SXSW 2014: Connected TVs and the Future of Sports

Today at the Driskill Hotel, Hank Adams, CEO of Sportvision, gave a compelling talk on the affect connected TVs can have on the way we consumer entertainment, particularly sports.

For those who might be unfamiliar, Sportvision is behind a number of amazing augmented reality experiences built into broadcast sports. These include the yellow first down line in football and the strikezone overlay in baseball, as well as the overlays following the cars in NASCAR.

But what the user sees is only the tip of the iceberg. For instance, in Major League Baseball, they have detailed data on every pitch thrown during the entire season, including velocity and spin. This data is made available to teams and they use it for training purposes. The Yankees alone have 6 data scientists on staff working with this and other data.

Mr. Adams pointed out that “the history of media is the history of customization”, and that all this data that we have can be used to enhance live television experiences when televisions are attached to the Internet.

Some interesting ideas for the world of sports:
– As you watch a game, your fantasy players are highlighted and their sports displays their current fantasy points
– A widget overlaying a NASCAR broadcast provides the live status of your favorite driver
– The ability to toggle the strikezone overlay in baseball, including the hot zones of where a particular hitter at bat likes to hit the ball

Obviously, this sort of functionality can expand well beyond sports. What you see on live television is only part of the story; there’s more detail and background information that can be surfaced on any topic, but the ability to personalize that experience can make it exceptionally valuable for users.

The question then becomes how to work within the framework of the current model of broadcast television, as it is key within that model not to divert attention from the ad breaks. The answer remains to be seen, but perhaps the ads themselves can be augmented in interesting ways.

SXSW 2014: Being Social With Grandma

During SXSW last month AARP is leveraging both the education of important content around the ACA and the connective history and faith-based initiative for Black Community to create and develop social, mobile, and digital activity as well as brand loyalty for the AARP brands and partners.

Using social media and mobile to educate on ACA. They actually turned a stereotype on its head in nudging 50+ users to educate Gen Xers and Millennials on the affordable care act. This effectively made the 50+ to influencers on a important topic to both parents and kids in medium where they are mostly non power users.

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The program was done in English and Spanish and got a 16% engagement rate with  67% of mom’s comments with kids happening on social media.

See more on this at mom means it and at the AARP ACA site here

The success led into more socially infused programs like the new YouTube and TV spots for “You don’t know AARP” aimed at making the 70+ crowd more digitally fit an through their new program AARPTEK that leads with a Twitter hash tag of #loved.

See the video below or see it on You tube here

All in all it was great seeing that even late adopters and the brands that serve them, are doing very unique things with digital and social mediums and talking about it at SXSW.

SXSW 2014: Big Data, Personalized Stories

We hear often about the power of “big data” to do magic things like identify supply-chain problems, drive conversion, optimize direct mail and other impressive tasks. But what effect could big data have on storytelling? After all, isn’t that the other side of marketing besides the actual technologies used to deliver the stories? Today at the Sheraton, amidst an audience made up almost entirely of marketers and product managers (as determined by a show of hands), Francois Ajenstat from Tableau Software and Eric Shoup from Ancestry.com held an interesting panel discussion about “Big Data” as it relates to storytelling.

Mr. Ajenstat stressed the need to try and break out of displaying data simply in rows and columns and show information more visually, as a way to help tell a story. Marketers today have access to mountains of data: purchase activity, social media engagement, device GPS data and even government data. Beyond simply using this data for business decision-making, could it be used to tell a story back t consumers? He described data as a new form of multimedia that brands could turn to as a way to enrich their own content. As an example of data telling a powerful story visually, he cited a TED talk by Hans Rosling that used data visualizations to challenge the audience’s perception of global health and trends.

Mr. Shoup showcased a new product recently launched by Ancestry.com called Story View. The new tool draws upon Ancestry’s 10 petabytes of data (across 55 million family trees) and assembles what it knows about a person into a sort of timeline. It effectively pieces together a biography, with dates and places and images assembled to tell a person’s life story (as best they can) in a linear fashion. They used A/B testing to try different layouts and templates, and used the number of social shares as a metric to measure whether a given approach was working.

The speakers agreed on this tip for turning data into stories: Start with the question; what are you trying to get at? Then see how many data elements you can you remove and still answer the question. In short, Simplicity helps the storytelling.

Also discussed was technologies such as those offered by Narrative Science, which automatically generates prose summaries (e.g. of sporting events) based purely on raw data. A potential application of this technology could be to auto-generate direct mail or mass e-mail based on big data customer profile, changing the narrative text on the fly for each customer.

 

SXSW 2014: What’s New In Fantasy Sports

Fantasy sports has becoming a big business for Football and the NFL. More  sports are being added to the ecosystem and a lot of the trends that have been used to grow casual and mobile gaming are being used to attract younger audiences.

Shortening the format of Fantasy play to a daily and quicker gameplay added a new segment to the business. Short-format Fantasy is a daily format with picks of teams and players for games renewing everyday. The size of this new business is over $20MM per year, with a current user base of about 1.3mm (500k with money on the line in games)

New investments are being made with startups to capitalize. Companies like FanDuel (add link), which recently received a 11mm investment from Comcast is bringing in audiences that peak around 26-30 yrs old (Long form Fantasy sports peaks around 41yrs old). Their fans also have a higher rate of sports programming viewership by 40% over traditional fantasy players. This is making the big players like the NFL at ESPN look closer at Daily fantasy and short-format fantasy

Fantasy games are now year long, multi-platform and moving towards mobile. They are also increasing inclusion of bloggers to drive engagement.

ESPN and others are building for other sports outside of Fantasy Football.

  • Fantasy Baseball (more demanding). Now using touch screen technology to create injury tracker and telestrate injuries , like in-game analysts on TV.
  • Better explanation of injuries and stats now for Fantasy than for players
  • Users engaging more and more as their GM and scout planning year round for sports

Finally, Fantasy Sports is influencing TV content for major sports networks and cable providers

  • DirectTV – create your own red zone based on your fantasy players. Live updates to your TV overlaying the screen
  • NFLNow-can update your new fantasy players when added to your team with video
  • Fantasy Live – NFL network (6 days a week)

In addition, ESPN com has multiple Fantasy sports shows on air and there is a 24 hour a day Fantasy Sports Network launching this year; so growth will continue to move in this space.

SXSW 2014: Mobile In Latin America

The fact that mobile marketing is not bigger commercially in Latin America is a little mind boggling in my mind. Many creators of major streaming content already come from the region, for example Grooveshark was created in Mexico and Brazil is one of the larger in country user bases for the newly purchased WhatsApp that is part of Facebook’s global mobile domination.

From the session that was held at SXSW, directed by Pablo Salazar Rojo-managing director of Naranya Ventures, the big needs are that surfaced are really funding, knowledge, and education.

  • More education will create additional talent on the continent.
  • Building relevance for mobile will be based on more conferences and development of conversations in countries about how mobile can work for businesses and brands
  • Fiscal incentives are dearly needed to assist with funding. Some government budgets are $1mm and below

Naranya Ventures is building more accelerators in Latin America to build momentum and development of research, funding and acceleration of the conversations. One of the methods he discussed was using what works in Africa, with mobile payments, and social and leverage in Latin America to create structure at scale.

But the real thing we think that may stimulate growth are the tests that America Movil and others area pushing  in Latin America that have deeper pockets to invest and already have existing infrastructures in Central and some area in Latin America

Take a look at one of the upcoming events in May for 5/2-5/6 Emerge Americas in Miami here. It will be one in a series of many events that will help push this issue forward in the future.