Friday, February 20, 2009

Sports that Tweet

The hottest new Web 2.0 site isn’t really that new at all. Twitter—the subject of recent adulation from The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, LA Times and more—started as former Blogger creator Jack Dorsey’s side project in March 2006. Now this stripped-down, not-for-profit social networking site has an avid group of followers, estimated at around 7 million. Not so much compared with Facebook’s 132 million unique users, or Myspace’s 117 million users, but a rapidly-growing vanguard of early adopters that Web 2.0-savvy sports properties shouldn’t overlook.

So far, an impressive collection of sports apparel manufacturers, teams, sports media, and athletes have staked out virtual territories on Twitter. The NFL has 600 followers (and no posts), while ESPN has 36,000 followers and Lance Armstrong has 150,000 followers.

Among sports video games, EA Sports has some of the best content. About two dozen employees, developers, producers, and community managers actively tweet, including Will Kinsler (Raczilla), who has 1,300 eyes reading his Madden and NCAA series posts. Sports game publishers Activision, 2K Sports, SEGA, and Sony Computer Entertainment also have Twitter accounts.

At minimum, a Twitter presence can help communicate with customers and fans. At best, Twitter can build a brand by engaging a pre-segmented market of tech-hungry loyalists, sharing insights into upcoming products, pointing fans to a Web site or other forum, and relating with consumers in a non-corporate setting.

The white hot risk with Twitter seems clear, though. Even at 7 or 8 million unique users, Twitter has a lot of catching up to do before it can compete with its larger Web 2.0 kin, let alone traditional media giants. But, like Ray Kinsella in Field of Dreams, many companies are betting that if they build it, fans will come.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Warsaw Guest Speakers

Last winter I posted a list of the fantastic guest speakers and visitors who came to the Warsaw Sports Business program. Here’s a list of sports industry leaders who have recently shared their insights with MBA students in my program.


Adam Antoniewicz, NBA China

Stephen Baines, Sports Business International

David Baker, AFL

Eric Barmack, ESPN

Lee Berke, LHB Sports

Declan Bolger, Stoneybatter, Inc.

Gert Boyle, Columbia Sportswear

Justin Byczek, NBC Sports

Carter Carnegie, NTRA

Tim Chen, NBA China

Emilio Collins, NBA

Jason Day, IMG

Len DeLuca, ESPN

Andy Dolich, San Francisco 49ers

Dave Doroghy, Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic & Paralympic Games

David Dunn, Athletes First

Dennis Farrell, Big West Conference

Sal Galatioto, Galatioto Sports Partners

Chris Granger, NBA

Stephen Greyser, Harvard University

Arthur Griffiths, Octagon

Eric Guthoff, IMG

David Haney, AFL

Chris Heck, NBA

Heather Higgins, NTRA

Stu Jackson, NBA

Akash Jain, NBA

Patt Keck, AT&T

Erica Kerner, adidas

Hollis Kosco, IMG

Peter Land, NTRA

Amy Lasky, NTRA

Sheng Li, Visa

Hunter Lockman, NY Knicks

Donna Lopiano, Sports Management Resources

Joe Mattson, Relay Worldwide

Mike McCarley, NBC Sports

Chris McCloskey, AFL

Jim McDonald, Cornerstone Marketing

Nolan Mecham, IMG

Jason Michelotti, Millsport

Jim Noel, ESPN

Vince O’Brien, General Motors R*Works

Donna Orender, WNBA

Lisa Orzechowski, Relay Worldwide

Andy Peake, Under Armour

Jeff Price, Sports Illustrated

Shannon Pruitt, FremantleMedia

Emma Qui, Fudan University

Dave Rosen, Electronic Arts

Peter Rotondo Jr., NTRA

Peter Rotondo Sr., NTRA

John Rozeira, General Motors R*Works

Beth Schnitzer, Pier 39

Adam Silver, NBA

Andrew Sippel, ESPN

David Stern, NBA

Robert Strand, Jarden Outdoor Solutions

Lucy Strong, Octagon

Tyler Vaught, EA Sports

Marvin Washington, University of Alberta

Carter Westfall, Helios Partners

Pat Zeedick, Nike

Chris Zimmerman, Vancouver Canucks