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Sports Hospitality
By Michael Alan Hamlin
February 16, 2004

Sports Hospitality is not the latest evolutionary manifestation of event marketing, but it's certainly one of the latest - and most exciting. But what is it?

In Avaya's case, it's the chance to take an elite group of customers and prospects behind stage at the Olympics. Avaya sponsors the Olympics by providing advanced wire and wireless communication facilities, which it has been doing since 2000. Its contract runs through the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The company also sponsors other sporting events, such as American football, in its principal markets.

The Philippines is a reasonably important market for Avaya, thanks mostly to the fast-growing contact center industry. I'm told anecdotally that most of the equipment used in call center facilities here is in fact provided by Avaya. If that's the case, there's a pretty good chance executives working in the industry here will have a chance to see the Olympics in four years.

For companies that can't afford the huge budgets an engagement like Avaya's involves, the event industry has begun offering sports hospitality services that provide similar thrills, if not the branding advantages. One of these companies is a firm called smg. The company is part of the MarcusEvans Group, a multinational offering a wide range of event services ranging from high-end summits for multinational CEOs to association congresses.

To understand how smg works, consider its involvement in the China NBA Games in October this year. smg provides a VIP package for around US$17,000 - plus an agency fee of 21 percent - that allows a company to treat 10 guests to a series of exclusive activities associated with the games. Or to be more accurate, the game, which will be between the Houston Rockets and the Sacramento Kings.

The action starts at 9:00 am, with a champagne buffet brunch at the Kerry Centre Hotel in Beijing, complete with attractive prize draws to make sure those valuable customers and prospects all go home with something in their pockets. The brunch is followed at 10:45 am by limousine transfer to Beijing Workers Stadium where the game will actually take place around noon.

Two hours later after the Rockets have trounced the Kings (Right?), the merry group jumps back into the limousines to head back to the Kerry Centre Hotel, where a post tournament cocktail reception carries on until around 4:30 pm. Presumably the staggering guests then retire to dinner and perhaps more drinks, but the sponsorship benefits end with the post-game reception.

In all, the package includes the function room, reserved grandstand seating, the gourmet champagne buffet brunch, the prizes, mementos, "sponsor" signage in the function room, a table centerpiece, the post-tournament reception, television coverage in the function room, uniformed hostesses, and don't forget the premium open bar. All this, I might add, for just $2,057 per guest, assuming that the package allows for a couple of company executives to ride along for free.

Why would a company choose to part with that kind of money for a few hours of somewhat exclusive sports entertainment? Well, for the very same reasons that Avaya spends much larger bucks to entertain customers and prospects prepared to spend millions of dollars. The company that chooses smg's pseudo-sponsorship probably isn't looking for customers that will spend millions of dollars annually with them, rather, likely a million or somewhat less, or a few million at the most.

And apparently that classification of customers does find the offer attractive, and appreciate it, and so the companies that foot the bill feel the investment pays off. Which is why smg and its sister companies offer these packages at some 250 sporting events around the world. Here in Asia, aside from basketball, Formula 1 racing seems to be a big hit. Races in Australia, Shanghai, and Malaysia are all being marketed by smg this year.

Indeed, the smg formula demonstrates one of the principal beauties of events, and that is that they can be designed to fit just about any budget, and still get results.

(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001), and he is currently at work on High Visibility: The Making and Marketing of Asian Professionals into Celebrities. Write him at mahamlin@teamasia.com.).

Copyright © 2003 Michael Alan Hamlin. All Rights Reserved.

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