FIS broadcasted their youth world championships via YouTube to reach a younger generation of fans, and for Benjamin Stoll it is still an “exciting challenge how to engage a young generation – we have to learn the behaviour and patterns of the younger audiences. They have the shortest attention span ever, and there is so much competition outside – we have to be really quick. Twitch is a very important platform, but first many other platforms need to be optimized, we have to do our homework first. And we need to learn from the new generation how to create content and communities around our athletes.”
For Alexander Walkenhorst clubs and federations have to change their minds: “A young athlete wants to create his own content, but currently it needs to be connected with the clubs, the leagues the federations – this is the problem, we are missing opportunities – we need to enable the athletes to do their own story, not regulated by the clubs.”
A major part of the second day of the European Handball Talks was about sport marketing. Andreas Ullmann and Philipp Tappe from company ‘The sports people’ explained how their analysis and expertise bring brands and sports together.
“First, we try to understand the problems and to explore the perspective of fans, leagues, clubs, athletes and partners to find a common line, to find the values and core of the partnership,” said Tappe.
As an example, they analysed EHF club competitions by finding future topics such as society trends like gender equality, the CSR of EHF and sponsors, and the needs of the next generation of players and fans.
“The core of a partnership is the common perspective of all three sides and find joined targets,” said Ullmann.
Three experts from the sports marketings business took a deep dive in the current situation: Alenka Potocnik Anzic (Marketing Director Hisense Europe), Jan Lehmann (Founder Vispex, former CEO Mainz 05 football club), Karsten Petry (chief marketing & sales officer Deutsche Sporthilfe) discussed current developments with Philipp Klotz (Transform Sports).
Sport sponsorships play an important role for Hisense with their brands Gorenje and Hisense – and handball plays an integral role since years for Gorenje as Alenka Potocnik Anzic underlined: “EHF and EHF Marketing are the right partners to reach our European-wide target audience and in supporting our goals, all over Europe, the value for money is good in handball to explore new markets.”
Vispex on the other hand offers a platform for sport media agencies and brands to find the right media rights, which are currently on the market: “The brands want to have data about reach or users, we deliver, and they can choose from their criteria”, said Lehmann.
Potocnik Anzic fully agreed: “In 2017 when we started, we like sports because of passion and emotions, but the owners wanted to have numbers. We analyse our partnerships every year in terms of brand, media, sales, market share and hospitality for our partners, as pillars for our sponsorship decisions. Handball fulfils all our criteria, but the biggest challenge for the future is how to engage the younger generation, for all brands and all sports, we need to find a new way.”