Measure for tourney success. Then do it again, and again

Published Aug 27 on Soccer America’s Grassroots Soccer Biz.

Is your soccer tournament better off this year than it was last year? How do you know? Unless you measure against goals and benchmarks, you really have no way of knowing. While you may have more money in the bank, was it because you sold more t-shirts or was it because the teams increased over last year. Or maybe your schedule was tighter. Or maybe your team numbers increased over last year, but you somehow found yourself with less money? How could that be?

Unless you are running your soccer tournament like a business with financial tools such as profit and loss (P&L) statements, budgets, cash flow projections, revenue and expense reports and other measurement tools like rankings and surveys, you really have no way of knowing. Because the goals of each soccer tournament vary from event to event, there are no right and wrong measurements, but here are a few things to measure as you move through the various phases of your soccer tournament.

1. Project and watch cash flow
Starting with day one to day 365, you should have cash flow projections. Day one is defined as the day after this year’s tournament and the start of next year’s tournament cycle. (you didn’t take the day after your tournament off, did you?) You will probably wish to divide up the cash flow projections into months, but project out on the same income and expense cycle as the previous year so that you can compare cycles year to year. As an example, Labor Day may fall in the same month each year, but the number of days preceding it in September may be different year to year. Now, comparing your cash in and out for the previous year, are you operating a more positive cash flow each month? While a more positive cash flow is important, don’t give up asset purchases for short-term cash goals.

2. Track profit performance as a percentage
Always measure profitability as a percentage rather than a dollar figure so you will have an accurate yardstick year to year. Keep in mind that the soccer tournament business has a cycle. You may have a run of three incredibly profitable years and then the next two may dip down a bit, then move up. Once you have a longer history, you will be able to predict profitability and plan inventories (like concessions, shirts, etc) accordingly.

3. Know your demographic metrics
How many times have you had a tournament where one year you have far too many of one age group and then next year, you are struggling to get a division together for that same age group? Did you check the overall birth rates in your local area or from areas you pull from? Or maybe a league installed a new age-based requirement? If you are able to predict the flow of players year to year, you are better prepared to either market to them or prepare a smaller division and focus your attention on the more populous ages. Age is just one metric you can use, but there are many others, including travel costs from certain regions, school schedules, league requirements, state association rules, etc. The point here is to know your target market; don’t just shotgun out your marketing and see what sticks.

4. Measure happiness
Revenue is what happens when people buy things. Profitability is what happens when happy people are eager to buy your soccer tournament experience. MEASURE HAPPINESS. Most of the teams competing in your soccer tournament will not take home trophies, so only a fraction of happiness can be attributed to winning. The majority of teams will judge your soccer tournament on whether or not they had fun.

While measuring fun is a very elusive metric, the three big factors appear to be a) hotel quality, b) food quality and c) respect. Hotels and food are fairly straightforward to measure and control, but measuring and influencing respect is slippery. It all comes down to the attitude of the volunteers, the HQ tent, the flow at registration, the way the coaches were talked to, the way the referees controlled the game and how much of your frugality was exposed during the tournament.

Encourage teams to give you feedback, whether that is directly via email or gathered through ranking and feedback systems such as GotSoccer, TICO Scores or bulletin boards like Back of the Net. Then, when unhappiness trends appear, DO SOMETHING to fix it. Don’t ignore it. If a few are willing to complain, many more are willing to just keep silent and simply not come back.

A soccer tournament is a business. While your goals may be to give the soccer community a fun experience, you need to be able to stay in business to accomplish that goal. These are just some of the measurements you should be using for your soccer tournament, but is by no means a complete list. Knowing more about what makes your event profitable within your niche or target market area is your competitive advantage that you should be honing with each season. But, you can only know how far you have come by knowing where you have already been.

Share your thoughts and what else you measure by commenting!

Local Dayton, Ohio teams finish as finalist at the Veterans Invitational

EVANSVILLE – Two local-area teams emerged as finalists from the 2007 Veterans Invitational (VIT), held the past two weekends in Evansville, Ind. The two trophy teams are Boys17, Metro FC B90 White and Boys16, Sycamore Arsenal. The VIT hosted over 250 teams per weekend and attracted talented teams from Illinois, Missouri, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and several other surrounding states.

“The VIT has become a popular tournament for club teams finishing their Fall season,” said Debbie Tucker, tournament director. “We’re also a popular choice for high school-aged teams just finishing their season. We’re at the perfect time of the year and the perfect weather.”

Both weekend offered mild weather for the soccer teams with no rain or frost.

The teams from the local area that participated in the VIT are: Boys09, CUSA Courage; Boys11, Warrior 96 Red; Boys14, Cincinnati Futbol Academy; Boys15, Thunder United Metro FC; Boys16, Star Magic; Boys16, Sycamore Arsenal; Boys16, Warriors ’91 Red; Boys16, Warriors 91; Boys17, KASC Thunder Premier; Boys17, Metro FC B90 White; Boys17, NUSA Fire; Boys17, Warrior SC 90; Boys17, Warrior SC Novas; Boys18, Dayton Warriors; Boys19, Warrior SC United 89; Girls13, Lady Warrior 95; Girls14, Metro FC White; Girls16, DSA Blue; Girls16, ISC Storm 91; Girls16, Lady Warriors 91 Black and Girls17, Warren County Cyclones.

For complete scores, standings and contributed photos, visit the Veterans Invitational Web site at www.veteransinvitational.com.

PHOTO (contributed) The Girls Evanville Elite 99 team welcomes the 400+ teams to the 2007 Veterans Invitational, held in Evansville, Ind. mid-November each year. The Evansville team won all three of their scheduled games.

Visit the event web site….

TourneyCentral and Charm City Cakes have a sweet deal for the 2008 NSCAA Convention

TourneyCentral announced today that they have contracted Charm City Cakes (Food Network’s Ace of Cakes) to produce a showpiece cake for their exhibit booth for the 2008 NSCAA Convention January 17-19, 2008 in Baltimore, Maryland.

TourneyCentral announced today that they have contracted Charm City Cakes (Food Network’s Ace of Cakes) to produce a showpiece cake for their exhibit booth for the 2008 NSCAA Convention January 17-19, 2008 in Baltimore, Maryland.

“Charm City Cakes is right there in Baltimore,” says Gerard McLean, Principle at TourneyCentral. “We like to support the local economy when we do a trade show and this was just the perfect opportunity.”

The cake will stand about two feet tall and feature a pair of goalie-gloved hands reaching up to grab a soccer ball in flight. According to Mary-Alice at Charm City Cakes, it will be a “show-stopper.”

TourneyCentral intends to raffle off the cake Saturday at noon to one lucky attendee who has put his or her business card in the bowl at their booth. They will also have samples of the cake for the Thursday night open of the exhibit hall.

“We hope the lucky recipient will in turn donate it to one of the local soccer organizations in Baltimore, but if they want to take it home with them, that would be fine too,” adds McLean.

TourneyCentral will be showing at the NSCAA in their own expanded booth, 2813. Charm City Cakes can be found on the Internet at www.charmcitycakes.com.

About TourneyCentral
TourneyCentral.com provides comprehensive, event-focused, web-based solutions for youth soccer tournaments and is wholly owned by Rivershark, Inc. an Ohio Corporation. Since 1999, TourneyCentral has been producing web sites that provide youth soccer tournaments with end-to-end integrated experience management for guest teams, from marketing through scoring. In addition, the advertising tools provide the tournaments with an increased opportunity for advertising and sponsorship revenue as a result of significantly increased traffic to the web site. For more information, visit www.tourneycentral.com.

Companion and marketing partner properties consist of: The Soccer Tournament Review, a blog and iTunes podcast for tournament directors, MyTournamentSpace, a photo-sharing site linked directly into the tournament game schedule and www.ticoscore.com, a single-source database and ranking system for soccer tournaments.

Visit us at the 2009 NSCAA in St. Louis, MO.

How discounts hurt your soccer tournament brand

I received a call from a local soccer coach who was interested in planning his spring soccer tournament season for his team. He initially wanted to confirm that some of the events that had not yet received sanctioning (are you one of these tournaments?) were still on. But then, he shared something interesting and very telling.

Part of his criteria for selecting tournaments is whether or not they are hosted by TourneyCentral. Most of the other soccer tournament web sites are just way too confusing and hard to use, he said. We’re flattered, of course. This year, he added a new criterion I hadn’t thought of.

In the local area, there are several coaches who are known for scouting out tournaments that need one of two teams to round out a bracket. They wait until the last minute, contact the tournament and get in for free or nearly free, maybe paying just the referee fees. This is kinda like flying stand-by, so these teams may not get in, but it is still a good deal if you do. The tournament doesn’t disclose this, but coaches sure do talk. And they are pretty good gossips! So, part of his new criteria is: If he sees teams from these coaches, he passes the tournament on by.

Every local area has coaches who scrounge for tournament deals. And, all the coaches from the local area know who these coaches are, even though your guest teams may not. But, I can see the next step for this coach is to start calling some of the local coaches of an away soccer tournament — perhaps a neighboring club — and ask who these flying standby coaches are. Then, they see if they have played in your event and pass you on by.

Our advice: Don’t discount. Ever. Always have a backup plan for a division you need to round out. Can you play a round robin format? Can you move the seed one team up a division or possibly one of your club teams? What if you dropped a team to even out a division instead of letting one in for free (again, one of your club teams)? Short term, you may take a hit on the fees, but long-term, letting coaches in for free to round out a division ultimately hurts your soccer tournament brand. With lasting damage.

Where are your photos?

It is Sunday evening after the tournament and your photographer said they would post the photos from the weekend after the tournament. So, where are they? Your teams are asking. It is after the tournament, the teams have all gone home and they were promised photos after the tournament.

When you call the photographers, they are dead tired and think that your request that they stay up all night and get some photos up on their site (or yours) for your teams to look at is an unreasonable request. They hang up on you. But, is your request really all that unreasonable?

In the Soccer Tournament Web 1.0 world, it is. Everyone knows that it takes several days to process the photos that were taken and that waiting a few extra days to se and order photos is just the way things are. But, this is Soccer Tournament Web 2.0. Things are supposed to happen real time. The photos are digital and should be uploaded almost immediately. The teams want to relive the experience right now, not wait until Thursday.

Our advice: When working with a photographer, make sure they understand that your tournament is real-time and that they should make arrangements to have a stream of photos going up all weekend long, with the balance of the photos on the site, ready for ordering no later than Monday morning (or the day after your soccer tournament.) The teams have an attention span of about two days. Anything posted after that is just a lot of effort for nothing as very few teams will visit to find photos after that.

Dayton CVB honors local ambassadors

20071108_huffmanMORAINE – Soccer was well-represented at the annual Dayton/Montgomery County Convention & Visitors Bureau Ambassador Breakfast this year, held at the Mandalay Banquet Center in Dayton. Approximately 260 people were in attendance, including hospitality partners such as hoteliers, attraction operators, event planners and sporting event directors including the Warrior Classic, Creek Classic and the Mead Cup. TourneyCentral was also present as an event sponsor.

“The Ambassador Awards Breakfast gives the Dayton/Montgomery County Convention & Visitors Bureau (CVB) and the community an opportunity to publicly say ‘thank you’ to the many meeting planners who select Dayton/Montgomery County over other cities as the site for their convention or special event,” says Jacqueyln Powell, President/CEO of the Dayton/Montgomery County Convention & Visitors Bureau.

The CVB presents leather flight jackets from Dayton, the Birthplace of Aviation as ambassador awards to a select group of honorees each year who bring their event to the Greater Dayton Area. This year’s winners were Matt Anderson of the Ohio District Council of the Assemblies of God – Youth Department of Fine Arts; Chris Cree, National Scrabble Association Players Championship; Wendee Debusk, National Warbird Operator Conference; Jeffrey Elmore, Alph Phi Alpha Fraternity; Jeff Hills, Cincinnati Flames Baseball Tournament; Susan Monnin, Monster’s Making It Count National Speaker Training and Thomas Ritchie, Ohio American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees Convention.

Nearly 130 Ambassador Award flight jackets have been awarded since the first breakfast in 1992.

PHOTO (contributed by Aulay Carlson, Ambient Light Photography, Inc.) Dale Huffman, columnist for the Dayton Daily News, introduces the Ambassador Awards recipients during the 2007 Dayton/Montgomery County Convention and Visitors Bureau Ambassador Breakfast.

Visit the event web site….

College player profile photos

vit369411194359371.jpgMeet Sarah Scheidel. She graduates in 2010 and is top in her class. She is probably a pretty good soccer player. I don’t know much about Sarah, but I know that her profile will stand out from the pile of other profiles that her teammates will have submitted.

Why? Because she understands the purpose of including the photo on her player profile. The photo is there primarily so the college coach can recognize the player when he/she sees them, but a face also communicates who the player is, what kind of personality she has, how confident she is. I’ll leave it to you to determine what kind of person Sarah is and how she handles herself on the field. But, if it was just me, I’d want to see if her confidence on the field matches the confidence she displays in her photo.

Our advice: Encourage player profile photos to be marketing sheets for the players as they are as a person. College coaches will give interesting players with a good photo a second look, even if their playing history is only average if the photo talks to them. Encourage the players to choose their photos as wisely as they choose their words on the profile. After all, 1 photo=1,000 words whereas 1 word=1 word.

A shout-out to friends in Denmark

dansk.jpg

Helle Jessen writes:
Kære alle. En lille hilsen med et par billeder af nogle meget glade piger!! De har lige vundet Jysk Mesterskab og er dermed nr. 1 i Danmark i A-gruppen!

Congratulations to the Aab Team. Loosely translated, Hi all. A little hello and a couple of photos of some very happy girls. They have just won the Jysk Mesterskab and are number 1 in Denmark for Group A. (Helle – Correct me if this is wrong)

Do you know your 2008 dates?

Do you know the dates for your 2008 soccer tournament? We are trying to plan our team tournaments and need to budget….

You may think this is a question being asked about early spring tournaments, but it is not. Teams are writing in and asking even late summer and fall tournaments!! In fact, it is the #1 question coming in from the contact forms across all our soccer tournaments.

Our advice: Think 365/24/7! When you are done with your 2007 soccer tournament, get sanctioned and get out there with your 2008 dates. Even if your state won’t sanction tournaments until late in the year (Michigan, Colorado, Indiana … are you listening??) get out there with proposed dates. A date range is better than no date at all.

Keep it simple, make it work

Screen shot 2009-12-06 at 7.44.25 AM

A couple weeks ago, my hi-tech coffee maker broke. All the electronic stuff on it worked just fine, but it failed in the most basic way; the mechanism to bring the hot water from the reservoir through the grounds and into the carafe no longer moved the water. So, I went out to the local Kroger and bought a Melitta coffee cone and carafe for 12.00. I heat my water and pour it through the grounds. My coffee-making experience is now simple and will never break.

What does coffee have to do with a soccer tournament? Well, for one, it fuels a lot of tournament directors, volunteers and soccer moms/dads for early-morning games, but the real correlation here is the lesson to keep things simple and down to its most basic requirements.

It might seem odd that a technology company would advocate for simple gravity instead of a hi-tech coffee-maker, but that doesn’t really seem odd to us. Even when we’re developing soccer tournament web sites and software, we always ask the question, What is the simplest way to do this? Based on the over-loaded technology web site of the average soccer site, keeping things simple is some advice a lot of them could use.

Our advice: Keep it simple, make it work. Nobody cares that you employ the latest AJAX, Java, whatever scoring system on your soccer tournament web site if they can’t find the scores and when they do, they can’t view them on their Blackberry. Apply this to everything, from your sponsorship packages to your web site to the game schedule to your standings and tiebreakers. People understand and accept simple. Like my coffee maker, it can have all the best time-keeping, auto-coffee-making, coffee-to-water-ratio-measuring technology in the world, but if it can’t pour water through coffee grounds, it is a piece of junk. Do the basics well. Keep the rest simple.

Keep it simple

Very few people like complexity and fewer still like unnecessary complexity. In an article in the Washington Post examining why Apple is successful, the author states:

Apple’s success doesn’t come from those cute Hi, I’m a Mac ads. It’s a product of a consistent focus on simplicity and elegance

The emphasis is mine.

Our Advice: Keep your systems SIMPLE and make sure they work. Teams only want a few things from your tournament: 1) To register easily, 2) to find deals and hotels quickly and effortlessly and 3) to find scores, standings and photos with more ease and effort than finding a hotel.

That’s it! There is nothing else to deliver to your guest teams at a soccer tournament. Anything beyond that is a complication the teams won’t accept, regardless of how important you or your sponsors feel it is. So, given that, the challenge is to work within those needs. Serve up ads within the context of scores or email messages. Don’t allow advertising to complicate the system. Don’t force viewers to register to view the scores or photos. Don’t make teams register first to see the available hotels. Don’t make every field on your application required. Get out of their way so they can get to you faster.

Also, keep your systems simple for your staff and volunteers. Entering scores should be a one-click and done action, not a click-click-wait-click-verify-click… you get the idea. A TourneyCentral system keeps everything simple, uncomplicated and just plain works.

Ironically, the simpler the software is to use for the guest teams and your staff, the more time and effort goes into writing it. But, that is where TourneyCentral shines and will continue to do so in an ongoing effort to un-complicate processes as the soccer tournament industry develops.

Mead Cup supports TOPSoccer

20071025meadCENTERVILLE – TOPSoccer (The Outreach Program for Soccer) is $1,500 richer this year thanks to the success of the annual Mead Cup Soccer Tournament, hosted by the CUSA Soccer Club each Labor Day Weekend at sites throughout the Dayton area. At the conclusion of the tournament, the Mead Cup presented a check to the local TOPSoccer program.

“We’ve enjoyed a partnership with TOPSoccer for years,” says Dan Monahan, Mead Cup tournament director. “It is rewarding experience for both the CUSA Courage players and the TOPSoccer athletes.”

According to Monahan, the Mead Cup Soccer Tournament is considered one of the largest and most competitive youth tournament in the country, drawing teams from fourteen states and Canada. This year, the Mead Cup hosted 450 teams between the ages of U8 through U14.

TOPSoccer is a national program created to train young soccer athletes five through fourteen years-old with disabilities, within a coaching environment. Organizations like the Mead Cup, US Youth Soccer and local volunteers make the program possible in areas like Centerville.

For more information about the Mead Cup Soccer tournament or TOPSoccer visit the web sites at www.meadcupsoccer.com and www.usyouthsoccer.org.

Photo (contributed) Dan Monahan, tournament director for the Mead Cup Soccer Tournament, presents a check to Sherry King with TOPSoccer.

Visit the event web site….

It’s about playing smart

GracieI watched Gracie yesterday with my daughter. The movie, like most soccer games, moved incredibly slow, there were no climaxes, anti-climaxes and slam dunk plot points like there were in Will Ferrell’s Kicking and Screaming It was almost painful to watch, but I pushed through the dip.

Despite my initial reaction to the movie, the paragraph above is actually a compliment to the actors, directors and the producers who probably had to be convinced that soccer people would get the film. The plot moved like a soccer game does, sometimes moving forward, sometimes dropping back with the score only being a few points ahead or behind at any given moment. It was actually brilliantly written and directed without tending to over-arching social statements and absurd hyperbole for comic or dramatic effect.

What does all this have to do with running a tournament? Like Gracie and any good soccer game, a soccer tournament is not won or lost by anything huge that you do, but by doing all the really small things really well. And, knowing when to drop back and knowing when to push through and make a run. And, of course, not giving up… and NOT listening to the critics who tell you that dropping back is giving up. Dropping back is just another strategy for ultimately moving the ball forward.

The only bad thing about the Gracie is that it is a soccer film. That is a shame, because it is more about the Universal Idea (or Human Condition for us older English Literature folks). A lot of people who could use a good view would not ever watch it because it is soccer. (The same about The Devil Wears Prada.. not about fashion…)

Our Advice: First, watch the three films mentioned above. Will Ferrell for how NOT to look at life, and the other two on a deeper understanding of the Universal Idea. Second, soccer and soccer tournaments are all about playing smart, honing your craft and being tenacious, not about being the biggest and strongest. In the end, the game always falls to the clever and agile.

Get parents online

I received this email from a coach/team rep for a tournament coming up:

Do you expect any more changes to the schedules? …. I just want to make sure this new schedule is safe to distribute.

Wow. Team reps and coaches printing off tournament schedules for parents instead of sending them to the tournament web site is a bit like getting a telegram and then gathering everyone in the town to read it to them in the town square using a megaphone.

Our Advice: At every opportunity, encourage the coaches and team reps to send their parents to your tournament web site. When there are changes (almost always are!) the coach/rep just needs to tell them there is a change via the phone tree or email and not print off the schedule, make more copies, distribute them, make sure all old copies are destroyed… you get the idea.

At TourneyCentral, we will be installing some tools that allow parents to be notified when a change occurs in the schedule, hoping to save your coaches and team reps some additional work and stress. Stay tuned.

Hidden marketing in email addresses

Do you pay attention to the email address domains that coaches and team reps use when they apply to your soccer tournament? Maybe you should. While the vast majority of applications come in with yahoo.com, msn.com, gmail.com, aol.com, etc. addresses, a sizable percentage come in from corporate email.

Here is the thought: If your guest team had a good time at the soccer tournament over the weekend, who do they tell? Practically anyone in their office who will also not want to get to work right away on a Monday morning (or Tuesday morning after a holiday Monday). This is hidden marketing as these folks are your champions. If they had a miserable time, keep in mind they will most likely tell seven times more as many people, even those people who don’t want to listen, including posts to Internet blogs and chat boards.

Our Advice: Pay attention to the email addresses when accepting, scheduling and other activities that will affect the personal comfort of the team rep or coach. Reach out with a personal thank you note after the tournament. Build that relationship slowly because if done right, it could lead to other contacts within their company that may blossom into sponsorships. At the very least, you’ll have a stronger champion around the water cooler on Monday morning.