0.5% Of UK Sponsorship For Women’s Elite

07 Nov 2011 | tshego
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New research has revealed that sponsorship of women’s elite sport in the UK amounted to less than one percent of the total market between January 2010 and August 2011.

The report from The Commission on the Future of Women’s Sport revealed that sponsorship expenditure on men’s sport accounted for 61.1% over the same period, with the remainder spent on mixed sports.

Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson, chair of the Commission, told SportBusiness.com: ‘It’s a depressing state of affairs. Our research tells us that men and women are keen to see more women’s sport on our screens but many sports, potential sponsors and broadcasters, seem to be spectacularly missing out on the opportunity to secure some great deals.’

‘In just a few months, the eyes of the world will be on London 2012 – the only occasion in our lifetime that we’ll be a global showcase for women’s elite sport in this country. It’s disappointing that more brands and rights-holders haven’t seized the opportunity to benefit themselves and women’s sport, and help create a lasting legacy.’

The research for ‘Big Deal? The case for commercial investment in women’s sport’, showed that there had been a 0.1% increase in value in the women’s sport sponsorship sector since the last time the market was valued.

The study did show that women’s sport had accounted for 1.5% of the total sports sponsorship spend in the UK so far this year, with brands such as Investec, Continental Tyres, Umbro, Vauxhall, Yorkshire Building Society, Invesco Perpetual, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Fiat, Samsung, Speedo, Hovis, BP, British Airways and BMW having invested significant sums.

The data for ‘Big Deal?’ was collected and analysed between January 2010 and August 2011, by Havas Sponsorship Insights and is taken from The World Sponsorship Monitor body and the Broadcasting Audience Research Board.

The Commission on the Future of Women’s Sport is supported and run by the charity, The Women’s Sport & Fitness Foundation (WSFF).

WSFF chief executive Sue Tibballs said: ‘The time is ripe for investment in women’s sport. However, the lack of investment accounts, in large part, for the absence of a female sporting culture in the UK – women’s sport is not widely promoted and its competitors are not being publicly presented as fit and healthy sporting role models to inspire women and girls to be physically active.’

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