So you want to be sponsored?

By tomleogrande | April 20th, 2009

So you want to be sponsored?

I know, I know, you are the next KVD and you want a company to pay your way so you can show the world how great you are. Let’s face it, there are thousands of anglers around the globe that are making that statement or a slight moderation of it to potential sponsors every day. So there’s the problem. Now what are you going to do to separate yourself from the rest of the pack?

Let’s dive in on the problem. If you have or ever thought about sending an email like the ones you are about to read – then you need to rethink your strategy big time!

Actual sponsorship request samples – names changed to protect the innocent!

Hi, my name is John Q. Public, I fish Future Pro Tour. My partner is Mike J. Doe. We had our first tournament at Lake Berryessa a few weeks ago. I’m looking for sponsors to help with gas or tackle to use. I would put any logos on my boat. I have a Ranger 2008. Any thing would help out a lot. We would appreciate anything we can get. Thank you for your time!
John Q. Public

I was seeing if you were accepting any resumes for pro or regional staff. I am new to the whole sponsorship thing but i know I can help you generate sales for you. I will fish Bass Weekend Series and FOM with one other being a BASS Southern Open. I want to move to the Opens soon and work my way up from there. Any questions feel free to contact me (555) 555-1234 or by email. Thank you for your time and hoping to here from you soon.
Joe Sample

No offense to these individuals – but, really?  Do you really think you are the first person to send this email?  If not then what makes you think a sponsor is going to pick your email out of the dozens or even hundreds that they get?  This is not putting you in position to get a reply. You need to make a sponsor want to reply because they just can’t do business without having you on their team!  Neither of these two emails even remotely have that effect on the reader.  I’ll stop here, but I can go on for an hour on why these emails are just a waste of the writers and the readers time.  From here on we’ll look at what you should do not what you shouldn’t do!

Types of Sponsorships

Before you can even consider looking for a sponsor you should have a pretty good idea what types of sponsorships exist. In actuality, there are an infinite number of sponsorship types but, lets just cover a few. Product sponsorships, incentive sponsorships and cash sponsorships are the basics but, any combination of the three are possible along with others.

Product Sponsorships
A product sponsorship is a basic agreement between a company and an angler that provides the angler with product for promoting the sponsors products or service.

Incentive Sponsorships
An incentive sponsorship is a detailed agreement between a company and an angler in which the angler receives cash or product based on milestones or goals set within the agreement. Examples of milestones could be;

a) Winning a tournament
b) Being featured in an article in a regional magazine or newspaper, in which the sponsors product or company name is mentioned
c) Finding a retailer to carry the sponsors product
d) and many more

Cash Sponsorships
An agreement between a sponsor and an angler for an amount of money to paid to an angler by the sponsor and an outline of what the sponsor receives in way of promotion from the angler. This is the type of agreement that most of the biggest names in the sport have with their sponsors.

So how do you get one of these deals?
The first thing you have to do is figure out what you can do for the company. We all know what companies want, sell more of their product, make more money and get more exposure. You need to figure a way to help the company do one or all of these things in a way that goes beyond putting their logo on your shirt, truck or boat.

For this article we’ll use a fictitious company called ABC Baits. ABC Baits is a bait manufacturing company that sells crankbaits, walking top water baits, poppers, rip baits and some other specialized baits. A typical bait company like Strike King, Lucky Craft or Jackall.

So how do you get ABC Baits to Sponsor you?
ABC Baits gets hundreds of emails like the one’s you just read. Sending them another one of those letters or emails is going to get you nowhere. So lets think outside the box for a minute here. Keep in mind the three major goals for ABC Baits – sell more product, make more money and gain exposure for their products.

Improving Sales
Every company might have a different way to increase their sales. With ABC Baits they’ll want more tackle shops to carry their products, retails shops is critical to a bait company. A tackle shop might want to utilize your eyes and ears to their customers. After all, if you are looking to get sponsored you are probably on the water quite a bit more than the employees at the bait shop so they might not know what is working on the water as well as you. That information is critical to a tackle shop. No matter what type of company you are considering approaching figuring out what is critical to their sales and profit making ability is essential. You’ll need to think like the business owner and ask yourself – what would I like from my sponsored anglers, and then find a way to give them that.

Back to ABC Baits, to help them sell more product there are so many angles we can’t cover them all in this article but, the simplest and most effective one might be simply helping them get local shops and then keeping the local shops informed on new products, new colors and more. Let’s say ABC Baits is in Des Moines Iowa and you are in Lubbuck Texas. Perfect this opens the doors for you to try and help them in the big Texas bass fishing market. You can work on the local tackle shops to bring the baits into the stores. If you travel a lot you can make sure to stop in the local shops during your travels and talk to them about ABC Baits and educate them on why they should be selling them. Keep in mind, most tackle shops aren’t going to order up hundreds or thousands of dollars in baits because you said so. So you’ll need to understand the local fishing areas, the baits, the company, the pricing of the baits and what the shops profit margin is going to be. You’ll also need to know of any successes ABC Baits has had in local tournaments, national tournaments and more. This is a good reason that you better make sure you like ABC Baits before you even think of approaching them.

Gaining Exposure
With today’s technology we all have the ability to put our opinions and beliefs out on the web in many ways. There are hundreds of fishing message boards that you can get the ABC Baits some exposure on. However, you’ll need to be smart about this as most don’t allow blatant advertising on their sites. So you’ll need to work ABC Baits into answers to other peoples questions or even questions of your own such as “Have you guys seen this crankbait? What do you think?” Keep in mind, all the responses may or may not be positive but, exposure is exposure.

YouTube.com is another great avenue for you to get the bait some exposure. With a simple camcorder and a little computer experience you can make ABC Baits a few videos showing how to fish their crankbaits, rip/jerk baits or top water baits effectively. Post these videos onto YouTube and spread the word and you’ll be increasing their exposure.

Facebook is another great resource for you to use to spread the word on ABC Baits. You can post pictures of fish you’ve caught on the pages. Join fishing groups and post about the baits and spread the word around the fishing world that way.

It’s really tough to get an article printed in an industry publication as they all have writers they deal with on a day to day basis. However, writing an article or two and sending them to the publications for their consideration in their publication could potentially work out. This is the one place where being a better angler can help in the process. Articles that are more likely to be picked up include how you use ABC Baits to catch better fish or technique specific articles where you utilize ABC Baits in the descriptions of how to perform the technique.

If the article doesn’t get picked up by a publication then you can do a number of things with it. You can add it to a blog or post it to an article archive website for others to use on their websites. A good example of an article archive website is http://ezinearticles.com.

The Basic Stuff
Of course, just because you can’t really land a deal promising logos on shirts, boats and trucks doesn’t mean you shouldn’t mix it into your presentation. All of those will increase the exposure for ABC Bait company but, making that the center of your presentation really limits your success rate.

First Contact – Presentation
It’s always better if you know the owner, marketing person or pro-staff director of a company but, if you don’t you’ll need to make contact somehow. Sending an email or letter can be effective, but, you better get to the point early and then keep their interest throughout or you’ll have a tough time being successful.

As for starting the email or letter, don’t start by saying you are looking for a sponsorship. Start by telling them you want to help them make money, gain exposure or both. Be very descriptive and precise about what you want to do FOR THEM. After all, they already know what you want as soon as the open the email or letter. You have about 30 words to gain their interest before that letter gets discarded or the email gets deleted. So use it wisely, let them know you want to help them.

Almost the whole letter needs to be about what you want to do for them so again be very specific (the more specific the better), think outside the box and offer them something they can’t do for themselves because of time, location or other reasons. Be sure to leave what you want from them until the end. Let’s face it we all WANT something, even ABC Baits wants something, like more sales and more exposure, and you need to feed those wants for them before even thinking about asking for something in return. It’s really hard to stop reading an email or letter that is about how you are going to help them. On the flip side, it’s really easy to stop reading an email or letter telling them what you want from them, as we’ve covered already, they get lots of those!

The Results
If they respond negative you’ll need to keep your head up and keep trying. With the bad economy, many companies may not be able to afford another pro staffer. Even if you get turned down you are at least making contacts and if and when that company is ready to work with pro staffers they will already know what you have to offer.

If you get a positive response you’ll need to work with the company to lock down a contract. Even if its not a very formal contract have something in writing so that both yourself and the company know exactly what to expect. Keep in mind, after you get sponsored you better remember to live up to your end of the deal.

Summary
Separate yourself from the others by thinking outside the box, offering potential sponsors what they want and need. So many potential pro staffers are great at asking for what they want but, not very good at explaining what they can do to help the sponsoring company. By explaining in detail what you can do to help you’ll gain the upper hand. I’d say good luck, but there is no luck in this, it’s about research, effort, using the right approach and understanding the business of your potential sponsors.

Tags:

10 Responses to “So you want to be sponsored?”

  1. rodwynn says:

    Great Read…

  2. k0diak says:

    Great article!

  3. keithscatch says:

    Tom,

    Good points. I was just trying to show that no one person could possibly get in front of as many people as a well thought out direct mail campaign and or email campaign to hundreds of thousands of fishermen. So for my money, sponsoring one or two or three people would make no sense to me. They just can’t get my name in front of enough people to justify their expense.

    Since this is your blog I respect that and will not promote my site here. However, I will put what I do up against any other option on a ROI basis and will more than likely be able to provide folks with a better return on their investment than any site, magazine or sponsorship deal going.

    Pretty strong words I know. I just believe that strongly in what we are doing.

    As far as Tackle tour I agree in that it is a great site. I have used it several times personally myself. I like their concept. Is it a great deal for advertisers? Yes, as long as it pays back more then what was put in. Which brings me to this point. As long as advertising pays back more than invested it is not a cost at all in fact, it makes a company money. So theoretically, it makes no difference how much someone spends on advertising. What matters is how much money all that advertising is making a company. I hope folks realize this. Spend $500 or $500,000 per month. It is all relative.

    So if a source is paying for itself, it is time to duplicate that and find another source capable of paying off like the before mentioned source ;)

    Thanks for the opportunity to discuss that which I love.

  4. tomleogrande says:

    KeithsCatch,

    I think we are actually saying the same thing from different perspectives. I agree it doesn’t pay for a company to sponsor an individual if that individual can’t provide ROI. However, there are very good opportunities for an angler to provide a great ROI for a company if they put forth the efforts I mentioned above by having a solid plan of attack to create exposure and sales.

    This next part was going to be my next article and still very well may be – but, here’s a quick peek at what I am thinking

    On the flip side, I think it is important for a company to think about this. As a tackle shop what is going to want me to carry their product? Why would I want to carry an ABC Spinnerbait over a ACME Spinnerbait. Even if their bait is better, if WE, the tackle shop, has to educate the public on the ABC Spinnerbait and then sell it – it’s twice the work of selling the spinnerbait they already know about and want.

    This is where TackleTour.com comes into play. Through their reviews and through advertising on their site you can reach a HUGE number of anglers across the country and promote your product. It’s a lot easier to WANT to stock a product if WE, the tackle shop, know that it is going to be a widely promoted and advertised product. It’s just a leg up for ABC Spinnerbait vs. the other 900 spinnerbait companies. Side note: as a paying advertiser on tackle tour, I can assure you that the ROI is EXTREMELY well worth it, and the exposure is second to none!

    I know you do advertising and marketing for tackle companies KeithsCant, so you may have some great ideas and advertising avenues as well. However, I think TackleTour.com is among, if not THE best fishing websites on the net.

    Just my .02
    Tom

  5. keithscatch says:

    Tom, this is a well thought out article and seems like sound advise. However, if you will allow me to ask some different questions and perhaps cause the tackle companies and or manufacturers to think a minute about sponsorships etc.

    In my humble opinion I am not sure why a small company would even consider a sponsorship deal in the first place. Even if it is a small deal that gives product away for free. No matter what the deal is it still costs this small company money.

    Before I go too deep let me say that my angle here is strictly business and marketing. I have sold advertising for over 13 years and this is coming from a new business development perspective.

    Before you owners of companies sponsor anyone please consider the following:

    1) ROI (Return On Investment) This is critical. What are YOU going to get in return for this sponsorship? Is it the best option available for you? How much will it cost you? I can’t stress this enough, ROI is critical to a small business. If you spend a few hundred dollars sponsoring Joe Q Public what is Joe Q Public doing for you? I mean, how many people is he really going to expose your business too? 100? 200? Is that worth it to you? Is this really the best you can do as a business owner? Why not compare what Joe Q Public wants as a sponsored fishermen and compare this to other sources of ADVERTISING. After all, sponsorships are advertising. So let’s call it for what it really is. This brings me to point 2
    2) Where do you advertise your business? If you are spending hundreds or thousands of dollars sponsoring people then you may be wasting your money. Consider what else you could spend this money on in order to reach more prospects. Again, what is the ROI? I hope you keep track of this as without knowing what your ROI is how do you know if it is a good deal for you?
    3)Exposure-You need exposure. Any business needs exposure. But you need exposure to the right people, at the right time and at the right price. Perhaps thinking out of the box is a good thing but sometimes thinking outside of the box can get you in trouble too. Sometimes what is in the box is good and is basic marketing 101 stuff that shouldn’t be ignored. Advertise your business to your prospects in the area that will give you the best bang for your dollar. That is basic inside the box thinking that will help you become successful at your business.

    Those are a few things I would suggest that any business owner sit down and compare before he or she does any spending of money. I see far too many wasted ads by companies and I cringe everytime as I know that ad is not free. It costs money and when you do not know how to advertise properly it can cost you big in lost revenue that you might have gained.

    I hope this has helped anyone who is a business owner. Since I am not a person looking for a sponsor, I do not have any input on this subject, Tom & battisti did a great job. I just wanted to shine a light on the other end of things for the business owner who is considering sponsoring someone. Just consider what your costs are, what you will get in return and compare that to traditional advertising, email advertising, direct mail etc and see which option gives you your best ROI.

    Thank you and God bless.

    Keith

  6. tomleogrande says:

    Battisti – as usual you are right on – I guess that’s why you are a nuclear physicist or rocket scientiest or whatever your day job is! :) Although, I do think there are some positions for mid level guys with good marketing skills and a good plan to help.

  7. battisti says:

    I’d like to add some to what Toim had to say here. It may seem crass but at the same time it;s the truth.

    I have been associated with the fishing and tackle industry for 31 years. Back in “the day” very few were sponsored and those who were, were the big names in the industry. Nationally, it was Bill Dance, Roland etc and in the west it was Don Iovino, Dee Thomas, Mike Folkstad, and Dave Gliebe – to name a few.

    Since about the late 80s, it seems everyone who has a rod or reel thinks they deserve to be sponsored. To me, this is crazy. Does everyone that owns a set of golf clubs ask or feel they deserve a sponsorship? I mean does John Q Saturday golfer write Titlist (sp) a request for sponsorship because they won their Sunday free-for-all golf derby (excuse me for my golf illiteracy)? No, they don’t.

    From 1998 to 2002 I was owner of a hand-poured bait company. I’d been pouring worms since I was 17 and was pretty decent at it. I came out of southern California, learned to pour worms and mix colors from Jim Smith (Smitty Worms) and knew the industry like the back of my hand. What I didn’t realize was how many people out there were wanting sponsorships. During that time, I was just amazed at the number of resumes I got on a weekly basis from anglers wanting sponsorship. I mean most of the letters were from people who’d never even used our products.

    On average, I received around 50 resumes a week and to be flat honest with you, they all went in the round file.

    So, to add to what Leo said about how to get sponsorships, let me state what I feel is important.

    1) Be willing to foot your own bill.

    2) Be willing to work for free when your local tackle store is having a tackle show. Help them promote the show and work the floor. Answer any and all questions pertaining to everything you have confidence in and use.

    3) Go to tackle shows and introduce yourself to tackle companies/boat companies etc and spend some time in their booth. Talk to prospective buyers and tell them your personal experience with this companies products. It’s always better if an average Joe talks up a product rather than the owners of the company and the company will greatly appreciate your efforts. Teach the prospective buyers something and at the same time impress the owners that you actually know the product. At the end of the show give your contact information to the owners and let them know you’re willing to help them the next time they’re in town.

    4) Fish and do well in tournaments. And, not just club events or weekend series stuff. You have to fish big events. This may sound extremely crass but no one cares if you’re the AOY for the BFE Bass Club. Fish the big stuff (Pro/Ams and Big Team events) and do well.

    5) Let sponsors come to you – don’t chase sponsors down. The problem with the industry today is sponsorships have become so diluted that they’re not worth anything anymore. This is because every Joe out there is willing to put a patch on his/her shirt for the cost of 15 bags of plastics a year. Let your skills be your resume and let the companies come to you. When they come to you, you have the upper hand.

    I hope this didn’t upset too many people out there but it’s the truth. Do what Tom said and practice what I wrote and you’ll be a lot better off.

    Tom, great blog.

  8. prosource says:

    Leo this is a great blog, and should be required reading for anyone tryng to break into getting a sponsorship. I bet manufacturers get a ton of these emails from anyone thinking they can fish, even worse many who can’t and simply want to be sponsered just to get free stuff!

  9. dalemeddock says:

    Leo;
    This is a great informative blog, Great information in here.
    Thank You, Dale

  10. darkman says:

    Great Advice..thank you Tom…that’s as clear as it gets…Great Blog

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment. Register.

Recent Comments

Categories

Recently Updated Blogs

Archive

  • Hot Tags