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Social Media For Football Agents

The following article is a guest contribution from Evan Brennan. Mr. Brennan is a current student at Whittier Law School in Orange County, CA. He holds a Master’s degree in Sports Management from California State University at Long Beach, and a Bachelor’s degree from Brigham Young University. He has worked in athlete public relations, marketing, and other areas for various sports professionals and companies for years. Follow him at @brennansports on Twitter.

Tim Tebow is an example of an athlete who understands the importance of watching what he Tweets. (Photo posted by @TimTebow)
Tim Tebow is an example of an athlete who understands the importance of watching what he Tweets. (Photo posted by @TimTebow)

When one thinks of managing professional football players, one thinks of contract negotiation, endorsements, and maybe some public relations efforts that will be required of the manager or agent. In the ever-evolving industry that athlete representation is, a new and growing role and skill is now gaining prominence and importance in the services and repertoire that such a professional should possess and be able to offer. That talent and service is the advisement and management of a player with social media. Optimizing platforms like Instagram through a linktree alternative would naturally be the right thing to do for any professional sportsman. Social media truly has taken over so many aspects of society today, which is why so many people out there are desperate for free instagram followers. For athletes, social media is just as important as it is for everyone.

One particular sport that has seen a growth and prominence of social media in its ability to interact and provide value is the sport of football. Looking across sites such as Tweeting-Athletes.com, one sees players such as Larry Fitzgerald, Tim Tebow, Drew Brees and others that command over 1 million followers on the Twitter platform alone. Savvy agents and marketers have been and must now have the savoir-faire in order to capitalize on this type of interactable exposure for their clients with fans, media, and ultimately endorsers that want access to them.

Many of the endorsement deals that agents now will pitch to endorsers will have a clause or provision that exacts some social media interaction and consistent posts about the endorsing company’s effort, product, or event. Obviously the more followers and the activity of said followers that the player possesses, the more the agent should be able to seek in compensation for use of the player’s social media. This is where the services that you may find at Social Media Market (or bei Social Media Market for our German readers), for example, may come in handy, especially if you’re looking to grow your social following.

Companies desperate to find ways to penetrate markets with real interaction with an oversaturation of other advertising are interested in putting together these types of deals. The zero cost for an athlete to put together a Twitter page is therefore enticing as a starting point to build towards these types of deals. One promotion athletes aren’t utilizing at the moment is YouTube, with more than 1.9 billion users now watching YouTube videos, there could be big advertising opportunities if the players were to start mini-series of training regimes or “A Day in the Life” videos, being that professional athletes are already very famous and in the public eye it shouldn’t take long for them to gain a following on the second-largest social media platform (yes, YouTube is the SECOND largest social media platform so why don’t they use it as such?) however if a player and agent found they were struggling with growth they could look for the services similar to Getfans.io/pt to purchase organic views and subscribers for a YouTube channel they wish to grow.

But, an agent must be well-versed in how to effectively grow social media to the point that it can be used for such endorsement purposes. An associate of this writer, Cameron Jensen, a former BYU and Seattle Seahawks middle linebacker, is now an executive at NUVI. NUVI is a platform that analyzes social media with graphics and visualization in real time to provide insightful analytics. In an interview earlier this year with ESPN, Jensen discusses NUVI’s study concerning notable 2013 NFL Draft rookies and the negative and positive sentiment that they were garnering on and through social media. The study and article also discusses how positive interaction and perception through social media can raise the amount of followers, thereby adding a tangible benefit to a player’s marketing cache. The NUVI platform and others like it, provide evidence of the progression that athletes must be prepared to deal with now when embarking on professional careers. Having a representative who is able to utilize services such as NUVI, who has a well-laid out and executable plan to enhance the interaction and following of fans on social media, and who can effectively spent significant amounts of time educating and insuring that that the player knows what not to tweet is also huge.

But the need for advisement on social media extends so much further than the procurement of endorsement deals. Where public relations was at one time confined to television interviews and press releases, the accessibility to athletes has been augmented through the rise of social media. The instantaneous nature of the medium allows information (positive or negative) to spread quickly and largely uncontrollably, in many cases.

Beyond this, NFL teams look to social media as a means to see whether or not players are going to be a good fit for their respective team. Team executives have openly admitted that they monitor every single prospect on their draft boards as they evaluate them. From their vantage point, if a player is willing to do something stupid or questionable on social media, they are willing to do stupid or questionable things in life as well. The inverse can be said as well, if a player can demonstrate continued and perceived genuine character on social media, agents believe it may aid a player’s stock. Knowing this, it is essential that a player has an agent that is able to spend the time and has the expertise to educate him on what to say and what not to say social media. The agent likely needs to monitor the social media of his client, selling the good works that the player is engaging in, and steering him clear of potential pitfalls.

This type of social media etiquette and management is not being taught in schools or other locations, as one article hints that the vast majority of collegiate athletes (and therefore presumably professional) have social media pages, and less than 10% have received more than 3 hours of social media training. This is true despite the fact that they nearly 20% of student athletes freely admit to have posted something inappropriate on some form of social media. A savvy, well-trained agent can capitalize on this dearth within the market without question.

Those agents that are not well-versed in social media are certain to encounter the difficulty of client retention and procurement of endorsement deals. As social media is now such a huge focus of marketing, the inability to advise and craft marketing plans utilizing social media to a distinguishable extent will keep such agents a way from long-term relationships with high-profile (and therefore lucrative) clients.

By Darren Heitner

Darren Heitner created Sports Agent Blog as a New Year's Resolution on December 31, 2005. Originally titled, "I Want To Be A Sports Agent," the website was founded with the intention of causing Heitner to learn more about the profession that he wanted to join, meet reputable individuals in the space and force himself to stay on top of the latest news and trends.

Heitner now runs Heitner Legal, P.L.L.C., which is a law firm with many practice areas, including sports law and contract law. Heitner has represented numerous athletes and sports agents as legal counsel. He has also served as an Adjunct Professor at Indiana University Bloomington from 2011-2014, where he created and taught a course titled, Sport Agency Management, which included subjects ranging from NCAA regulations to athlete agent certification and the rules governing the profession. Heitner serves as an Adjunct Professor at the University of Florida Levin College of Law, where he teaches a Sports Law class that includes case law surrounding athlete agents and the NCAA rules.