The New Sports Content Business
How Supply And Demand will shape the Sports Content Business.Sep-01-2010 My brother and I still have the scars from fighting each other as we raced to the kitchen, diving like
Fast forward to today and what does that sibling battle look like in homes each morning? Two brothers waking, one pulling out his
However, whether its traditional publishers bringing their content into
The good news is that for content creators willing to revisit good old economic principles, a roadmap might emerge for publishers to follow as digital technologies continue to change the game.
Supply Side - More Content Is A Good Thing
Back to my brotherly battles for a minute. Once one of us got his hands on the prized sports section, he would flip through the few pages of the previous day's stories and recaps, and that's all we got for the next 24 hours!
Nowadays, with multiple connected devices and thousands of pieces of content being produced each day, everyone gets to wade in to whatever sports media experience they want to create. And, thanks to Web-based publishing tools, anyone can be a writer or columnist.
Perhaps nowhere is the supply growth more evident than in the proliferation of sports content beyond the standard news and game recap reportage that dominated for so long. Opening up publishing capabilities for fans has enabled countless angles and voices to "swarm" around a news story, thus creating a broader array of analysis and opinion that in turn unlocks much more value than the game recap.
Demand Side - Consumer Driven Is A Good Thing
As any Econ 101 enrollee will tell you, supply is but one-half a marketplace. Assessing demand is equally important in being able to truly determine the potential value of any market.
Here again, the traditional approach to determining demand does not necessarily create the most efficient outcome. Relying solely on a small set of experts to make the daily editorial decisions cannot accurately take the true pulse of what consumers want.
Search markets spanning
Looking ahead, the next wave will be powered by social networks such as
Efficient Content Markets - High Quality, Scalable Businesses
Some folks fear that when content can be supplied in such large quantities and shaped to meet real-time demand, the user experience devolves to some lowest common denominator level and, worse yet, the core business model withers away as a result.
Bring it back to economics. Every day actually every few minutes content supply and demand can be brought in to a market clearing point of equilibrium. Quality content will be consumed in high volumes, low-quality content will not. The world will still crave stars in sports journalism the Frank Defords, Jason Whitlocks, and Bill Simmonses will not become dinosaurs rendered extinct by digital media.
On the contrary, we'll still hoist our new stars to the top of the heap we just may find that some of them come up through a different digital media training system.
The power of efficient markets should allay concerns that digital media disruption will kill the business of sports content publishing -- or any content publishing for that matter. So long as there are still siblings who crave stories about
By Brian Grey - Brian Grey is CEO of Bleacher Report, overseeing the strategic direction and day-to-day operation of the company. He joined Bleacher Report from successful leadership positions as SVP/GM of Fox Sports Interactive and, prior to that, GM of
