Can a business strategy framework be applied to the Scottish Premier League?
Published: 25 November 2011
A major research project conducted by University of Glasgow’s Business School has found that leading figures in Scottish football believe the game is boring and that fans are losing interest.
A major research project conducted by University of Glasgow’s Business School has found that leading figures in Scottish football believe the game is boring and that fans are losing interest. The MBA study by Alec Pearson, which focussed on whether a business strategy framework could be applied to the sport, also concluded that multi million pound television deals were not the salvation of Scottish football, but rather a sticking plaster on deep rooted problems. The study comes in the week in which an £80 million television deal was agreed between the Scottish Premier League {SPL} and satellite broadcasters SKY TV and ESPN.
"Sky Sports deal won't solve SPL's problems" - The Scotsman
As Pearson states, “The facts suggest a decline in the product, club revenues and attendances since the inception of the SPL in 1998. Scottish football is dominated by the Old Firm but we are about to enter uncharted territory. The longest gap between non-Old Firm league title wins stands at 27 years spanning 1905 when Third Lanark won the league and 1932, when Motherwell were crowned champions. If either half of the Old Firm wins in season 2011-12 we will match that 27 year gap, with little prospect of a meaningful title challenge in the foreseeable future.”
Short interview with Alex Pearson about his research
Previous attempts to make the Scottish game more attractive to both fans and television broadcasters have involved league reconstruction. According to Pearson, “The introduction of the SPL coincided with a boom in satellite TV broadcasting of games. Today some SPL chairmen and directors argue that, over the long term, satellite TV has actually reduced revenue available to SPL clubs. Ticket sales, unlike other leagues across Europe, are the SPL’s most important revenue stream. With ready access to live English and European games, the relative poverty of our domestic game is being exposed. Negative perceptions of the product and increased choice of alternatives have meant a marked decrease in average attendances.”
Critically, substantial TV revenue available in the early years of the SPL actually lowered league competitiveness. Clubs spent vast amounts on new players, which they could not afford.
Robert MacIntosh, Professor of Strategy at the University of Glasgow, thinks that the real problem facing Scottish football is holding the attention of the next generation of fans. MacIntosh says, “The worry is no longer that there are buses leaving from all over Scotland which drain support from the natural catchment of other teams, the real worry is that younger fans, brought up with wall to wall Champions League football and FIFA 2012, won’t see our domestic game as anything like as attractive as following one of a handful of global teams such as Barcelona.”
Alec Pearson’s research, which included direct interviews senior figures in Scottish football, concluded that too many clubs were run on a less than professional basis. “Whilst the majority of club chairmen and directors run their own successful businesses, it appears the vast majority run their football club on a part-time basis.”
Pearson found that a number of SPL clubs either didn’t have a business strategy at all or operated on a model that lacked clarity and was therefore largely ineffective. “Bringing some strategic thinking skills to the table might help football clubs break out of the silo mentality. It might also help clubs to engage in serious analysis of the environmental changes occurring around them. Considering the state of the game, I believe it is pertinent that clubs work closer together to find a collective long term strategic solution to the problems affecting Scottish football today.”
ENDS
For more information contact Peter Aitchison in the University of Glasgow Media Relations Office on 0141 330 7350 or email peter.aitchison@glasgow.ac.uk
First published: 25 November 2011
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