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FIFA’s Women’s World Cup recently sold out its sponsorship packages, with its partners for the event vaulting 150% from 12 in 2019 to 30 this year. The surge in sponsor interest comes amid projections that the games will be the most-watched in tournament history.
Nielsen’s “Women’s Sports Viewership on the Rise” study found that 41% of the global population is excited about the Women’s World Cup, up from 34% before the 2019 Women’s World Cup.
Nielsen declared that the interest in women’s soccer is part of a “meteoric” increase in fandom across women’s sports, citing hikes in viewership for the 2023 NCAA tournament final, the recent WNBA draft, and the United Kingdom’s Women’s Super League (WSL).
“This massive shift hasn’t occurred in a vacuum,” wrote Nielsen in the study. “It’s the result of brands, sponsors and broadcasters investing in and prioritizing women’s sports.”
Speaking to WWD, Mary Jo Kane, professor emerita at the University of Minnesota and director emerita of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls and Women in Sport, said the 2023 Women’s World Cup is benefiting from significantly greater media coverage, the U.S. team’s potential to three-peat, and many countries, especially in Western Europe, recognizing the benefits of investing in women’s soccer.
She said, “The media doesn’t cover this out of the goodness of their hearts. They cover it because it’s a good business deal for them. There’s a growing audience that they have finally recognized and respected.”
One longstanding challenge with women’s sports marketing has been a tendency to “highlight the athletes’ femininity and sexuality rather than their athletic ability,” according to a study from researchers at Cleveland State University.
London-based Dark Horses Sports Marketing Ltd. also believes that achieving parity with men’s in sports marketing includes focusing on individual stories rather than women’s accomplishments as a group and shifting women’s athlete campaigns “away from overcoming inequality, and more towards the confidence and swagger of entertainers.”
A survey of 2,500 U.S. sports fans taken in October 2022 from the National Research Group still found that while 30% watch more women’s sporting events than five years ago, 79% do not actively follow women’s sports.
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