Archives for November 2011

“Content is another word for too much crap,” Sports Illustrated Executive Says

Ford (left) and McDonell

Terry McDonell, Editor, Time Inc. Sports Group, and Mark Ford, president, Time Inc. Sports Group, debuted today in an video interview where they said they didn’t know how Sports Illustrated would monetize its sports social media, and McDonell called “content another word for too much crap.”

Speaking to MeetTheBoss.tv, McDonell and Ford don’t say anything all that different than what sports social media leaders at major print publishing brands are saying today. It is the unfocused nature of the interview that was unusual.

MeetTheBoss.tv focuses on “business challenges that matter today, clearly explaining the solutions, competitive strategies, people, and thinking around them,” but it is also a content provider aimed at aspiring executives. That may help explain the free-wheeling, non-substantive nature of the SI executive’s comments.

The interview underscores that few, if anyone, really knows how to make money on sports content as it flows to smartphones and tablet devices, and just a few basic principles are what business leaders have to go on as they push brands further into the social community space.

In leading the interview, MeetTheBoss.tv points up Sports Illustrated was first to market with a tablet application that delivered a major magazine brand to readers. Later, it brings up the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue was one of the first to include experiential marketing, smartphone, and tablet distribution for a major print product. McDonell said experimenting with sports social media has opened up SI’s corporate structure.

“Specifically at SI everybody basically created new jobs for themselves,” McDonell said. “It got fast and fun. We started inviting everyone from I.T. (information technology) at SI to our parties, and they acted like they had never been invited to a party before. So, they all showed up and then pretty soon they said, “pssstt what about this”…(Pretty soon), we had a real hot unit, and — you know — we haven’t cooled off much.

Then SI’s McDonell says,

“Content” is another word for too much crap. If you can break through that and not have “content” but have something good, people will pay for it.”

In making his “content is another word for too much crap” comment, McDonell plays off a famous line made famous by Sumner Redstone, who is majority owner of  CBS CorporationViacomMTV NetworksBET, and the film studio Paramount Pictures. At the dawn of the Internet as a commercial medium, when everyone was trying to figure out what dot.com meant to media, it was Redstone who famously said “content is king.” Microsoft chairman Bill Gates borrowed the famous line, and wrote an article in 1996 titled “Content is King.” Eleven years later, Redstone wrote in 2007 an article titled “If Content is King, Copyright is Its castle.”

In a section of the interview where McDonell and Ford say SI doesn’t plan to monetize sports social media content, the executives said the focus is on authentic content.

“We have some big-time social media people at Sports Illustrated,” McDonell says. “All that stuff works for us but it is kind of an orchestra coming together. I’m not sure. I’m not sure how we get the money.”

Ford then says,

“We don’t even use that language (referring to money). It is about building an authenticate community and an audience that’s true to the brand. Through that, opportunities will come up..It would be a big mistake to try to monetize that too quickly.”

McDonell adds,

“It is not a community. To be really successful, it has to be beyond community. It has to be tribal. You are building a tribe. And if you are in that tribe, you join that tribe, you want all that tribe stuff.”

Ford then says,

“Terry was in motorcycle gangs up in Northern California, you can tell. It was very tribal. We both love motorcycles.”

You will have to register for an account, but here’s the full interview:

Mark Ford & Terry McDonell Interview

PlayUp USA CEO Press says, ‘We’re Going to Deliver an Uppercut’

Over 75,000 people worldwide have downloaded a new, free iPhone and iPad application that provides the largest slate of sports scores available in the sports social media market, but the CEO of the company says PlayUp has just scratched the surface in what it can do.

Jonathan Press, CEO of PlayUp USA,  said an Android version of PlayUp is imminent. An Android version will significantly expand PlayUp USA’s potential user base, and turn up the competition for other companies looking to carve out a niche in the mobile sports application space. In addition, free games, premium content, paid games, micro transactions and paid advertising and sponsorship are all in PlayUp USA’s game plan, Press said. In fact, some free games will appear in a new rev of the PlayUp application around the end of the year, he added.

“We’re going to deliver an uppercut, and that punch will be the games we will be rolling into PlayUp,” said Press, an affable New Yorker who prefers you call him “JP” and previously worked as a VP of marketing and partnerships for the NBA and executive vice president at tech-startup T-INK Technologies.Read More>>

Highlights, Verizon NFL Mobile Twitter Chat with Pittsburgh Steeler LaMarr Woodley

I’m getting a little bit addicted to these “Twitter chats” hosted by Verizon Wireless and its NFL Mobile app. However I do find them a little hard to follow in real time since the delay between the fan-tweeted question and the NFL player reply is often interrupted by a bunch of new tweets — meaning that you tend to lose the question before you get the answer. Our solution? Highlights! Call us the SportsCenter of Twitter chats. We don’t mind. Here’s some of the better exchanges between fans and Pittsburgh Steeler LaMarr Woodley, who is a Twitter animal — looks like he replied to every question posted.

Has anyone checked out #NFLMobile? Watch the @ from ur phone on Sunday 11/6 at 8:20pm EST. #NFLMobile

@LaMarrWoodley

Pharaoh Renegade


Here’s Woodley hyping NFL Mobile: Nice sponsor move LaMarr!

@ Are you a fan of the other Pittsburgh pro sports teams, the Pirates and Penguins? #NFLMobile

@AtoZSportsWPPJ

Zac Weiss

@ of course and the panthers and the power #NFLMobile

@LaMarrWoodley

Pharaoh Renegade

Here’s a radio show host asking if Woodley likes other Pittsburgh teams (and his reply):

@ Were you playing the year Penn State lost to you at the last second? #NFLMobile?

@Bnat66

Bryan Natusch

@ yup was fun to ruin their season lol #NFLMobile

@LaMarrWoodley

Pharaoh Renegade

A collegiate question, and Woodley’s Penn State smackdown w/LOL

@ Be honest. What feels better, hitt brady or flacco? #NFLMOBILE

@PeteyLee726

Petey Luckenbaugh

@ thats like asking whats better, eating filet or eating rib eye both are great #NFLMobile

@LaMarrWoodley

Pharaoh Renegade

One fan asks if it feels better to sack Brady or Flacco. Woodley replies with a menu selection.

@ What’s on the ipod before games? #NFLMobile

@captmrose

M Rose

@ varies sometimes hip hop sometimes gospel #NFLMobile

@LaMarrWoodley

Pharaoh Renegade

Then of course, the obligatory “what’s on yer iPod” question.

Also noticed that the spam questions with links to porn sites did not appear… is that some good editing performed by Twitter and Verizon?

SB Nation breaks out of the Vox with a broad media strategy

 

 

 

 

SB Nation, with 25 million in monthly visitors and $24 million in venture backing, took its eye off the ball today. Whether that strategy works remains to be seen.

Read More>>

Man UTD gets it: first major sports team to attempt broadcast-based sports social network

British soccer team Manchester United is attempting to do something that hasn’t been done before: build a full-fledged, broadcast-based sports social media network around a single professional sports franchise.

The move is significant because Manchester United is one of the four most valuable professional sports brands in the world. It has an estimated 500 million fans in Europe, and 660 million fans worldwide. Its success could spur others to follow.

To date, most mobile sports social media applications run by professional sports teams and college athletic programs problems pale in comparison to Manchester’s plan. Typically, they feature a sports public relations person, or sports information intern, who tweets regularly about athletes and teams. Manchester United, by virtue of its fan base and television network, will include television broadcast and commentary from anyone willing to contribute.

Manchester has developed a two-year plan to build its network, and has hired digital media agency SapientNitro to spearhead the effort, according to a Haymarket Business Media report. Forthcoming mobile applications will include electronic commerce for the sale of club merchandise and other products. The soccer club will sell advertising and sponsorships on the application, according to Haymarket.

A driving factor in Manchester United’s social media expansion are untapped international markets, including China. It is estimated that about 160 million additional displaced fans will be able to access Manchester United content through its social media strategy, according to sports research company TNS Global.

In recent comments to TEDx, former AOL Sports excutive Jimmy Lynn identified China, Brazil and India as huge opportunities for any sports team looking to expand its fan base through mobile sports applications.

Manchester United star Wayne Rooney

Manchester United’s social media blitz isn’t as sure a thing as another goal from its star striker Wayne Rooney. In fact, its current social media efforts are modest. While it has attracted about 20 million fans to its Facebook page in its first year, Man Utd  is not even considered the most sophisticated sports social media teams in the English Premier League, according to TNS.

Today, the United States sports teams with similar fan bases and television broadcast networks capable of porting to a mobile sports social media application are The Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees. The NFL’s Dallas Cowboys and Washington Redskins, which have the fan bases necessary to support a large-scale sports social media network, are hamstrung by the NFL’s television licensing and revenue-sharing agreements from going out on their own.

SapientNitro clients include Air Canada, AT&T, Burger King, Carnival Cruises, Citi, Coca-Cola, Condé Nast, H&R Block, JCPenney, Kraft and Mercedes AMG, according to a report in The Next Web.

Nokia Teams with Microsoft in Smartphone Space — But Not in U.S. Yet

The two companies seek to establish themselves in the smartphone space

Finnish handset manufacturer Nokia has teamed with Microsoft for its latest generation of phones, a move that starts moving Microsoft’s smartphone operating system further into the mainstream market.

The move comes as the two partners seek to establish themselves as major players in the smartphone market. Nokia has been seeing very strong erosion of its position in the last year, dropping from owning 33% of the smartphone market in the third quarter last year to 14% this year. Microsoft, while garnering solid reviews for its OS, has not seen that translate into wide scale adoption.

The two have been working together for eight months and Microsoft’s Windows 7is a major upgrade for Nokia over its aging Symbian operating system, one that was failing to match the latest features of the rival Android and iOS platforms.

However Microsoft, never a power in the smartphone OS, has also seen its share in this space decline. A recent report by analytic firm ComScore showed Microsoft’s share drop from 7.5% to 5.8% between March and June 2011.

The two phones in this release are the Nokia Lumia 710 and the Nokia Lumia 800, with the 810 being the model targeted at the Apple iPhone and high end Android offerings. Currently available in Europe the smartphones are slated for rollout in Asia later this year. Nokia said that it is in talks with all four major US carriers and intends to release them in the US in the future.

The Lumia 800 has an 8-megapixel camera and a bright 3.7-inch OLED display that’s slightly larger than the screen in the iPhone. It has 16GB of storage and the phone is powered by a single core Qualcomm 1.4GHz processor. It includes an 8 megapixel rear facing camera.

The entry level Lumia 710 features the same processor and comes with 8GB of storage, a 5 megapixel rear facing camera and 3.7-inch WVGA display. The smartphones will run on high-speed 4G networks that use a technology called LTE, or Long Term Evolution, as well as on older 3G networks.

The Windows operating system still appears to be catching up to its rival iOS and Android rivals but is now a much fuller featured OS and includes cut and paste and other features that show it is on the road to parity. However it is a long road.

The Windows 7 OS uses “smart tiles” that show information about an app without needing to launch the app. It comes with a range of apps built in- People Hub, Pictures Hub, Microsoft Office Hub, IE9 Mobile, Xbox Live, and 25GB SkyDrive storage. There are currently tens of thousands of apps for Windows 7 but that seriously trails Android and iOS apps, which now number roughly half a million each.

This looks to be a good first effort for the pair but they still have a ways to go, particularly in getting both more features in the OS and a greater app market. Many top sports sites make no mention of Windows support at this time. However with the massive number of Microsoft developers out there this looks to be a relatively easy issue to fix.