Too much of a good thing
As a customer experience, the Olympic tournament excelled because it put the absolute best product in front of the fan every game. Every game meant something. And there there was a highly emotional connection between the fan and the experience.
Pro sports leagues, on the other hand, have largely lost that emotional connection with their fans that is at the root of any superior customer experience. Sure, there are meaningful games. And, fans are generally loyal to their team. But, business decisions over the past twenty years in baseball, basketball and hockey have focused less on connecting with fans and more on short-sighted profit motives. Product lines have been overextended and the quality of the product has been degraded through geographic over expansion, lengthening of the season and playoff systems where it seems every team makes the post season. New features like billion dollar stadiums, fancy food and luxury boxes simply distract from the fact that the core value proposition, the game, has been diluted. Now even the NCAA is contemplating devaluing its most valuable asset, its tournament, by expanding to 96 teams.
Compare this approach to that of Apple; a company that has an uncanny ability to connect at a visceral level with its customers, while offering an intentionally limited product portfolio.
It's an experience economy. People buy experiences. So, when your product is the experience, too much of a good thing is never a model for sustainable success.
(Photo: Multiplicity c/o Columbia Pictures Corp)
Other Posts by Barry Dalton
'We Have Received Your Customer Service Question...' - November 30, 2011
Don't Trick Your Customers With Self Service - November 3, 2011
The Customer Dating Game - October 23, 2011
Exceptional Customer Service Never Gets Old - October 5, 2011
A Bit Off Target - A Twisted Customer Service Tale - September 29, 2011
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bsdalton65 said:
Carla, thanks so much for the comment, I'll take that as a validation of my point :) Your last sentence represents the point that USA pro sports leagues need to listen to. I wonder how many others like you were either former fans or potential fans? If the pro leagues would better understand customers like you and, in turn, connect better, how much growth potential would there be? A lost opportunity.CarlaMcNeil said:
Hi Barry,I am not a hockey fan, but I watched every single one of those games that I could. I thought that living here in Vancouver during the Olympics was the reason, until I read your post. You are so right, it was exciting and there was something on the line for every game. It was stressful and heart wrenching at the same time and I came across a # of people who simply cud not watch the last game because it was just too tense!
Thanks for turning on the light for me, because now I am back to not watching hockey at all!!
Carla
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