Four Cornerstones of Digital Strategy:



Similar documents
Helping our clients win in the changing world of work:

Do not underestimate the value of your data think proactively about how you collect it, manage it and how you use it.

How To Listen To Social Media

COMMERCIAL PILLARS IN GRASSROOTS SPORT 2014 WHITE PAPER

Kea Influencer Relations and Marketing for High-Tech & Technology Providers

THE STATE OF Social Media Analytics. How Leading Marketers Are Using Social Media Analytics

Surf Life Saving NSW Strategic Plan to

SPONSORSHIP IS A PARTNERSHIP

Kwinana s Plan. Our strategic vision #swimkwinana

Click here to visit EPIC's updated website featuring our three services: Outsourcing, Consulting and Managed Services > EPIC Connections.

5 Point Social Media Action Plan.

Add Social Media to Your Event Strategy

Strategic Plan Leading a strong, vibrant and growing sport

WHAT IS LEAD GENERATION?

DESTINATION MELBOURNE PRIVACY POLICY

Experian Cross Channel Marketing Platform. Managing campaigns and reaching consumers in real time

Marketing Online SEO Facebook Google Twitter YouTube

Social Media. A brief overview of the Social Media module

How Businesses Are Leveraging New Internet Marketing Platforms Like to Acquire Customers and Build a Supportive Community

TRAINING & CONSULTANCY GUIDE

Reversing OutMigration Michelle Rathman Batschke Impact! Communications

+44 (0)

2.9.7 Other Summary About CCP... 39

Strategic Plan: Relentless Pursuit of Excellence Speed Skating in Canada (DRAFT)

Sourcing Gets Smart. Revamping Strategies, Rethinking Technology. April 2012 Madeline Laurano

About the SLSA Coach Development Framework

A simple yet advanced toolkit enabling you to communicate in new ways with patients and the public.

Marketing for Small Businesses on LinkedIn

1. Overview 2. Field Service Management Components 3. Joining the dots 4. Filling in the gaps 5. Implementing end-to-end Service Management

The Evolution of Enterprise Social Intelligence

Living LOHAS Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability in Australia

Building a new intranet?

CUSTOMER SERVICE PATHWAY

/ WHITEPAPER / THE BIMODAL IT

Marketing Solutions Built with People in Mind

Assessing Your Business Analytics Initiatives

OPERA Central Systems. Create success. integrated efficiency for hotel chains

2016 Grants. Information Booklet

WHITE PAPER Social Media In Technology. A Unified Strategy for Success

Modern Marketing Transformation

The six key marketing challenges facing recruitment firms today

SOCIAL MEDIA DID YOU KNOW: WHAT IS SOCIAL MEDIA? IGNORE IT AT YOUR PERIL! ANYWHERE GETTING GREYER

Australian Safety and Quality Framework for Health Care

EMPLOYING BUSINESS ANALYTICS TO ACHIEVE BETTER SALES RESULTS FOR YOUR LEGAL FIRM

How Can I Sculpt a Plan to Start Inbound Marketing

Attributes and Objectives of Social Media. What is Social Media? Maximize Reach with Social Media

WHITE PAPER OCTOBER Unified Monitoring. A Business Perspective

CRM. Booklet. How to Choose a CRM System

Application Performance Management

SOCIAL MEDIA FOR MSMEs A turning point. By DR. PRALAY DEY National Small Industries Corporation (NSIC)

Capability Report. JLT Sport

8 TIPS FOR MAKING THE MOST OF GOOGLE ANALYTICS. Brought to you by Geary LSF and Orbital Informatics

Empowering Agents to Employ Digital as a Competitive Weapon

Using Data to Find New Customers. Andrew Howe, Sales Director UKI, Teradata Interactive February 26 th, 2015

How To Market In South Africa Through Social Media

Social Media Strategy:

Online and Social Media Marketing Certificate Program. Syllabus

WHITE PAPER Analytics for digital retail

SUSTAINING COMPETITIVE DIFFERENTIATION

Social Media ROI. First Priority for a Social Media Strategy: A Brand Audit Using a Social Media Monitoring Tool. Whitepaper

The Business Case for Investing in Retail Data Analytics

Designing and Managing an Intranet

Archived. Designing and Managing an Intranet. Better Practice Checklist. Practical guides for effective use of new technologies in Government

CoolaData Predictive Analytics

Customer Activation. Marketing with a Measurable Purpose

10 ways Professional Service companies can increase their profits through marketing

(0) SPORTS & LEISURE

Financial Services Industry Solutions. Winning in the financial services marketplace for banks and credit unions

Chat Enhancements Optimize Customers Web Experience

5 myths of supplying talent through a third-party provider model. A guide for third-party talent managers and suppliers

Understanding patient access to online GP services

Getting the most from social: An integrated marketing approach

GUIDE Wealth Management. 9 Social Media Guidelines for Wealth Management Firms

Recruitment Process: Why Outsource?

Talent Management 2020

32 Tips for. Social Media Domination

Capturing Meaningful Competitive Intelligence from the Social Media Movement

Important Features of an Ecommerce Website

Analance Data Integration Technical Whitepaper

Introduction to Social Media Marketing. Using social media to promote your events.

South African Social Media Landscape 2015

Driving. Our Sport. The Touch Football Australia Strategic Plan 2011 to 2015

Our Sporting Future Preliminary Programme. Wednesday 21 st October Pre Conference Workshops REGISTRATION (Ground floor, main entrance)

Real Madrid brings the stadium closer to 450 million fans around the globe, with the Microsoft Cloud

Transcription:

Four Cornerstones of Digital Strategy: IMPROVE PARTICIPATION & GROW YOUR SPORT NATIONALLY 2014 WHITE PAPER Prepared for National and State Sporting Organisations

2014 thinkrelativity Pty Ltd. This white paper has been produced as an informative guide only. If you would like more information on the topics discussed within, please contact us: EMAIL > alex@revolutionise.com.au WEBSITE > revolutionise.com.au

FOUR CORNERSTONES OF DIGITAL STRATEGY EXECUTIVE SUMMARY "We use technology, but to be honest with you, it's pretty rubbish." This is the message repeated loud and clear by peak sporting bodies nationwide when asked about their use and understanding of digital technology in sport. Our analysis of over 50 governing bodies in Australia indicates to us that Australian sport is in the midst of change - a paradigm shift where governing bodies are no longer content with a technology solution that is "good enough". Sports are coming to grips with the fact that they must have a cohesive strategy to unify the direction of their digital assets. This white paper aims to provide governing bodies with understanding and practical tools to implement the four cornerstones of successful digital strategy: 1 Collecting meaningful data from your members 2 Analysing and drawing insights from membership data 3 Maximising the reach and impact of social media 4 Building a strong, integrated and professional website Digital strategy is more than just 'having a Facebook'; it's about knowing how and when to use your digital assets, and being able to draw meaningful and measurable analytics to grow your sport in line with your strategic plan. We have developed, free of charge, a digital strategy health check for State and National Sporting Organisations. To participate, please visit: http://www.revolutionise.com.au/healthcheck/ 1 Alex Mednis DIRECTOR Alex Mednis has over a decade of experience in managing and working with grassroots sports. He is a regular speaker at sports technology conferences, and is engaged by the NSW Department of Sport & Recreation in training clubs in digital best practice. He also sits on the Board of Directors of the Australian Sports Technologies Network. revolutionisesport is the emerging industry leader in digital sports club management, supporting a range of sporting organisations from local grassroots clubs to peak governing bodies. revolutionisesport provides a whole of sport solution across a number of recognised sports in Australia, including Diving, Gridiron and Boccia, as well as complete solutions to over 150 grassroots organisations nationwide.

FIRST CORNERSTONE Data collection 1 Where would sport be without its members? The #1 priority for State (SSOs) and National Sporting Organisations (NSOs) should be its members - attracting new and engaging existing members. And in growing this membership pool, digital technology has proved itself an invaluable asset. However, interviews conducted across more than 50 N/SSOs around Australia in Q1-2 2014 revealed that most had no concrete plans to design or implement a digital strategy to lower the barriers to entry. There is plenty of discussion identifying the need to lower entry barriers. What is missing from this discussion are specific ways to achieve this. Below we outline a number of practical steps that S/NSOs can implement to encourage participation and improve growth through the use of digital member management. Consider whether these measures are possible within your current solution. PRIOR TO REGISTRATION > Rationalise your membership types. Simplifying your membership types will reduce cognitive load on a prospective member - less is more. > Capture your social and recreational members. > Capture your non-paying officials, life members, staff and volunteers. DURING THE REGISTRATION PERIOD > Be clear on which level (local, state or national) registration occurs. Do they become a member of your organisation when they register? If registering at the SSO level, do they become a member of the NSO too (and vice-versa)? > Collect demographic data - but not beyond what is necessary, as potential members will be discouraged by having to disclose too much detailed personal information. MAINTAINING YOUR MEMBERSHIP > Consider a membership system that can split payments automatically between you and your peak body - this will free up time previously tied up with the transfer of funds, and will ensure that each level receives their correct portion at the same time. > Avoid transactional fees - look for fixed-rate systems that don t penalise your growth as a sport for every registration or online payment you take. > Avoid custom-built systems - the more customisable and bespoke your solution becomes, the harder it will be to maintain, update and extract meaningful insights from. 1 1. http://www.brw.com.au/p/tech-gadgets/australian_rugby_union_learns_tech_34nnwst9qwlgwkew8hvuuo

SECOND CORNERSTONE Data analysis & insights 2 Most sports collect a large volume of data about their members - from basic demographic data, event and competition histories to payment information and officiating accreditation - yet for many sports, this data is siloed amongst different vendors and systems, without any useful way to connect, aggregate or draw actionable insights from the data. This multiple-data-silo approach can also lead to confusion for members, who, for example, may have to register through one vendor portal, enter their results through a second, and purchase merchandise through a third. Effective integration is critical to achieve the scale and whole-of-sport management that will enable a sport to grow and compete in the marketplace only a sport fully integrated in this fashion can plan strategically for the benefit of the whole sport and operate with optimal efficiency. AUSTRALIA S WINNING EDGE, AUSTRALIAN SPORTS COMMISSION (ASC) In interviews conducted with over 50 N/SSOs across Australia in Q1-2 2014, fewer than 20% could quickly identify key metrics about their membership (e.g. age, gender or geographic distribution). 3 Organising and extracting insights from membership data is key to governance - how can a sport plan for the future without an accurate picture of both past and present? To plan for the future, sports should consider abandoning the multiple-datasilo approach, and focus on one vendor, one pathway, and one interface for their members. Your membership management provider should allow you to: > Collect a range of membership information > Disseminate news and information to members > Organise events > Sell merchandise > Organise competition fixtures and results > Have an online presence that integrates all of the above Most importantly, your solution provider should be able to provide you with quick and easy access to synthesised, high-level reporting drawn directly from your membership data. Don t work for the system - make the system work for you.

YELLOW SOCIAL MEDIA REPORT, DIGITAL INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA, 2013 THIRD CORNERSTONE Social media presence 3 Social media is the future of connecting with your membership. Photos from a junior grand final can be on Facebook within seconds of the game finishing - well before a club can publish the content themselves. Fans can engage with live scoring of games in real time. And the next generation of members can be reached in a matter of seconds. Over 65% of Australians use social media; Of those, the average usage is 7 hours per week. Despite this, discussions with peak bodies reveal how few organisations employ a social media strategy. Policy is reactive rather than proactive. Social media management is often distanced through outsourcing to external bodies. Channels are updated infrequently, without focus or drive on how to lead their sport by example. To establish a strong social media strategy, peak bodies should consider the basic measures below. > Have an Acceptable Use of Social Media policy - provide clear guidance about what content is and is not acceptable, and what content will (or won t) be published from clubs and other sources. > Have a dedicated social media role - an individual who is responsible for the creation of engaging and meaningful content that will add value to the sport. > Ensure consistent branding and communicate a cohesive message across all social media platforms. > Consider using a social media management suite such as HootSuite to manage all networks from one interface. > Consider scheduling posts (some platforms such as Facebook allow this), to release content over a given week - rather than having to come up with content every morning. > Follow or Like local clubs and your state/national body, and share engaging content from those sources with your followers. > Use social media as a means to drive traffic to your website - for example, when sharing a news story from your website on social media, simply share the article title and link instead of reposting the article in its entirety. > Include social media links alongside your organisation contact details, wherever they appear - website footers, email signatures, letterheads, print material. Finally, keep in mind that each form of social media has its own quirks, which you should identify and leverage to your advantage.

FOURTH CORNERSTONE Website integration 4 Your website is the first port of call for prospective and existing members looking to engage with your sport. It is your information hub and the professional face of your organisation; it needs to be clear, consistent and easy to navigate. But in reality, not everyone is, or can engage, a fully-fledged web developer. This leads to the well-intentioned board member with basic web knowledge building a home-grown website for their sport - but when that person moves on, that website is stuck in freeze-frame, with no one able (or willing) to step in to maintain it. The end result is a frustrated prospective member and a poor perception of your sport. Being spoilt for choice in today s sporting climate means that they can easily take their participation elsewhere. Organisations that are managing public investment and member interests must reflect a greater level of professionalism. AUSTRALIA S WINNING EDGE, AUSTRALIAN SPORTS COMMISSION (ASC) Below are the common problems and mistakes encountered when browsing peak body websites. > Content is not updated frequently - members need this week s content, not information about competitions held six years ago. > Navigation is poorly laid out - having multiple navigation tiers is not considered best practice. Two levels (primary pages & subpages) is ideal, and all links should be visible on page load (i.e. no hidden or dropdown menus). > Websites have no mobile equivalent or are not responsive for mobile devices. Finally, consider the three main points below to allow your sport to maximise your website s full potential. > Looks are important - if your website looks unprofessional, you won t attract new members. > Content is king - information should be relevant and accessible, and should empower your members. > Integration is the future - by integrating your membership, events, merchandise, sponsors and other key aspects of your organisation under the one umbrella, you will stay ahead of the curve in a very competitive environment.

2014 WHITE PAPER Prepared for National and State Sporting Organisations by www.revolutionise.com.au