Academic literature on the topic 'Concurrent sponsorship'

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Journal articles on the topic "Concurrent sponsorship"

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Boronczyk, Felix, Christopher Rumpf, and Christoph Breuer. "Determinants of viewer attention in concurrent event sponsorship." International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship 19, no. 1 (2018): 11–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijsms-09-2016-0063.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of exposure-related and consumer-related factors on the return of sponsorship investment through their influence on viewers’ attention for sponsor signage. Design/methodology/approach Data were collected through an experimental study (n=92) involving eye-tracking and a questionnaire, and were analyzed using regression analysis. Findings The results show that viewers’ attention for sponsor signage is affected by the signage color of concurrent sponsors, as well as viewers’ brand familiarity, and sport involvement. In particular, the findings reveal that viewers’ attention for sponsor signage increases with greater color contrast between concurrently visible sponsor signage. Further, signage receives more attention if viewers are familiar with the brand and less involved with the sponsored event. Given that attention is an important prerequisite for further processing of sponsorship information, these findings have important implications for managers seeking to evaluate the return on their sponsorship investment. Practical implications When assessing the return on a sponsorship investment, marketers should consider the characteristics of surrounding sponsor signage and the audience with regard to their impact on viewers’ attention for their own signage. Ideally, marketers should attempt to create a greater color contrast between their own signage and its surroundings in order to maximize viewer attention. Originality/value This paper provides valuable information on the importance of concurrently visible sponsor signage and audience characteristics for the return on investment of sponsorships through their impact on viewers’ attention.
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Yousaf, Anish, Abhishek Mishra, and Anil Gupta. "Concurrent sponsorship: implications for sponsoring brands and sponsored property." Marketing Intelligence & Planning 36, no. 6 (2018): 633–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/mip-02-2018-0042.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the interesting dynamics of image transfer when multiple brands get together to sponsor a property, referred to as concurrent sponsorship, and its effects on the consumer-based brand equity (CBBE) of the sponsor or the sponsored property, in the context of Indian Premier League of cricket. Design/methodology/approach Two pre-tests, for identifying the sponsored property and sponsors, were followed by the main experiment, involving 500 respondents. A general linear model was used for data analysis. Findings The findings reveal that for brands with high CBBE, investment in concurrent sponsorship leads to larger benefits, especially if they have similar associations to the sponsored property. This study also shows that image of the sponsored property is strongly dependent on combined CBBE of the sponsors. Finally, it is found that brands with high (low) CBBE are benefited more in concurrent (solo) sponsorship conditions. Originality/value This paper is an original contribution in this field, with limited works studying the impact of concurrent sponsorship on the brand equity of sponsors or the sponsored property.
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Breuer, Christoph, and Christopher Rumpf. "The Impact of Color and Animation on Sports Viewers’ Attention to Televised Sponsorship Signage." Journal of Sport Management 29, no. 2 (2015): 170–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jsm.2013-0280.

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Although competition for viewers’ attention to sponsorship signage in sport telecasts has become a growing issue in sponsorship-linked marketing, sport management research has not yet investigated how to create eyecatching sponsorship signage in the cluttered visual surroundings of sport events without negatively affecting the viewers’ first objective: watching sports. This research takes into account the peculiarities of televised sport sponsorship platforms by including (1) the concurrent appearance of sport action and sponsor signage, (2) the color contrast between signage and sport surroundings, and (3) viewer confusion as a reaction to an overload of sponsorship information. Based on a laboratory study, it was found that both color and animation significantly impact sports viewers’ attention. However, animation can lead to visual confusion for television sport viewers, and may jeopardize intended sponsorship effects. These findings provide scientific evidence for the opportunities and risks of visual features in sponsorship-linked marketing.
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Boronczyk, Felix, and Christoph Breuer. "The company you keep: Brand image transfer in concurrent event sponsorship." Journal of Business Research 124 (January 2021): 739–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2019.03.022.

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Boronczyk, Felix, and Christoph Breuer. "Brand-related feelings and sponsor attitude formation." International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship 21, no. 3 (2020): 513–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijsms-11-2019-0118.

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PurposeThis study examines how brand attitude formation with respect to sport event sponsors is affected by feelings related to the sponsor brand, the sponsored event, and concurrent sponsors.Design/methodology/approachUsing systematically manipulated press releases, 216 sport-interested participants were presented with different sponsorships of a major sport event. Sponsor information was systematically manipulated both within the stimulus text and the accompanying photo, which contained clearly visible sponsor signage. Participants' brand-related feelings and attitudes toward the stimulus brands were assessed through an online questionnaire following the treatment and analyzed using structural equation modeling.FindingsThe results show that sponsor brand-related feelings represent an important step in the creation of brand attitudes. Sponsor brand attitudes are further revealed to be in part determined by event- and co-sponsor-related feelings through several indirect pathways.Practical implicationsThe findings presented in this study suggest that managers who seek to create favorable brand responses need to consider the feelings associated with their brands, the event and concurrent sponsors. Brands may experience both beneficial and detrimental effects, depending on whether the feelings involved are positive or negative.Originality/valueTo date, no research has investigated the relationships between brand-related feelings and brand attitudes in event sponsorship while accounting for the influence of the sponsored event and concurrent sponsors. Therefore, this study contributes to a better understanding of the role of feelings in sponsor brand attitude formation.
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Won, June, and J. Lucy Lee. "The effectiveness of multiple brand portfolios: the role of directional dominance and brand interference on brand evaluation." International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship 21, no. 2 (2020): 285–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijsms-09-2019-0100.

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PurposeThe purposes of the study were (1) to examine whether directional dominance between co-existing athlete brands and sponsor brands exists; (2) to explore whether directional dominance influences consumers' memory interference; and (3) to test whether brand interference interacts with directional dominance among brands to influence consumer evaluation and behaviors under multiple endorsement and sponsorship portfolios.Design/methodology/approachThe research is a 3 (directional dominance: symmetric dominance vs. asymmetric dominance with existing vs. asymmetric dominance with newly endorsed brand) x 2 (brand memory interference: interference vs. no interference) between-subjects factorial design.FindingsThe results indicate that (1) directional dominance influenced consumer brand interference, and directional dominance interacted with brand interference on (2) brand evaluation and (3) purchase intention in multiple brand portfolios.Originality/valueConsidering that conventional single-sponsor sponsorship or single-endorser endorsement portfolios are increasingly rare, research on concurrent circumstances of multiple endorsers and multiple endorsed brands in multiple brand portfolios was necessary. By expanding and reconceptualizing the context of brand networks, this study provides empirical evidence on how the dominance and directionality between endorser and (existing and newly) endorsed brands—an athlete endorser's strong pre-existing association with an existing endorsed brand in particular—influenced consumer brand interference and the brand evaluation in multiple brand portfolios.
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Kallenbach, AM, and CJ Rosenblum. "Carotid endarterectomy: creating the pathway to 1-day stay." Critical Care Nurse 20, no. 4 (2000): 23–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.4037/ccn2000.20.4.23.

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Use of a collaborative team approach to design a care pathway and standing orders for carotid endarterectomy patients achieved the project's goals. Variation, LOS, and resource consumption were decreased while quality of care and patients' satisfaction levels were maintained. Education of patients, patients' families, and staff members increased. Coordination between caregivers increased. The consistent concurrent database provided a feedback loop for continued change and for setting the target. Essential to the success was sponsorship from key leadership via the hospital's steering committee. The diverse membership of key associates on the CQI team helped to create an excellent revised carotid endarterectomy process and ensured full implementation. This membership of the CQI team was essential to comprehensive education and implementation. The step-by-step implementation kept the project moving forward. Creating a care pathway and changing practice require collaboration between nurses, doctors, and administrators. Creativity and systematic, thorough steps are what move a practice change from idea to inception.
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O'Reilly, Norman J., and Judith J. Madill. "Evaluating Social Marketing Elements in Sponsorship." Social Marketing Quarterly 13, no. 4 (2007): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15245000701662481.

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Organizations of all types increasingly recognize the importance of sponsorship as a source of revenue and as a means to achieve their objectives. This trend is driving the broader adoption of sponsorship, which has resulted in its use to pursue objectives other than those related to promotion, including those related to behavior change and, thus, social marketing. Concurrently, sponsors and sponsees are demanding the development of legitimate, reliable, and meaningful methods for the evaluation of sponsorship as investment in the area increases. For organizations whose objectives include behavior change and, thus seek to market behaviors (i.e., social marketers) this results in a need to be able to evaluate the social marketing elements of their sponsorships, distinct from other objectives that may be sought. The current research conceptualizes social marketing in sponsorship and then develops hypothetical examples for each resulting scenario to demonstrate how social marketing elements in sponsorship should be evaluated.
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Parganas, Petros, Roman Liasko, and Christos Anagnostopoulos. "Scoring goals in multiple fields." Sport, Business and Management: An International Journal 7, no. 2 (2017): 197–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/sbm-11-2016-0072.

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Purpose Professional football clubs currently strive for a number of concurrent goals, ranging from on-field success to profit maximization to fan expansion and engagement. The purpose of this paper, theoretically informed by the social penetration theory, is to analyze the economics behind such goals and examine the association between team performance, commercial success, and social media followers in professional team sports. Design/methodology/approach A data set relating to 20 European professional football clubs that combines financial (revenues and costs), sporting, and digital-reach measures for three consecutive football seasons (2013/2014 to 2015/2016) was used. In addition, to elaborate on this data in terms of a descriptive study, the study constructs a range of correlation statistical tests and linear modeling techniques to obtain quantitative results. Findings The results indicate that all the three main sources of club revenues (match-day, commercial/sponsorship, and broadcasting) are positive drivers for Facebook followers. Staff investments (staff costs) are also positively related to Facebook followers, albeit to a lesser extent, while higher-ranked clubs seem to follow a constant approach in terms of their revenues and cost structure. Originality/value This study seeks to bridge the communication and sport economic research, providing evidence that Facebook followers are part of the cyclical phenomenon of team revenues and team performance. In doing so, it initiates a debate on the relationship between the digital expansion of a football club and its sports and financial indicators.
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Larson, Daniel J., Jordan C. Wetherbee, and Paul Branscum. "CrossFit Athletic Identity’s Relationship to Sponsor Recall, Recognition, and Purchase Intent." International Journal of Kinesiology and Sports Science 7, no. 3 (2019): 6. http://dx.doi.org/10.7575/aiac.ijkss.v.7n.3p.6.

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Background: The CrossFit Open is a physical activity competition that allows athletes from across the world to compete in fitness challenges online, whereby participants document their progress via an event website. No apparent studies have examined participant event sponsorship in a case where sponsor messages are delivered primarily via an event website. Furthermore, current research has yet to consider the differential impact of audience athletic identity on sponsor messaging in such a context. Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between CrossFit Athletic Identity (CAI) and the ability to recall and recognize official sponsors of a participant event conducted on an online platform. Methodology: A cross-sectional research design was used with a convenience sample (n=170) of CrossFit Open participants from 36 affiliates in the South Central United States. A concurrent treatment validation with a subset of four participants utilized laboratory eye-tracking to evaluate the attention and viewing patterns within the CrossFit online platform. Results: CAI was not a significant predictor for sponsor recognition or recall (α = 0.05). Only one of the case study participants had a recorded brand image fixation (0.29 seconds) during the eye-tracking assessments of their typical website interaction. Conclusion: While CAI was not associated with improved sponsor recognition and recall, the assessment of the participant website interactions suggest that participants in this study were not likely exposed to sufficient sponsor images. This highlights the need for critical evaluation of event website designs using eye-tracking or some other metric of visual exposure.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Concurrent sponsorship"

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Dickenson, Peter. "Enhancing purchase intentions through sponsor entitativity : untangling the process." Thesis, Loughborough University, 2015. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/19658.

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Companies increasingly believe that sponsorship, and in particular sport sponsorship, can help them achieve their respective strategic objectives. Achieving sales objectives are especially important in the context of sport sponsorship, given that managers are under increasing pressure to justify their sponsorship expenditure, and that over two-thirds of all sponsorships are directed towards sports properties. However, isolating a sponsorship s contribution to a company s sales figures is difficult to accomplish, and even if this were possible, understanding the mechanisms behind consumers behavioural responses to that respective sponsorship would still constitute a challenge. Hence, understanding consumers behavioural purchase intentions, and what drives these intentions within sponsorship contexts, is of paramount importance. That said, little is known about what drives consumers purchase intentions in sponsorship settings. A greater understanding of consumers behavioural intentions within concurrent sponsorship settings is necessary. Concurrent sponsorships involve multiple brands sponsoring a property at the same time. As such, they are a more realistic and common sponsorship context than simple sponsor-sponsee dyads are. It is important to examine concurrent sponsorships because a collective is formed when multiple sponsors are involved. In turn, social psychology highlights that a collective is characterised by the degree to which its a priori members are perceived as a group. Groups are perceived qualitatively differently to dyads, and can also be perceived differently to the sum of their respective constituent parts. Moreover, the extent to which people perceive a collective as a group can impact upon their subsequent evaluations of that group and that group s actions. Consequently, consumers evaluations of a sponsee s concurrent sponsors and the sponsee itself may be affected by how concurrent sponsorships are perceived, which in turn may affect consumers behavioural intentions. Hence, it is imperative that concurrent sponsorship contexts are investigated. That said, there is scant literature investigating concurrent sponsorships, with sponsorship research historically focussing on sponsor-sponsee dyadic settings. This thesis contributes to our understanding of concurrent sponsorship settings of major sporting events by examining how people s perceptions of concurrent sponsors entitativity influence both their purchase intentions towards a focal concurrent sponsor and their sponsee equity evaluations. An online questionnaire, utilising sponsorship vignettes (scenarios) as part of a factorial survey design, was sent to respondents of a mid-sized UK-based university. Scenarios were used to manipulate respondents into perceiving two concurrent sponsorship settings: a concurrent official providers sponsorship setting and a concurrent official financers sponsorship setting. Hypotheses were tested through Lisrel 8.71 where confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and structural equation modelling (SEM) were performed. The results in both sponsorship contexts (concurrent official providers and concurrent official financers ) appear to be very similar. Specifically, the results suggest that people s entitativity perceptions are positively related to their sponsee equity evaluations, which in turn are positively associated with people s purchase intentions. Entitativity is also positively associated with consumers intentions to purchase from a concurrent sponsor but only when consumers attribute high levels of sincerity towards that sponsor. The one significant difference between the two sponsorship types (official providers and official financers) in the study concerns how sincerity affects the entitativity-sponsee equity relationship. People s attributions of sincerity moderate the relationship between entitativity and sponsee equity in the official provider concurrent sponsorship context, such that the entitativity-sponsee equity relationship becomes stronger. However, people s attributions of sponsor sincerity do not affect the entitativity-sponsee equity relationship in the official financer concurrent sponsorship context. A post-hoc examination of repondents entitativity ratings also suggests people perceive official providers as being significantly more entitative than they do official financers. This study makes a number of contributions to both theory and management practice. For example, the study demonstrates how the entitativity concept, found within social psychology, can be applied to concurrent sponsorship settings, such that people s behavioural intentions towards a sponsee and a concurrent sponsor, are influenced by their concurrent sponsor entitativity perceptions. Following this, concurrent sponsors and sponsee rights holders should consider how sponsors can foster people s entitativity perceptions whilst at the same time communicate sincere motives for their respective sponsee sponsorships, as sincerity perceptions are important too. This would not only help the sponsee s rights holder by increasing sponsee equity but the results also suggest that people are more likely to purchase from a concurrent sponsor. That said, this may lead to further difficulties between sponsors and sponsees rights holders. For example, sponsees rights holders may be perceived as needing sponsorships as opposed to being able to command them, which in turn could lead to difficult sponsorship negotiations between rights holders and potential sponsors. Second, the business and marketing acumens of sponsees rights holders are generally regarded to be lower than that of sponsors . In fact, sponsors often act independently of sponsees rights holders when making sponsorship leveraging decisions and investments, and this is partly because sponsees rights holders are not proactive enough in working with the sponsors. Therefore, if sponsees rights holders do not have the capabilities to help sponsors foster entitative and sincere sponsorship contexts, sponsors may be unwilling to renew their sponsorship deals or even set up their own events.
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Baba, Aïssa Modesto Latifa. "Notion de sponsorship et investissement étranger : l'exemple du Conseil de Coopération du Golfe (CCG)." Thesis, Toulouse 1, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015TOU10056.

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Bien des fois, c’est en regardant le passé que l’on découvre que le présent s’en est inspiré et qu’on peut construire l’avenir. Le sens profond de l’hospitalité des Bédouins fait aujourd’hui de ce code d’honneur un acte social et commercial de premier plan. Passant d’un devoir de bienveillance à l’égard de son prochain à une obligation de partenariat, le sponsorship véhicule une valeur morale souvent occultée par les mécanismes juridiques de sa mise en œuvre. Mal connu dans le monde, la kafala ou sponsorship a fait l’objet de très peu d’études doctrinales d’ensemble. Les États du Conseil de coopération du Golfe (CCG) ont relégué une mission d’intérêt général à la société civile. L’institution pénètre le contrat de droit privé. Le législateur a mis en place un droit de l’investissement obligeant les étrangers à disposer d’un sponsor pour mener une activité commerciale locale. Cette impérativité attribue ausponsorship un caractère prohibitif et, pourtant, son efficience économique dépasse largement les objectifs initiaux du législateur. L’ambition de cette étude est de découvrir la vraie nature du sponsorship<br>Frequently, while looking at the past, we can discern that the present draws inspiration from it, and that we can also use it to shape the future. The long-standing Bedouin tradition of hospitality nowadays gives this code of honour vital importance, both socially and commercially. Whether a duty of benevolence towards one’s neighbour, or a partnership obligation, sponsorship conveys moral values, often obscured by legal machinations in its execution. Little known globally, kafala, or sponsorship, is a theme that has rarely been considered in doctrinal studies. The GCC states have underestimated what is in fact a mission of general interest to civil society. This institution is a part of private-law contract. Legislators have introduced a law obliging foreign investors to have a sponsor in order to conduct a local commercial activity. This imperative nature gives sponsorship the impression of being prohibitive, although its economic efficiency far exceed the initial objectives envisaged by the legislation. The aim of this study is to discover the true nature of sponsorship
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Lee, Yu-Hsin, and 李玉馨. "A Study on TV Product Placement in Taiwan and A Concurrent Study on The Chinese TV Title Sponsorship Production." Thesis, 2014. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/97889322114180505630.

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碩士<br>銘傳大學<br>傳播管理學系碩士班<br>102<br>Title Sponsorship has been widely used in television programs in recent years. In China, for example, the well-known company Mengniu Dair sponsored 2,300 million CNY in a singing show“Super Girl” by inserting its logo along with the show name, which leading to the great resonance among audiences. In Taiwan, similarly, the National Communications Commission (NCC) has also announced a regulation "television program in business marketing into provisional specification" by relaxing restrictions on the television programs in 2012, in order to welcome this hot and inevitable trend. Hence, there are more and more television stations started to carry out the plan of title sponsorship since 2013. Compared to the situation of title sponsorship in China, the main purpose of this dissertation is to explore the development of Taiwanese television program from the point of view of Political Economy of Communication. In the meantime, qualitative research method will be conducted by interviewing Taiwanese television program producers who are highly familiar with the title sponsorship. Finally, by analyzing the past literatures and interviews, this study has come out with the result that the relaxing title sponsorship restriction has played an important role in the progress of television program in Taiwan, which also indirectly change the standpoint of the advertisement owner.
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Book chapters on the topic "Concurrent sponsorship"

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Groza, Mark D., and Joe Cobbs. "Attenuating the Negative Effects of a Low-Fit Sponsorship: The Role of Concurrent Sponsors." In The Sustainable Global Marketplace. Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10873-5_284.

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Conference papers on the topic "Concurrent sponsorship"

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"Message from the Sponsorship Chair." In 2013 26th International Conference on VLSI Design: concurrently with the 12th International Conference on Embedded Systems. IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/vlsid.2013.121.

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