Sony Ericsson is shunning traditional television and billboard advertisements and will pin its hopes on the boom in social networking in its first major foray into soccer sponsorship at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
The mobile phone handset maker, whose parent company Sony has a $305-million, tier-one sponsorship agreement with FIFA until the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, believes interaction through sites such as Twitter and Facebook is the best and most intimate way of reaching out to the fan.
However analysts say that at a time of plummeting television advertising rates and the relatively uncharted territory of basing such a campaign on social networking, success could be a difficult task. "We have made the conscious decision to steer away from the traditional branding route as this supports our fan-centric strategy," director of global marketing partnerships Calum MacDougall told Reuters in an interview.
"Instead we are going straight to online fan communities through popular social networking channels." The company has launched a Twitter Cup competition where fans have been split into groups along the same lines as the countries for the finals in South Africa next year. The countries yielding the most Tweets will progress to the later stages of the competition.
"Fans love being given the opportunity to share their feelings with one another and really get behind their team, and social networking platforms like this allow them to do this," MacDougall said. "What's great about the social networking world is that we can give fans real value and improve their experience by providing ways in which they can enjoy all the fun of the World Cup.
These channels also mean that we can reach a truly global audience, which is incredibly important for us." Observers will be watching the venture with keen interest, especially considering that Sony, as FIFA's 'Digital Life' category sponsor, has preferential negotiation rights for television commercial spots. "Social media is only one format, it is still an unproven format," Vincent Letang, a senior advertising analyst at Screen Digest told Reuters.
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