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Wimbledon's marketing strategy
contrasts sharply with the other three grand slams in the game. Courtside
sponsorship is not permitted and the organiser's "all white" rule means that
the big brands behind Federer and friends need to keep their logos to an
unobtrusive three inches square or less. Off the court, sponsorship
opportunities are limited too, with organisers largely restricting
opportunities to those providing essential services for the tournament;
like clocks, computers and, erm... champagne.
By keeping the look and feel of the tournament clean, the stage is cleared
for "Brand Wimbledon" to step up to the centre court argue the marketers,
and the statistics seem to back-up the claim.
Racking up over five million hits during the two weeks of the competition
last year, Wimbledon.org is the most visited of all the grand slam websites. Having
established at least 24 licensees in seven different countries, the brand
also beats all the others in the game when it comes to official merchandise:
Wimbledon generates official merchandise revenues that outstrip those of
Roland Garros - the second strongest Grand Slam brand - by five to one.
So while sponsors down at SW19 may not benefit from the courtside branding
that comes with the other major tournaments, they're drawn in by the brand
prestige that comes with supporting what Wimbledon's organisers call the
world's "premier tournament". And while the marketing business may not like
handing over cash without being able to call the tune, keeping the elite
character of the Wimbledon show means businesses are never far from the
sponsorship manager's door.
Wimbledon's roster of official
sponsors actually sits quite respectably amongst the others. While they may
be hard to spot on the courts, the tournament actually has 14 official
suppliers including IBM, HSBC and Evian. That's just a few short of the U.S. Open where players
sport much larger logos and the courts are adorned with sponsorship
advertisements.
IBM and Rolex are two of the tournament's most established supporters and
both brands have a presence on clocks and scoreboards across the Wimbledon
courts. Since 2006 US operation Ralph
Lauren has also been sneaking under the brand umpire's nose with an
innovative strategy that supplies designer gear to the tournament's
officials.
No longer required to dust off the gym shorts and the plimsolls, today's
Wimbledon ball boys and girls are togged out with clothes that “feature high
performance, fast-drying fabrics for maximum comfort and full range of
motion”, says the RL communications team. (Anyone wondering what's
happened to Boris Becker's dress sense in recent tournaments should note that the US
designer is kitting him out too while he plays the pundit on BBC)
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So how can Wimbledon sponsors
make a racket? |
If they're hidden under a bushel
on the court, what can these sponsors do to maximise a return from their
investment on the other side of the fence. For most, it's about leveraging
the Wimbledon brand prestige via offsite events or "by association" tactics.
Official card to the tournament,
AMEX, kicked off its multi year deal with Wimbledon in 2004 by hosting a
four-day promotion called "Wimbledon at Tower Bridge." The event featured a
floating court on the Thames River with a live concert by Alicia Keys, a
charity pro-celebrity tennis night, and giant live-screen coverage of the
tournament. Meanwhile IBM and Rolex routinely build entire marketing
campaign's based solely on the equity afforded by their relationship with
the tournament.
By keeping the ball firmly in
it's own court, Wimbledon has, arguably, become a brand that needs its
sponsors less than it's sponsors need it. At a reported cost of $10 million,
Ralph Lauren's deal is designed to put the Wimbledon logo on Lauren's
clothes rather than the other way around. Leveraging the prestige that comes
with the Wimbledon brand delivers greater exposure in an elite European
market it is keen to penetrate says the RL team. The business sells a
100-piece line of official Wimbledon attire online and in stores across
Europe, the United States and Japan.
"Wimbledon is selling an experience," says Nader Tavassoli, marketing
professor at the London Business School. "That experience includes
strawberries and cream, the grass courts and a sense
of Britishness, maybe snobbishness even. The bride wearing white at a
wedding is part of the tradition. Does it change the experience if the bride
wears a miniskirt? I think it does.''
We might not have a winner on the court, but Britain's been winning the game
in marketing terms for years.
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