In the past 18 months Sports Social Media has come a long way, especially in Football! In the English Premier League for example, it\u2019s no wonder that the combined number of club Twitter followers has grown by an astonishing 69% since the start of the season. Similarly, on\u00a0Facebook there are over 50 million Facebook fans of EPL clubs<\/a>\u00a0\u2013 that\u2019s nearly a whole nation. Yet, US Sport franchises still lead the way in creative and innovative Sports Social Media. With that in mind, here are my top 5 trends to watch out for and what we can expect to see soon in European Football:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Teams in the NBA, NHL and NFL differ from European Sports teams in that they have already evolved the way they engage with Sports fans. Social Media is used to not market the brand \u2013 tickets, products, merchandise or adverts. Instead, teams use Social Media to focus in on the \u201cgame day experience\u201d \u2013 the highlights, the atmosphere, the music playlist, the pre match rituals, views from seats and funny anecdotes from the game. Here in the UK we are far too focussed on telling what the fans want, rather, marketers should be sitting in the fan seats and absorbing the emotions and stories during a game. Sports fans want a shared experience, not a broadcast competition about a free subscription to the club magazine!<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n I\u2019ve spoken about this brilliant invention\u00a0before<\/a>\u00a0hand but it\u2019s still incredibly relevant and untried on this side of the Atlantic. Social Media Command Centre\u2019s \u2013 or Hubs if you don\u2019t want to be too dramatic \u2013 are allocated areas within the stadium on a gameday where pre-selected fans can take control of the clubs Social Media presence. These fans are usually selected for being Social Media savvy and tend to be quite influential in the space. Not only do they create content, but they curate content from their fellow fans. They are the perfect Community Managers \u2013 they know what the fans want, they know the fan chants, know the fan groups, they know what the expectations are. But most importantly, they focus on the experience \u2013 not the endless stream of sales spam so many clubs force onto their fans.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n If there\u2019s one thing the American know how to do \u2013 it\u2019s reward their fans. US Sports recognise how powerful and influential their Social fans can be, one way of rewarding them is the increasingly popular \u201cFan Night\u201d in which fans are invited to come to the stadium to meet their fellow Tweeters and put faces to Twitter handles. It\u2019s a simple enough idea and a nice\u00a0gesture\u00a0to bring your most influential followers closer to the club. Clubs might put on some food, give a stadium tour, or even meet a player\/legend. It just shows that the club genuinely cares about their fans and appreciates their efforts in the Social Media space.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Again, this is a topic\u00a0I\u2019ve already written about at length<\/a>\u00a0and although clubs like Manchester City and Norwich City are starting to integrate fans into their official content \u2013 there\u2019s still a long way to go. Content has dramatically changed in recent years, no longer should it be aimed at audiences, but it has to involve them as well. Clubs can tap into their fans\u2019 talent and encourage them to be content creators for official media. Whether that is crowdsourcing questions for an upcoming YouTube interview with a player, a match report in the programme, or even getting fans to create biographies about their favourite players (past and present). Fan Content is more engaging, authentic and usually a whole lot more interesting.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n1. Marketing the Experience, not the Brand!<\/h3>\n
2. Social Media Command Centre<\/h3>\n
3. Fan Nights<\/h3>\n
4. Fan Content<\/h3>\n
5. Pinterest<\/h3>\n