Online Sports Marketing Guy Blog

  1. 2013 MLB Payrolls

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    This is a list of 2013 MLB payrolls by team. The source for all of our MLB salary information is USA Today. Detailed player salaries will be added throughout the season. If a team name is hyperlinked, you can click on it for additional salary information.
  2. Who Cares About These World Series Teams? [Visualization]

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    The 2012 World Series has drawn 12.2 and 12.3 Million viewers for Games 1 and 2, respectively. According to television ratings published in Sports Business Daily, this is the fourth consecutive year MLB has seen a drop in World Series Game 1 and 2 television ratings. I have to admit that I have only watched a couple of innings this year, even opting to watch an MLS match running during the same time as Game 1 on Wednesday night.

    Part of the challenge for MLB is there are more entertainment options than ever competing for fan attention (although this has not been a problem for the NFL). I believe the bigger issue is the lack of parody in the league driven by the range of total team payrolls. Not surprisingly, the Tigers (fifth) and Giants (eighth) both have among the highest paid players in the sport. It was nice to see some surprising teams be very efficient with their salary this year and make the playoffs, but inevitably, these low-payroll team playoff cameos are short-lived.

    Winning the World Series as a small-market team is close to impossible. Fans in cities like Kansas City will go to a few games a year for the atmosphere and Sheridan’s ice cream, but there is a completely different feel to any other sporting event I’ve been to – there is no expectation of winning. I even saw a man reading a book in the front row at a Royals game I attended this year. Experiences like this made me excited to find this interactive visualization at Tableau which illustrates fan interest by team as of September 15th. The interest is based on tweets related to each team....
  3. Chiefs Block Twitter Follower: The Good, Bad, and Ugly

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    Last night, the Kansas City Chiefs blocked a Twitter follower for calling them out on their spending habits in recent years. As reported earlier today by Bob Fescoe of 610 Sports Radio in Kansas City, the Chiefs Twitter policy is to block no one unless their behavior gets vulgar. I looked up the tweet that caused the stir from @teedubya, and I have to admit, I wasn’t exactly comfortable embedding it on my own site.

    That being said, the problem is not that the Chiefs blocked Travis Wright, who is a global Social Media Manager with over 120,000 Twitter followers (oops….), it’s how they responded with the following private direct message....

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