zipyaj
05-25-2008, 10:21 AM
Appearing on page 1 of the Wall Street Journal's May 23rd Business section is Mathew Futterman's article, Goal: To Make Fans Love Hockey which includes interviews with Gary Bettman, NHL Commissioner, and John Collins, a 46-year-old former National Football League executive who joined the NHL 18 months ago.
IHC readers may find this article of to be interest relative to references in these forums about the growth of inline hockey and of hockey in general.
Some of the conclusions reached therein include that Hockey is tribal. NHL research shows 50% of NHL fans won't watch the finals if their favorite team isn't playing. Television ratings for hockey grow just 41% in the playoffs which compare dismally to other sports.
The responsibility of persuading sports fans that hockey is worth watching again has fallen to John Collins. He convinced Mr. Bettman to forget about growth and focus instead on getting North America's 53 million self-described hockey fans to start acting as though they love the sport. "The question is, how do you build incremental behavior," Mr. Collins says. "To talk about acquiring new fans at this point in our development is almost too much of a challenge."
Marketing Hockey to Hockey...
In this observer's opinion, while I understand the objective for unification (council the tribes), Mr. Collins advice is short-sighted. It would appear that hasn't seen a street or roller hockey game to know where his future players, fans, TV viewers, ticket and merchandise buyers come from, or how easy they are to convert to loyal tribesman. Like so many others, he keeps preaching to the same old choir.
This article may be accessed at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121150452375216175.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
IHC readers may find this article of to be interest relative to references in these forums about the growth of inline hockey and of hockey in general.
Some of the conclusions reached therein include that Hockey is tribal. NHL research shows 50% of NHL fans won't watch the finals if their favorite team isn't playing. Television ratings for hockey grow just 41% in the playoffs which compare dismally to other sports.
The responsibility of persuading sports fans that hockey is worth watching again has fallen to John Collins. He convinced Mr. Bettman to forget about growth and focus instead on getting North America's 53 million self-described hockey fans to start acting as though they love the sport. "The question is, how do you build incremental behavior," Mr. Collins says. "To talk about acquiring new fans at this point in our development is almost too much of a challenge."
Marketing Hockey to Hockey...
In this observer's opinion, while I understand the objective for unification (council the tribes), Mr. Collins advice is short-sighted. It would appear that hasn't seen a street or roller hockey game to know where his future players, fans, TV viewers, ticket and merchandise buyers come from, or how easy they are to convert to loyal tribesman. Like so many others, he keeps preaching to the same old choir.
This article may be accessed at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121150452375216175.html?mod=googlenews_wsj