sales. She continued this position
and working in St. Louis until the Rams relocation to Los Angeles where she
helped with the transition. The work on the relocation developed into a
promotion to her current role as Director of Global Partnerships. She took the
position when she knew there was a second entity of the Rams that would be
handling the stadium side of partnerships which intrigued her due to her pervious
experiences. Her current duties include managing the stadium complex and
selling naming rights and partnerships for the stadium.
Ms. Normansell’s job is not transactional, meaning that products are
not given immediately and that her deals are more complex. This complexity
causes a lot of planning in the fall and allows her to work on about 15-20
sponsorships a year as her sponsors are not looking for immediate signing of
the deal and will work out the details of the deal. Her work usually has her
traveling often to meet with clients and members of the league office to
discuss details and make sure that all parties involved are satisfied with the
elements of the deal and navigate approvals. The league needs to make sure that
the company falls into the values with the NFL as well as the team is
responsible for the company to be aligned with their values as well. For
example, if the Rams wanted to have a marijuana company sponsor them and the
league didn’t feel like the company represented the values of the league then
the deal wouldn’t go through. Currently, during the pandemic these meetings
have been supplemented through conference calls. During meetings to find
agreeable terms on deals brands would expect the ability to make changes to deals.
Ms. Normansell would have to make sure that those changes were both acceptable to the team and the NFL in
order to proceed with the deal.Ms. Normansell said “managing the relationships
between the league, the Rams and the sponsors are the toughest part of my job.”
Managing relationship seems to be more of a struggle given the fact that the NFL
tends to want to control their image and this creates strict rules for
developing sponsorships at the team level. This provides fewer opportunities
for sponsorships given the league is not willing to expand the view of their
league too much. This means that the league is looking to stay as a company
that wants to keep their image the same and is not willing to partner with
companies that stray from the current view of their company. Ms. Normansells
main goal is to get the brand interested and then get the best deal for the
Rams while navigating the complex web of interpersonal relationships with a
multitude of entities. This task seems daunting and in order to succeed it
requires an assortment of types of skills and a mastery of those skills.
To achieve success in bringing in a new partner as well as maintain
relationships with existing partners, Ms. Normansell is very conscious of the
relationships she develops and makes sure not to burn any bridges between her
and companies. Her first step is to become aware of the partners that Kroenke
Sports and the NFL have and looks at how she can bring in companies associated
with them to be a part of a Ram’s partnership. To keep strong relationships,
she always makes sure she can deliver on the things that she agrees on. This
requires meticulous planning and an honest assessment of the abilities of
herself and her team. Another strategy she uses while selling sponsorships is understanding
her client’s budget. This is key to building relationships, so all parties
involved are satisfied and have a long-lasting relationship. She makes sure
that she is not upselling clients and giving them things that may not be
beneficial to the sponsor or their brand. Given this information of what the sponsor
wants, she then layers it with the timing of a project to ensure that the project
is done promptly as well as the sponsor is satisfied with the product and won’t
feel cheated. Given all of this meticulous planning and communication there are
still unexpected circumstances that come while finding terms to a deal.
COVID-19 has created uncertainty in the industry and leaders in the
industry are trying to figure out what daily announcements mean for their work.
One announcement that was made is the concerts will be pushed to 2021 at the
new SoFi stadium. With this new information, Ms. Normansell is coordinating
with leagues, concert coordinators and other event managers to gather
information about which leagues are in a better position at this point and what
changes they are making for reopening and how this may help with their grand
opening. Given this new landscape of a post-COVID world there are a few
developing trends in her industry. Some trends that Ms. Normansell is keeping
an eye out for are which industries are growing and what industries are falling
from COVID-19. Industries such as online groceries will be an industry she is
looking to partner with in the future while she is looking at the tourism
industry and thinking twice about sponsorships from these companies.
Understanding these trends will prove pivotal to the future success of her
organization
Reflecting on Ms. Normansell’s journey she recommends understanding
both sides of a transaction, understanding this will be beneficial whether you
are the sponsor or the team because you will be able to know what the people
you are negotiating with are looking for. She also realized that early in her
sales career she was very hesitant to ask people for money. She then learned
through a mentor that if a company is not going to spend their money with her,
they will spend it with someone else. She realized that there is nothing to
fear or be hesitant about and this fear would cause her to miss out on
opportunities Once she found that out, she was less hesitant to ask for money and
was able to be more successful. From these experiences, what she recommends to
others in the sports industry is to build human connections and develop hard numbers
to prove your success. If you do these things, she believes that you can
control your destiny.
Young people interested in the sports industry can learn from Jane
Normansell. She has provided great insight to me on how things in your career
can change and don’t be afraid to take those opportunities. She also spoke about,
“how when things get hard in your work, don’t be afraid to ask for help” and
“don’t burn bridges”. This statement seems to be something that comes up a lot.
The more one continues to work and speak to others in the sports industry they
will continue to see the truth in her words. Many people who achieve high
positions in sports organizations tend to move around to find opportunities to
improve their skills and have developed relationships with mentors along the
way who help them if they ask. This interview highlights that fact and the winding
road of a successful career. This interconnectivity means that early in sports professionals’
career’s they should be developing the support system in the industry to find
the answers that they will need. Moving forward in one’s career they should be
finding new opportunities no matter where they may take them and hopefully, capitalize
on the opportunities to achieve success.
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