I had been thinking about this a little bit over the past few days. It seems the track for ultimate has been to start in high school (Columbia) move to college with their graduation and then trickle down from there. From the formation of club teams, to the formation of a serious college competition, and then finally back down to the high school level where we are now.
There is an emerging middle school scene now, as the high school competition becomes more developed. We are a long way off from Ultimate Little Leagues where parents take their kids in their small town to the local park and every child gets a different solid color jersey with the name of a local orthodontist on it. But we are gradually moving that way.
While we have this organic growth, the formation of leagues and training camps and travel teams etc we also have the publicity aspect of ultimate. We have blogs (aggregated at places like PlayUltimate.us), we have message boards like RSD, and we have the multimedia coverage of intrepid individuals and the more established folks like UltiVillage. Aside from the niche media mentioned there is very very little established coverage of ultimate. We see it every time the local newspaper runs a feature on "those crazy kids playing that game with the frisbees", usually with the title "The Ultimate game"... because originality is at a premium.
The UPA does some outreach to media, they have started to post press releases online, but they are only beginning to tap the growth potential of media relations.
But where should they focus the energy - the crux of this matter. You can spend all day yelling at the Wall Street Journal, telling them they should cover Easterns or Westerns... spoiler alert: they aren't. (until someone starts measurably profitting from the sport)
We have to face certain realities of ultimate press coverage, daily ESPN highlight reels - not going to happen. NYTimes sports pages - maybe once a year, more likely to find it in the arts section though. The work required to place or pitch a story to major outlets like this vastly outweighs the profit of one story. What the UPA should focus on now is what i call High Value Exposures.
Right now the UPA and ultimate as a sport is focused on growth, High Value Exposures are media blips that will actively help this cause and aid in the development of leagues and teams. An ESPN clip is a novelty, something that is sandwiched between an NHL highlight and an NFL off-field scandal. Ok, some examples of what I mean -
Sports Illustrated for Kids - it has a circulation of 8.1 million with the target demographic as 8-15 year olds - a two page spread on the rules of the game with some pictures from WJUC showing Team USA victorious is good for a few thousand new players. They usually put a "find out how to play in your area" starburst somewhere on the page, maybe the UPA could come up with a more attractive (read: not so text heavy) website geared towards teaching the rules to kids?
Nickelodeon and Disney Channel often have shorts between shows and commercials that show kids doing "interesting things". The on camera person will explain why they play sport stacking and what the rules are, or why they skateboard or play basketball. This is the PERFECT medium for ultimate. The game can be explained in 5 minutes or less and looks interesting and appealing when filmed and cut correctly.
At a minimum every single press release from the UPA should be CC-ed to these three venues (and the hundreds like them). When you get younger kids to see your product (ultimate) and identify with it positively that is a high value exposure, the more frequent the better.
To make this happen you need to make ultimate more accesible - take the Facebook publicity model. They have an online press room where you can find headshots of company personnell, stock footage of people using facebook (b-roll), all their latest press releases and more. The UPA needs to have these resources available and promote them. They have made great strides in recent years but there is more that we can do.
My point with all of this though is that it doesn't come naturally. ESPN is not out looking at ultimate tournaments just waiting to pick one to cover and the NYtimes does not have a beat reporter trailing Wisconsin's college season. To make these things happen you need pressure from a unified body - one would say the UPA. At the same time you need companies like discraft pushing the envelope as well - they need to see that they gain from increased coverage (as if this were hard to see). They need to push for product placement in stores like Sports Authority and Modell's to make the sport more readily accesible for the kid who just saw a clip on Disney Channel, picked up their SIforKIDS and read an article on the game.
We are a long way off from the bulk made monocolor jerseys of large scale little league in every town, but these are a few of the venues where the UPA and you can push for more publicity to push ultimate into the forefront of the larger consciousness.
So what do you think, is the UPA doing enough to promote ultimate in the press? What would you do differently?
Become a fan on Facebook! - Help spread the word about high school ultimate.
PlayUltimateMedia | PlayUltimate.us | PlayUltimate Blog | PlayUltimate Canada | PlayUltimate Store |
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Where to promote ultimate
Monday, December 29, 2008
How do you read PlayUltimate?
If you are trying to find a more convenient way to read the site, check out any of the options in the center column. You can subscribe to the RSS feed or you can just enter your email address and have the latest posts delivered to your inbox.
Do you have any suggestions as to ways we could make the site more accessible? Other formats we should offer it in? Leave em in the comments
Become a fan on Facebook! - Help spread the word about high school ultimate.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
2009 National College Ultimate Signing Day
For the past three years (2008, 2007, 2006) PlayUltimate has compiled a list of high school seniors and their college choices. It has grown into the National College Ultimate Signing Day. Now everyone will be able to see which colleges have the best recruiting classes and maybe even begin to look into the crystal ball a bit.
This year we will announce the list on Wednesday, May 27th, at 5 p.m. so the deadline to submit college choices will be May 26th. The form is a little bit more detailed and in depth, but it will provide a very interesting picture of the coming college season.
Please forward the link to friends, fellow teammates, your league message boards etc. Post it on facebook (link below every post) or MySpace or whatever you use.
More than 10 players have already submitted their information (early action/decision?) Will you be in the first 100?
Without further ado, you can start submitting information here.
If you have any suggestions on other information we should gather leave it in the comments. Feel free to discuss your prospective colleges, I am sure there are some people out there who would LOVE to hear your ideas and influence your choice.
Posted by
McCabe
at
2:02 PM
Labels: 2009 college choices
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Best practices: How does your team keep in touch?
This is going to be an ongoing feature on the site, called "Best Practices" where we ask the readers to submit their ideas, thoughts on a given topic and then report back. There is a ton of knowledge out there and we'd like to consolidate it and make it accessible for newer teams and players. This is based off of the Lifehacker feature "Hive Five".
So the first question - How does your team keep in touch?
Some use google groups, email chains, BBoards, blogspot accounts, facebook groups?
What works best for your team and why?
A side note, you should now have to sign up to comment. You can sign up with a fake name, fake email address or whatever you would like to keep your anonymity should you desire. But we are trying to cut down on spam, and inanity. Once you log in you will be able to rank comments as well so you will be able to tell who you should pay attention to in the threads, fun.
Posted by
McCabe
at
1:22 PM
Labels: best practices, open thread
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Holiday gift ideas for ultimate players?
Need holiday gift ideas for the ultimate players in your life?
Want to make sure mom and dad don't end up getting you a dog frisbee or something similar?
Direct them here - the PlayUltimate store powered by Amazon
there is also a link at the top of every page of the site.
Consider this an open thread - what are you asking for this christmas, Hanukkah, holiday?
Posted by
McCabe
at
2:14 AM
Labels: open thread, site updates