Active Brands Reexamining Endorsement Deals in Intermittent Sports World

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After months of a world without professional sports, the leagues, elite athletes and their sponsors hope that pandemic-weary consumers will tune in now that games are finally restarting. But where endorsement deals will go from here is another story altogether.

Some have greeted the delayed start of the National Basketball Association’s season and current playoff rounds with a shrug. The season may be short-lived anyway though, as it’s been reported several NBA players are discussing a boycott following the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisc., on Sunday. On Wednesday, Milwaukee Bucks players didn’t take to the floor for their game against the Orlando Magic, and following that, the NBA postponed the night’s two other playoff games. (Major League Baseball’s Milwaukee Brewers as well as four WNBA teams later joined the NBA teams’ stance and called off their Wednesday games.)

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Others are wary of how the recent spikes in coronavirus cases may affect the National Football League’s upcoming opening season, as it has impacted Major League Baseball teams like the Miami Marlins. With the Summer Olympics and recreational events postponed — and many college sports downright canceled — some athletic brands and industry observers are counting on nonathletic personalities to endorse their labels and share beliefs that extend beyond sports.

Where multimillion-dollar endorsement deals with sports stars and musicians used to be the norm, companies will need to be more selective due to COVID-19-induced financial constraints, executives said. With many anticipating a slow economic recovery, athletic companies and fashion brands are reevaluating their marketing budgets in light of ailing sales, furloughs, layoffs and ongoing consumer reluctance to spend.

As for what companies should be exploring or surveying consumers about in relation to endorsement deals, Luca Solca, senior research analyst, global luxury goods for Sanford C. Bernstein Ltd., said, “This doesn’t change. Brands are confronted with the challenge to stay relevant and desirable to consumers. That is the name of the game in the discretionary space.”

With more brands being risk-averse due to the challenging economic climate, they will be more likely to line up pay-for-performance endorsement deals, said Conrad Wiacek, Sportcal’s head of analysis and consulting. AB InBev and Nike started taking this approach across their partnership portfolios before the pandemic, he said, referring to Nike’s multiyear deal with Liverpool Football Club, which included increased royalties and cash bonuses based on good on-field performances.