By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.
FBLA Study Guide – Sports Marketing (Sponsorship, Endorsements, Brand Loyalty)
Sports marketing is the strategic use of athletic events, teams, athletes, and venues to promote a brand, drive sales, and build long?term consumer loyalty. For the FBLA exam you must understand how companies evaluate sponsorship deals, negotiate endorsement contracts, and measure the impact on brand loyalty. Example: Your school’s varsity basketball team partners with a local sneaker store; the store pays a sponsorship fee, the team’s star player wears the brand’s shoes, and the school tracks ticket?sale spikes and repeat?purchase rates to prove ROI.
Mistake: Treating “impressions” as the same as “sales.” Correction: Impressions measure exposure only; convert them to sales using conversion rates before calculating ROI.
Mistake: Ignoring the “fit” component and signing any high?profile athlete. Correction: Use the Fit?Alignment Matrix; a poor fit can damage brand equity even if the athlete is famous.
Mistake: Forgetting to include earned media value in the ROI calculation. Correction: Add estimated earned?media dollar value (often 2–3× the paid cost) to the numerator for a realistic ROI.
Mistake: Using the total number of followers as the sole reach metric. Correction: Adjust for engagement rate and audience relevance; a smaller, highly engaged audience can outperform a larger, passive one.
Mistake: Assuming brand loyalty automatically rises after a sponsorship. Correction: Measure BLI before and after the activation; only a statistically significant lift confirms true loyalty growth.
A sports apparel company spends $120,000 on a college?football sponsorship that generates $210,000 in incremental sales. What is the ROI? Answer: 75% ROI. Explanation: ROI = [(210,000 – 120,000) / 120,000] × 100 = 75%.
Which metric best indicates long?term brand loyalty after an athlete endorsement? Answer: Brand Loyalty Index (BLI). Explanation: BLI combines repeat?purchase rate and satisfaction, directly measuring loyalty rather than short?term impressions.
A brand’s Fit?Alignment Matrix shows high Brand?Fit but low Audience?Fit for a potential sponsorship. What should the brand do? Answer: Seek a partner with better Audience?Fit or adjust the activation to target the desired audience. Explanation: Both dimensions must be strong; low Audience?Fit limits the effectiveness of the sponsorship.
Join 4M+ learners. Unlock unlimited quizzes, wrong-answer tracking, flashcards + reminders, study guides, and 1-on-1 challenges.