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soccer tournament software

Measure for soccer tournament success. Then do it again, and again

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 or 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 www.gotsoccer.com, www.ticoscore.com or bulletin boards like www.backofthenet.com. 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.

Gerard McLean is President/CEO of Rivershark, Inc. the parent company of www.tourneycentral.com. TourneyCentral produces an end-to-end, web-based soccer tournament management system that handles everything from registration through scheduling and scoring. McLean is also the editor and host of the companion podcast and blog, The Touchline. His Fortune 500 experience with Target Stores and Huffy Corporation, along with various positions at private companies, has forever sealed his obsession with constantly measuring success performance.

Dynamo Round Robin Soccer Tournament

WHEN: March 19-21, 2010
WHERE: Indianapolis, IN
FEES: U9-U10 $375 U11-U12 $425 U13-U19 $475
APPLICATION DEADLINE: Friday, Feb 5, 2010
PAY TO: Dynamo FC; PO Box 80261 Indianapolis, IN 46280

This is the twelfth annual Dynamo Round Robin.

The Round Robin is a great pre-season warm up tournament for the Spring. Last year’s tournament featured several defending state champions and state runners-up. Teams from Oklahoma, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Missouri, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and other states were represented.

As in the past, this year’s tournament welcomes all girls’ teams U9 through U19. U9 through U14 teams will play four games while U15 through U18 teams will play three games. The change to a 3 game format for older teams is based on extensive input from coaches who felt that four 80 minute games in a 2 day period was simply too much physically for their players.

U-9/U-10 will play 6 v 6, U-11/U-12 will play 8 v 8, U-13 and up will play 11 v 11. U12 teams from states that play 11 v 11 may opt to apply to play up in the U13 division.

http://www.dynamoroundrobin.org

Getting more out of your soccer tournament brand

When people start talking about “brand,” the talk immediately turns to logo design. While a good logo is part of your brand, it is not “THE BRAND.” The brand is how people feel about and view your soccer organization (league, club or tournament). Your brand is what you can leverage to sponsors, advertisers, guest teams, potential players, potential coaches and the media.

We intuitively know what a strong brand looks like within the soccer industry. A strong brand is a club every coach wants to be a part of or every kid wants to play for.

As soccer grows beyond the boundaries of soccer enthusiasts and evangelists, soccer parents and players, a strong brand becomes important to the community at large, including the media and business community. It can also mean the difference between securing a sponsorship or not, good press or bad press; or worse, no press at all.

I recently attended a soccer tournament that is now in its 22nd year, fills up almost 50 hotels and hosts more than 500 teams over a period of three days. The economic impact of the event is estimated to be about $5.2 million dollars due to its draw from out of state teams. It enjoys a reputation unrivaled in the soccer community.

The local newspaper — about 180,000 daily circulation, 290,000 on Sunday — published four stories on the event. The first story was on the front page and lead with “Soccer tournament cause traffic jams across city.” On the second day (Sunday), an article ran with a large color photo and the description of the parking lot as a “…gas-guzzler SUV convention.” In the same article, a manager at one of the local hotels was quoted as saying “… the parents party more than the kids” and followed the quote with a parent’s favorite beverage recipe. The third and fourth stories were more flattering, but they were buried deep in the sports section and ran with no photos.

The host soccer club gives back thousands of dollars in community services, donates jerseys and equipment to teams in South Africa and Nicaragua and its tournament director has been recognized as an ambassador by the local CVB for bringing teams into the area. So, which is the truth: the tournament as a traffic menace or economic asset? The frustrating truth is it is both, depending on how you see the tournament brand.

As soccer becomes more and more embedded into the culture of American sports, the folks who run the leagues, camps and tournaments will need to turn their branding efforts toward the community at large.

Had the tournament illustrated above better managed its brand outside the soccer market, the chances of the tournament being seen as an “economic boon for the local” economy rather than a “traffic-jam event” would have been far more likely. While there is always a chance the media will write an unfavorable article, it is less likely if you are a strong community brand as well as a strong soccer brand.

A strong community brand is also an asset that can be leveraged for sponsorship and advertising dollars. Reach out to the local newspapers and television stations by letting them know who you are and what non-soccer benefits you bring to the community. Invite them to fundraisers, meetings or other activities.

You may also want to open some board positions for members of local companies who are influential within the business community. As dedicated as you are to the SPORT of soccer, the BUSINESS of soccer is what will drive a positive brand image outside soccer.

Your soccer organization is already branded outside of the soccer market; good, bad or indifferent. Take control of your brand and guide it so your non-soccer community sees your soccer organization in the same light as the soccer market does. It is a job that requires vigilance 365 days a year, 24 hours a day, but the rewards in positive community support are worth the effort.

Gerard McLean is President/CEO of Rivershark, Inc. the parent company of TourneyCentral. TourneyCentral produces an end-to-end, web-based soccer tournament management system that handles everything from registration through scheduling and scoring.

How to run your soccer tournament like a pro

At some point, you may need to break your soccer tournament free from the “mom and pop” pack, ditch the volunteer economics and fundraiser-based budgets and start running it like a “real company.” You will most likely be looking to do business with other companies that are “real companies” with employees, voicemail systems, receptionists, conference rooms and offices. And, these offices won’t resemble anything like a dining room table piled high with soccer gear.

Here are some quick tips in dealing with “real companies.”

1. Soccer is most likely not their passion. 
Chances are, soccer is not their passion. While it is always best to work with companies who understand soccer and know the game, that should not be enough of a criterion to do business with them. Nor should the lack of soccer smarts be a criterion to exclude them. You are seeking out professional services and you will be better served if they understand their business and you remain the soccer expert. Unless, of course, you are seeking soccer marketing services; then, soccer better be their passion.

2. Prepare to pay market rates. 
True professionals know the value of their goods and services and are less inclined to bargain that value away. While you may attempt to persuade the company to support your local club, league or soccer tournament with a sponsorship, advertisement or discount, only a few will likely oblige. If you pay less than market rates, you will most likely only get the value of goods or services you pay for, which may not be enough to get what you really need.

3. Prepare to do business during business hours. 
When dealing with a “real company,” chances are they will not be there to discuss the changes you need done to your web site, brochure or accounting program at 11:00 a.m. on a Sunday morning like your volunteer was. Also, lunch hour does not qualify as business hours, even though it is in the middle of the day. Be prepared to discuss your project, take phone calls and do meetings during business hours. And, if you can’t, make sure someone in your soccer tournament with authority can. There are a few things more annoying to professionals than constant project delays due to the client’s inability to meet or give approvals in a timely fashion.

4. Pay your invoices on time and in full. 
Among the many things that keep “real companies” from doing business with volunteer-based management groups is the fear that getting invoices paid on time and in full will be an issue. Being a 501c(3) does not give you a pass on paying on time. Nor does the excuse that your treasurer is out of the country on vacation and can’t be reached qualify as a legitimate explanation. If you take no other advice from this article, take this point to heart.

5. It’s not personal. 
A “real company” cares about providing the very best service that they can. After all, it is their reputation on the line as well. Sometimes, they will tell you things that you may not want to hear, but you need to know to bring your tournament to the next level. Value that, even if their comments sound like a stinging insult. It’s not personal.

So, get out there and do business with “real companies,” but expect to be treated like you are also a “real company.”

Gerard McLean is President/CEO of Rivershark Inc., a “real company” that develops database-driven web-based applications like jo bbank engines, membership databases, etc. for trade groups and the retail services industry. Rivershark also owns www.TourneyCentral.com, which provides soccer tournament services to soccer clubs. While most soccer tournaments are not yet “real businesses,” he claims it is a lot of fun. And since he is the boss, they keep doing it. McLean is convinced that soccer tournaments will eventually become “real business” and wants to be part of that when it happens.

Advertising Module

One of the most time-consuming tasks a tournament director does is manage sponsors and advertisers! The advertising module is a centralized hub where ALL the advertising activities are managed easily. By pooling all the intellectual property (IP) of the tournament in one place, it ensures a continuity from year to year.

The advertising module allows you to generate invoices and statements, set up web-based advertising easily and keep track of an advertiser’s activity from year to year.

The advertising module is tied in tightly with the team advertising reports, so if your club or organization relies on teams and parents to sell advertising, everyone can easily see what each team is assigned and has sold.