Chris, as you know mate, I talk to a lot of people in the industry, and I mean a lot.
Now, either I am to believe them or I am to believe you.
You should believe me. I'm not saying that people in the industry are not blaming a contraction in sales, what I'm saying is that's not the real problem, and if people want to understand what the real problem is, they have to look below the superficial answer.
Plus, what do you expect them to say? "We're not sponsoring you because we've suffered a contraction in business", or "We're not sponsoring you because sponsoring a Pro team is a waste of money and has been all along." One of those makes it look like the teams are a victim of circumstance, and the other is mildly insulting and makes the company owners look somewhat silly for spending the money that long.
Like you, I also talk to people in the industry. I would also hazard a guess that I talk to the sponsorship-centric people in the industry more often than you do. For example, at a recent national event, I had the person in charge of sponsorship for one of the major manufacturers/distributors approach me and want to get involved in one of the things I was doing - provided that we could find a way to show a return on that investment. He specifically told me that whereas he used to be able to hand out sponsorship based on whatever he thought was the best thing to do, he now had to account for the expected return on every sponsor expense, down to giving out tshirts.
This change would have occurred regardless of whether the business was good or not. These corporate guys look at the budget, see that you're spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on a team, and they say 'How is this expense justified?' and you better have an answer. If you can't justify it, it gets pulled from the budget - REGARDLESS of overall sales.
Let me go back to what you said. I think you might realize that it's really not far off from what I'm saying.
They tell me one of the major reasons they are pulling back on sponsorship deals is because they are now having to be more accountable because of a downturn in surplus monies.
Emphasis added by me.
I want to look at both of those statements separately, and what they mean below the surface.
On the first statement, you can see here that people are having to be more accountable. Because the decrease in pro team sponsorship apparently coincides with a reduction in business (although I think you'll find that some businesses have not yet seen a decline at all), people make the connection that the two must be connected. But the reduction in pro team sponsorship *ALSO* coincides with a lot of the sponsors being bought out/managed by corporate people instead of paintball people. But no one seems to think that is the cause - why? I think it most certainly is. At best, you can say people didn't have to be accountable before because there was so much extra money floating around they could run their business in a very crappy manner and not go bankrupt, but that's a pretty poor basis for expecting sponsorship.
On the second statement - if teams are not being sponsored now because of a lack of SURPLUS money, that means that the only reason they were being sponsored before is because there WAS surplus money. Which proves my point - teams were not getting sponsored before because it was a GOOD INVESTMENT, they were ONLY getting sponsored because the companies had money to THROW AWAY ON PRO TEAMS, *AND* had people running the companies who were WILLING to throw that money away (or viewed it as a hobby expense).
So, if your team is sponsored because you happen to be in an industry where the current people in charge are raking in money and willing to dump money into your team EVEN THOUGH your team doesn't make a return on investment, and you expect that situation to continue indefinitely, and your continued existence depends on the situation staying the same, the only person at fault when the situation changes is you. A wise team would have taken action so that when the situation inevitably changed, your team would continue to be sponsored because, like Dynasty, you had taken steps to make your team valuable because for every dollar spent on them, their sponsors get back even more.
This tends to suggest that contracting sales is in fact one of the reasons for this reassessment.
Chris, what sometimes seems like a plausible factor, whilst in the theoretic stage, is sometimes not the practical solution.
This is one such case mate, I'm afraid your theory just doesn't stack up with what I am being told by the people at the sharp end and if you wish me to name the people I will do so in a pm, no problem.
I think you're talking to the wrong people. Ask the corporate guys who have been buying up the paintball companies and cutting the sponsorship budgets why they're doing it. It's not sales. It's because the teams are not worth the money spent on them.
Condensed version:
- Business people do not spend business money on something unless it is going to make them more money.
- Most pro teams do not make the sponsor more money than the sponsor spends on them.
- Most paintball companies that used to be run by people who got into business to pay for playing paintball are now run by people who got into the paintball business to make more money.
- Most pro teams are going to lose their sponsorship, regardless of whether sales go up or down, because they don't make more money for the sponsor.
If sales go up, you sponsor valuable teams because they will get you more business. And if sales go down, you *STILL* sponsor valuable teams, because they will get you more business! So, if you're not getting sponsored, it is NOT because of the sales, it's because you don't bring value to the sponsorship!