Comparison Between NFL and NBA Global Marketing Strategies
Aaron
Rodriguez
Ent MKT
4330
February
17, 2019
Professor
Akopian
Football
Globalization Journey
The game of football started in Canada
and the United States in the 1800s and since then has grown to one of the most
popular sports in those countries. In the 1930s football had been introduced to
Japan and gained popularity in the country. Japan became the first country
outside of North America to play the sport and establish leagues. In these
early stages football was still small globally but in the 1970s is when there
was a real start for the push of football on the global stage and a huge surge
in the 1980s. Due to the increase in popularity globally, there was a push to
have a world championship. This championship happened in 1999 in Palermo, Italy
and was the first senior world championship. The winner of this first
championship was Japan where they beat Mexico 6-0. To capitalize on this
increase in popularity of football in 2005 the NFL introduced its American Bowl
and NFL Europe. The American Bowl was a series of games during the preseason
played around the world to try and introduce the world to American football.
From this international series, the league had built interest in the sport and
created a developmental league, NFL Europe. NFL EuropeThis American Bowl series
has expanded to regular-season games as well where now a few times a year the teams
go to London to play. These games have been widely successful bringing in over
80,000 fans per game. Although football has tried to establish multiple leagues
worldwide they still fail to make football prominent in those countries, unlike
basketball.
NBA Globalization Journey
Basketball started its globalization
quest in 1893 by Melvin Rideout when it was introduced in France at the new
YMCA building on Paris’s Rue de Trévise which is the oldest original court in
the world today. The next year Brazil was introduced to the game as well and
became the first country in South America to play basketball. In 1895
Basketball was introduced into China in the cities of Shanghai and Tianjin and
two years later it entered Australia. Basketball started to become large in
multiple countries but didn’t become a global brand till the NBA started to
intervene with the “Dream Team” and touring the stars around the world with the
help of sneaker companies. Basketball has become one of the most popular sports
with 825 million fans globally and 108 international players from 42 different
countries in its most prominent league in the NBA.
NFL
strategies for globalization
The NFL has mixed success with its
globalization efforts. In Mexico, they have been extremely successful with the
most fans internationally according to Statista there are 23.3 million fans
with huge drop-offs in the next countries of Brazil at 19.7 million and Canada
at 7.21 million. Their success is largely due to the fact of partnerships with
popular brands in Mexico such as Bud Light, Sabritas, Pepsi, Movistar, and
Dodge. The next step that the NFL took was to make deals with cable providers
in Mexico by giving the rights to televise nine games per year. The televised
games have exposed the youth to the game and have grown popular among them and
teams have been popping up in high schools and colleges. The NFL has realized
this interest in football and partners with schools by donating footballs and
equipment and today in Mexico 2.9 million students play football in their gym
classes according to the National Football League. Fans in Mexico of football
who prefer it over soccer do so according to an LA Times article because of its
focus on strategy, teamwork, and discipline. Despite all these efforts in
Mexico, less than 1% of players are Latino. Although there is a moderate
success in Mexico through most of the world the NFL is unsuccessful in
establishing their league and stars. According to Forbes the reason for this is
the name is confusing in a game with the word “foot” in it there are almost no
feet used in it. Another reason is that is the lack of action in the game,
according to a study by the Wall Street Journal NFL games have an average of 11
minutes of action in a 3-hour game. The last reason that they fail to be
internationally accepted is that they have a perception of not being manly
enough compared to rugby because of players wearing pads.
NBA
Globalization strategy
Although Basketball had been introduced
into many countries since the 1800s the NBA started its Global expansion in
1984 at the peak and rebirth of the league. David Stern and the league decided
to televise the games internationally and the Celtics vs Lakers rivalry helped
reignite the league in the United States as well as expand their fans globally.
In that same year the first European-born and trained player France’s, Hervé
Dubuisson to the New Jersey Nets. Through the 1980s there was a trickle of players
who came in such as now Hall of Fame players Nigeria’s Hakeem Olajuwon and
Germany’s Detlef Schrempf but as soon as the fall of the Soviet Union there
were many foreign-trained players who came into the league bypassing the NCAA
which made the NBA more appealing. In the 1990’s the arrival of Michael Jordan
intrigued the fans domestically and globally. 2 years later the 1992 “Dream
Team” excited the world about the game of basketball and showed them all the
stars of the game. This became the catalyst for the exponential growth of the
game, kids' interest in the game increased who now dreamed of playing in the
most elite league in the world the NBA. The US coaches decided to set up camps
for these kids to capitalize on the new interest of the youth. With the growth
of satellite television and the internet, there were new platforms to watch the
games as well as stars like Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Dirk Nowitzki who
were foreign-trained helped kids realize their dreams were attainable.
How can
the NFL improve?
The NFL has a challenging task when
trying to establish their league in many different countries since athletes
must not only be tall but also big. The NFL should continue to develop their
talent in established countries such as Mexico and Brazil. This will create
stars that kids can look up to just like how kids who watch basketball can look
up to European and Chinese players in those countries. Another platform the NFL
can use to expand the popularity of the game is by increasing visibility. The
league must look into working together with foreign television providers to
show their games in those markets. Another tactic they can use is to provide
online streaming videos to foreign countries and use social media to promote
these games to other countries. Currently, Rugby is the 9th most popular sport
in the world according to World Atlas. There are a lot of
similarities between the two games which means that there is room in other
countries for football to grow. To get the youth into the sport the NFL can establish
flag football leagues all over targeted countries. According to an LA
Times article, the appeal of football in Mexico is the strategy and
teamwork. The NFL can target countries in which rugby is popular and establish
leagues in the offseason. This can be perceived by the youth as a way to keep
in shape for rugby but when the coaches show how fun and strategic the game can
be they can convert these players to football players. During these seasons
they can bring in NFL stars to run camps and have corporate sponsors such as
Pepsi, Microsoft and Amazon provide attractions to bring in the youth. Once the
NFL is popular among the youth they will grow up to star in the NFL and will
make the game of football popular in these countries.
References
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E. (2018, December 17). The NFL Seeks More Mexican Brand Sponsorship. Retrieved
May 5, 2019, from
http://www.mexiconewsnetwork.com/en/news/the-nfl-seeks-more-mexican-brand-sponsorship/
Gold,
J. (2017, June 23). 10 years after NFL Europe's demise, alumni remember league
fondly. Retrieved from
http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/19638357/oral-history-10-years-nfl-europe-demise-alumni-such-kurt-warner-remember-developmental-league-fondly
International
Federation of America Football (IFAF). (2016, September 13). Retrieved May 5,
2019, from
http://footballcanada.com/team-canada/international-federation-of-america-football-ifaf/
Keeler,
S. (2016, June 23). 'You didn't play to get rich': What killed NFL Europe?
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https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/jun/23/you-didnt-play-to-get-rich-what-killed-nfl-europe
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Linthicum,
K. (2017, November 17). Football - the American kind - is all the rage in
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J. (2017, November 23). The NFL is struggling. The AFL and NRL should take
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R. (2007, June 30). N.F.L. Pulls the Plug on Its League in Europe. Retrieved
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