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ORDER NOW TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION AUTHOR   BIO


THE GREAT
MONEY HUNT

An Insider's Practical
Guide to Raising Motor
Racing Sponsorship

Andrew Waite

NEXZUS Motorsports

ORDER NOW

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
 

Chapter One: So You Want to go Racing 1
-- Developing the Other Brain 2 2
-- Missing Disciplines in Race Teams 3
-- Three Legs of the Sponsorship Stool 4
-- Basic Business Disciplines 4
-- Developing On Track Performance 5
-- The Philosophical Paradox – How to Make it work for You 5
-- When On Track Performance is Critical 6
WHY SHOULD A COMPANY CONSIDER
MOTORSPORTS SPONSORSHIP
6
-- Primary and Secondary Selling Opportunities 7
Motorsports is a Unique Business Sponsorship Opportunity 8

BOOK OUTLINE:  Here is What We Are Going To Do

 
 
9

A.     PLANNNING

  • Decide on a budget.

  • Decide what a sponsor will receive.

  • Set pricing for different sponsorship levels.

B.     STRATEGY

  • Build a team sales strategy

  • Positioning

  • Structure an ideal sponsor/marketing partner combination.

C.     PROSPECTING

  • Define your target companies/individuals.

  • Research them.

D.     CONTACT

  • Begin the sales process.

  • Contact.

  • Introduction of your reason for calling.

E.      INTRODUCTORY SALES STEPS

  • Gain first meeting

  • Recruiting a "coach" or mentor in the prospect account.

  • Discovery

  • Forming the first ideas.

F.      PRESENTATIONS/PROPOSALS/OBJECTIONS

  • Response.

  • Present Response and gain permission to invest time and money in putting together a proposal.

  • Craft a proposal.

  • Present.

  • Modify and reflect their feedback.

G.      TRIAL CLOSE/OBJECTIONS/CLOSE

  • Reach agreement and negotiate contract.

  • Sign contract.

  • Get paid.

H.       FOLLOW UP/FULFILLMENT/ACCOUNT MANAGEMENT

  • Fulfill contract by going racing

  • Manage account to next stage of the relationship

   
The Traditional Sales Cycle 10

About Selling:    Getting Started

11
People don’t sell, People buy! 11
So you don’t think you can sell? 11
Dealing with the personal "I can’t sell" objection. 11
Exploiting existing relationships. 12
Learning your trade. 12
Being interested. 12
Being interesting. 13
Lessons. 13
 

 



 

 

The Great Money Hunt

INTRODUCTION and THE OPPORTUNITY

So you are a "hot shoe" or a team with an ambition to make racing a career. Congratulations! Great, but before you get carried away with the idea of toppling Jacques Villeneuve, Alex Zanardi or Jeff Gordon form their respective thrones, there is one small thing you need; Money. Scads of it!

If you don’t believe that, try this little reality from a motor racing legend:

The days of "Buddy, can you spare a motorsports dime," are over. To win sponsors you must work out what they do, how they do it. Then, how you can help them do more of it better, with your race program. This book is here to help. It is a compilation of ideas from many sources. It is a collection of basic business rules and common sense. It’s designed to help you, the racer, build a business style and argument to attract sponsors into the sport so you can go racing. Then after getting them aboard, keeping them in the sport by delivering the value in the form of measurable business returns.

NEW LANGUAGE RULE – They are no longer "sponsors…" they are marketing partners. Dump the term "sponsor." Using the term sponsor sounds like you are some penniless child in the wastelands of the third world, looking for a monthly handout to eat and get a minimal education, sponsored by some guilt ridden hard working capitalist with disposable income. Nonsense. Your motor racing ambition is the basis of an exciting and creative enterprise with a novel way of helping business win more business. You have a powerful method of building customers and market share.

After saying all this sponsors don’t seem to mind being called sponsors, so when in Rome….Throughout the book I use the term, but do so with dislike for the broad connotation of a donation.

WHY I HAVE WRITTEN THIS BOOK

My name is Andrew Waite. I have been raising money for drivers and race teams for six years and I am totally blown away by the things (about business and selling) that many racers don’t know. That’s not to say there are not some absolutely exemplary exceptions. Frank Williams, Ron Dennis, Tom Walkinshaw in F1; Roger Penske, Carl Haas and Steve Horne in Indy Cars and Richard Childress and Felix Sabates in NASCAR, to identify a few. Sadly these names are particularly outstanding in racing because they are exception. They are exceptions because they have made racing a successful business.

Now a top F1 two car team budget exceeds $60,000,000. A top one car Indy team; $10,000,000 and a similar number for a front running Winston Cup team. An Indy Lights season or Formula Atlantic will set you back $750,000 and a regional or breeder league formula, $100,000 to $300,000. In an economy league like IRL; try $500,000 a race. And that’s one season only. And then often with used equipment!

Take a look at F1. In 1998, Gerhard Berger, (1997 F! race winner,) is out of work. Take Indy cars are a little more forgiving though guys like Raul Boesel, Robeto Guerrero and Eddie Cheever gone or driving in secondary leagues, etc. The list could go on and on. We don’t have the recession of the early 90’s to blame and new names graduating into the slots vacated by those leaving. There must be sponsorship money somewhere? Yes, but it has become a lot more analytical and demanding of a measurable return on their motorsports investments.

All these named drivers have a couple of things in common; they are great drivers whom I suspect have never taken the time to develop the business skills necessary to build up a following of sponsors. This book is intended to be a quick introduction to these concepts and introduce some sponsorship winning ideas so you or your team don’t find yourself in this position.

AND WHY ELSE?…

I always believe anyone can learn another discipline, if they put their mind to it. Selling, for those who have never done it, looks easy. Or, alternatively, looks very hard. Many see selling as "telling people what they want to hear, to separate them form their money." It is none of these things. It is professional discipline, a method and common sense. I believe anyone can sell, given the tools, the chance and the motivation. As a budding racer you have the latter tow opportunities. Here is my modest offer of the tools. If you ever need more, call me. Advice is free. Results come at a modest cost.

THE COMPLETE RACER

There is a simple point here. A successful racer isn’t just measured by his on track performance, but also equally by his ability to please people. Prospects and sponsors alike. This book is designed to help you learn how to do that. This book is no "silver bullet." It is merely a collection of ideas. If your "daddy owns an oil well or two," maybe you don’t need this book. If your family lineage includes a list of racing legends, the same may apply. But for most of us this is not the case. This is intended as a helpful "how to" book for the rest of us.

The people and companies who buy motorsports sponsorship are not that much different from racers. They prepare, build their version of a pole and race winner and compete as vigorously for markets ass you do for a checkered flag. The words, phrases, measurements and prizes are not that different from yours. Once you grasp that, and learn these frames of business reference, you are well on your way to winning sponsorships. 

WHAT YOU ARE NOT SELLING

One of the first realities you are going to discover, no matter how good a racer (boxer, sprinter, jockey, etc.) you are, there is someone out there with your picture on their wall and a plan to beat you. You are NOT just selling your track record. If you have a great performance record, that’s great. If not, that is also not an insurmountable objection to selling sponsorship.

Also, you are NOT just selling advertising and exposure or advertising impressions. Racing is not just an alternate advertising medium. There are a lot better and more cost effective traditional advertising channels. Not only are they better, but more scientifically measured and a whole lot less controversial than motorsports.

WHAT YOU ARE SELLING

You are selling a complex set of marketing tools and the ability to deliver a very specific audience that the racing series you have chosen to compete in, attracts. A target audience has the ability to buy things, and sales are very measurable. Who do you know who wants access to these markets? Your racing program offers a unique platform and a package of business and marketing benefits that most businesses can use to build their sales…if they only understood how to use it. This book is designed to help you to understand what you have to offer, what a prospect may need, how to articulate this in the context of a prospects business and how to put it together. Then deliver on the expectation you have created.

A PERSONAL REMINDER AND SPONSORSHIP
SALES HELP…

I have also developed this book as much as a reminder to myself of how to go through the fundamental steps of a typical complex product sales cycle methodology to sell a sponsor. This book looks at applying this method to motor racing. It applies almost equally to any other sporting or charitable sponsorship sale. Just the language and benefits vary somewhat.

My sales background began selling complicated computer systems to business. To do this successfully, a seller of the computer system typically has to work out what the prospective buyer needs and then applies the system they are representing as a solution. Selling racing as an image making business building method and multimedia alternative to billboards, print, radio, TV advertising, trade shows, corporate entertainment and merchandising, is a complex task. But not impossible. And certainly something you can learn how to do.

Learning how is necessary as business has changed. We have woken up and discovered it’s the Nineties. Business expects a healthy return on their marketing investments. They have re-engineered, downsized and right-sized. Buying into racing, a corporation must be sure they have defensible business logic for doing this. It is up to us to find this and articulate it so a board of directors believes this too. To go racing with corporate sponsorship you need to recognize that marketing investments require measurable returns and work to provide these. Ignore this at your jeopardy.

…AND DESPAIR AT THE STATE OF THE
MOTOR RACING BUSINESS

This book also documents my disbelief at the business state of most motor racing series. It seems when grown men get around racing fuel there is a tendency for it to make many petty and greedy, while losing their better judgment and plainly dishonoring the sporting trust they have been given by spectator and sponsor alike. Many of these businessmen have achieved great things in their professional lives, strictly adhering to the tenets of good business practices, yet they totally lose it around racing! Look at the time, fan and equity wasted in the battle over Indy car and sports car racing, versus the growth and health of stock car racing.

Why then, when they are entrusted with husbanding this sport, do they forget everything they have learned at the expense of the sport. Undeniably, the most successful series in the world is NASCAR because of focused and single minded management. Yet it seems every other series and sanctioning body is fiddling with rules to make them more competitive, safer, cheaper and more attractive to competitors and spectators. Read this as attempting to make the sport more marketable. Wake up ladies and gentlemen and realize it takes a team consisting of owners, promoters, sponsors, spectators and participants to make this thing work. Once a series has a sound and stable business basis, competitors, sponsors and spectators will come.

It is just fine to complain, but no one cares! Improving any given series we choose to compete in begins with ourselves. This book is offered as help to improve our respective sales skills. Beginning here, is the only way this can change and motorsports become healthy again.

IDEAS ARE FREE…

First, I am frequently asked why I am so free with my ideas, opinions and strategies. I never found that being secretive with ideas gains anybody anything. Someone who offers help and positions themselves as having some special skill they won’t disclose, is typically hiding nothing except mediocrity. Ideas are free. It is the effort and grind necessary to make them work, that is worth something. That’s the magic.

Secondly, many of these ideas I have come across working with drivers and teams. Remember, taking an ideas form one person without attribution is theft, borrowing an ideas from tow; plagiarism, but taking many ideas from many sources is research. You will learn to research!

Ideas are free. Implementation is a bitch! You have to want it badly enough and then go out and do it. On the track and off. Go through the whole grind. I hope this book helps you build a better budget, a better plan, more marketing partners and better your racing program. All levels of the sport desperately need well funded, businesslike racing programs. I welcome ideas, corrections, contradictions, and even controversy.

Good luck. I hope you can have as much fun in this business as I am.

Andrew J. Waite,
Phoenix, Arizone
January 1998

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AUTHOR BIO

Andrew Waite is the president of NEXZUS Motorsports Marketing, Inc. NEXZUS represents drivers, teams and sponsors seeking productive marketing partnerships using motor sports as the compelling them.

Prior to entering motorsports, Andrew lead a sales organization for a major computer vendor, founded and successfully sold a short run trade publication and is the author of the best selling trade book, "The Inbound Telephone Call Center." Andrew also co-authored Scott Pruett’s "Defining Motorsports," a pocket guide to motorsports terminology.

Since becoming involved with motorsports two years ago, Andrew has produced substantial funding for drivers and teams and successfully introduced a number of new sponsors to the sport. He was instrumental in assisting the 1992 Indy 500 Rookie of the Year in attaining their dream.

 © 2001 NEXZUS Motorsports Marketing, Inc.
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