The impact of Tiger Update

I had earlier written about my thoughts on Tiger’s impact on golf travel but the question keeps arising. I think the impact on sports marketing in general will be significant. For a moment, reflect back on the marketing programs of two companies; Accenture and Titleist.

Accenture made the decision to connect their brand with what they believed to be a blue chip brand in the form of Tiger Woods. Woods epitomized everything that Accenture wanted to project. Conversely, Titleist, although they have in many cases, unlimited access to the very best golfers in the world never put any single player on a par (pardon the pun) with their brand. We know the Titleist ads with possibly one dozen golfers all cumulatively adding to the perception of Titleist as the premium brand. As a result, if one one player fell from grace, it had minimal, if any impact on Titleist. They certainly did not have to remove and replace an entire marketing strategy because of the actions of one person.

Accenture find themselves in that unenviable position. I still notice Tiger/Accenture ad’s in airports. Long term it would be hard to imagine any corporate CEO embracing the idea of wrapping their brand around a single sports celebrity, regardless of their pedigree. As a result, the relative dollar value of that celebrity brand must surely diminish with a resultant trickle down effect as the coattails that have worked so nicely for many golf professionals on the way up, re-engineer into a parachute on the way down.
 

About the Author: Gordon Dalgleish is the Co-Founding Director of PerryGolf, the leading provider of international golf vacations. You can find him on Google+

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Does Tiger impact golf travel?

Recently I have been asked a number of times by different friends and contacts the impact that the Tiger situation will have on golf travel. Possibly I am not insightful enough to appreciate the nuance of it all but with respect to international golf travel, I foresee little impact. Curiously a number of friends who are Club golf professionals have indicated that members have said to them that spouses have begun to question proposed trips to Las Vegas. Right or wrong, Las Vegas seems to have drawn another bad hand in golf circles after the beating it took at the hands of the President Obama earlier this year.

One of the challenges that golf in the British Isles has always faced is that it is perceived as a “guys trip”. The weather is not predictable and often times the spouses are perfectly satisfied to let their husbands bond with their buddies for 7 days of cigars, wine, whisky and wind! Perception is everything and the British Isles is not perceived as a “party” destination beyond wholesome golf entertainment. Given the current climate, that perception may well be a plus for the golf tourism industry in the British Isles.

The wild card is what impact will the uncertainty of when Tiger returns to playing tournament golf have on Americans travelling to the (British) Open Championship and Ryder Cup. St. Andrews which is hosting the Open this year has always been a strong draw for Americans regardless of participants and I would expect that to continue. I also have a theory that Tiger will desperately want to play at both Pebble Beach and St. Andrews as both hold fond memories and victories for him 10 years earlier and in some ways defined the decade in golf.
 

About the Author: Gordon Dalgleish is the Co-Founding Director of PerryGolf, the leading provider of international golf vacations. You can find him on Google+

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