Transcript Slide 1

DON’T JUST CUT THROUGH THE CLUTTER. BLOW RIGHT PAST IT.
2007 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Sponsorship Playbook
Prepared Exclusively for
Greater Richmond Chamber of Commerce
By OnTrack Marketing
A division of
Market This, LLC
10808 Kittery Pl., Glen Allen, VA 23060
804.346.1150
www.marketthisllc.com
This NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Playbook is a comprehensive guide to educate GRCC on how to
leverage the NASCAR brand into your marketing communications program.
GEARING
UP WITH
Auto Racing is arguably the fastest growing spectator sport in America. Specifically NASCAR
Racing, on many levels, has become the most popular form of all motor sports. Over 13
million fans attended NASCAR events in 2004 and NASCAR is televised weekly around the
world in more than 150 countries.
Sponsorship by major corporations is also growing at an incredible speed as companies are
becoming more aware of how involvement in motor sports can generate increased product
sales.
Sponsorship not only provides the benefits of increased exposure and consumer awareness,
but is effective at earning the support of racing fnas who are loyal purchasers of products
marketed by companies that support their favorite sport – racing.
The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series is one of three national touring series sanctioned by the
National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing. A number of truck competitors have
graduated into the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series and NASCAR Busch Series. As you will read,
an ambitious and talented young man is on course to cross the finish line as a graduate – top
of his class.
TJ Guthrie
Driver
Hometown: Richmond, VA
Age: 23
Story: Beginning at age 8, TJ started racing Go-Karts for fun with his family. It eventually
turned into a weekly event and Sunday became a day at the track. Eventually TJ started racing
locally and then conquered state events in Virginia. His next move was racing up and down the
East Coast in competitions and the rest is history.
T J Guthrie
It was when TJ made the jump from Go-Kart racing to stock car racing that he realized a dream
could become a reality. Watching TJ race cars … you would think he had been doing it his whole
life as he consistently finished in the Top 5 or better. In just his second year of racing stock
cars, he earned a championship at Southside Speedway. It was at this point several individuals
recognized tremendous talent in TJ and knew he was someone special.
When he isn’t racing: TJ is a mechanical engineering student at Virginia Commonwealth University. He successfully juggles
time on the track while working towards his college degree. He also works at Stock Car Products as a fabricator making
components for local racers and NASCAR teams.
His future: 2006 will be TJ’s first year racing in NASCAR. In addition to his natural talent, this opportunity is in part due to the
help of Larry McReynolds who identified TJ as someone with great potential and a gift for racing.
The forecast: TJ Guthrie races his heart away
until he becomes a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series
winner and the All-American guy who fans will
come to love and sponsors won’t let go of.
• Took 3rd for the season
• Had all top 5's except 1 DNF as result of being wrecked.
“Dave as previous hooters and NASCAR spotter says he is definitely ready to go up to
the truck level and should have his learning curve in the longer races but the ability is
already there.”
*Quoted by Jim Guthrie, in an e-mail on November 6, 2006.
Larry McReynolds
Director of Development
Hometown: Mooreseville, NC
Age: Wise beyond his years
Darrell Waltrip
racing.
Currently: With Fox Sports, SPEED and formerly one of NASCAR’s most successful crew chiefs,
Larry McReynolds is in the middle of the action as he is teamed with Mike Joy and
as a race analyst on the Fox Sports broadcast of NASCAR Nextel Cup
Claim to fame: Larry McReynolds brings 25 years of motorsports experience to OnTrack
Marketing. To quote NASCAR’s media guide, “Larry McReynolds has an insatiable
appetite for
success … and he is one of the most respected men in the garage area.” Larry
started his career
in 1975 and worked for various teams, but got his first big break in
1986 by being named the crew
chief for King Racing. His first win as a crew chief was with Ricky
Rudd in 1988, and subsequently
he directed teams to 23 NASCAR Nextel Cup winds
including two Daytona 500s, his second one that elusive Daytona 500 win for seven-time Nextel Cup champion Dale Earnhardt.
Following his stint with King Racing, McReynolds joined the Robert Yates Racing team in 1991 where his initial responsibility
was working with and developing the talents of the late Davey Allison.
Larry McReynolds
Turns to gold: The fact that Larry is the Director of Development and mentor for TJ, statistically gives him a sizeable
advantage to succeed by crossing every finish line – giving sponsors maximum exposure.
1991-1996
Robert Yates Racing
1997-2000
Richard Childress Racing
Drivers Davey Allison, Ernie Irvan and Dale Jarrett
Drivers Dale Earnhardt and Mike Skinner
WHO WATCHES NASCAR CRAFTSMAN TRUCKS?
65% Male, 35% Women
59% Between 18 & 44
42% Have children under the age of 18
45% Fans that attend races have an annual income
between $30,000 and $75,000
THERE ARE 30,000,000 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES FANS IN THE U.S.
Sources: Edgar, Dunn & Co., Nordhaus Research Inc., Neilsen Media Research/ESPN Chilton Performance,
Research Inc. and Goodyear Eagle Performance Report.
COMPREHENSIVE MEDIA SATURATION
25 race events per season
•Television: Live broadcasts of the races on the SPEED Channel along with
qualifying sessions, rebroadcasts and associated programming. SPEED Channel
now reaches over 60 million homes in the US and Canada. In terms of television
exposure value, NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team sponsors received over
$230 million worth of sponsorship exposure in 2004.
•Radio: MRN Radio, PRN Radio and SIRIUS Satellite Radio carry all events live
over 350 affiliate stations.
•Print: USA TODAY and virtually every major and local newspaper in the country
report on NASCAR racing. Sports-related magazines such as Sports Illustrated
and ESPN The Magazine, as well as specific motorsports-related magazines and
newspapers reach millions of readers weekly.
•Internet: NASCAR.com is the ultimate tool for NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
fans. There are 3.7 million unique users each month. There are 1.2 billion
annual page views. NASCAR.com Superstore is the most comprehensive offering
of NASCAR-licensed products.
NASCAR fans understand the need for sponsorship and support NASCAR
sponsors
Percentage of NASCAR Fans who Agree
NASCAR drivers could not run their cars
without sponsors’ support
91%
NASCAR is the kind of sport that needs
corporate sponsorship
90%
I know which companies sponsor
NASCAR and its drivers
76%
0%
20%
40%
NASCAR fans are 3 times as likely to try and purchase
sponsors’ products and services.*
60%
80%
NASCAR
*Fans vs. non-fans. Sources: Ipsos Insight (NASCAR Brand Tracker 2001), Ipsos Insight (NASCAR Brand Tracker 2003).
100%
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series image campaign
Strong commitment to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
2005 marks the 2nd year with an agency dedicated solely
to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series (and NASCAR Busch Series).
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series’ tagline: “Tough Trucks. Tough
Racing.”
Campaign to gain high level of visibility throughout the season.
New creative launched throughout the 2005 season.
Campaign utilizes a variety of media
Television spot
30-second television spots
Air during live race broadcasts, race re-airs, NASCAR
licensed shows, and support programming on NASCAR TV
on SPEED
Print ads
NASCAR Scene, NASCAR Illustrated, and souvenir race
programs
Internet banner ads
NASCAR.COM
Print ads
LEVERAGING YOUR SPONSORSHIP WITH
The Truck: Painted in each sponsor’s highly visible and eye-catching graphics, and designed for readability
during NASCAR’s Craftsman Truck Series live television broadcasts, the colorful moving billboards serve as
the cornerstone for creating brand awareness and rallying consumer share-of-mind for your product or
brand.
The Driver: Drivers help create great allegiance between brands and millions of race fans. This productendorsement relationship coupled with personal appearances with key customers and employees has proven
to be an effective tool in growing company and brand loyalty.
The Tools: Transports, Equipment, Facilities and Team Uniforms all bear corporate logos and identity that
embody the essence of the sponsors’ newly created sports property. These elements shape the overall
excitement and perception that spectators and viewing audiences have of the sponsors’ products. Transports
travel the U.S. highways creating millions of motorist impressions while pit equipment and team uniforms
add to TV logo exposure values.
The Off-Track Exposure: Show trucks, Communications, Apparel and Hospitality are also critical to the
overall off-track impact of your sponsorship. The implementation of a strategic marketing and consumeroutreach plan geared to communicate, involve, and excite targeted audiences about your products. Utilized
for incentives, point-of-purchase, entertainment, and general merchandising, these support elements are
key to realizing a maximum return on investment.
The Team: OnTrack Marketing is seeking sponsors who will become an integral part of TJ Gutherie’s race
team. Actively involving sponsors in the imagery, marketing, and overall presence of the team creates
synergies for sponsors to create a true sports platform in which to build its brands.
STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS: MOVING FORWARD
In today’s highly competitive motorsports environment, as in business, strategic partnerships play a
key role in success. OnTrack Marketing is seeking a primary sponsor-partner with whom we can build
a long-term plan for mutual success.
A representative from this key primary sponsor-partner will play a role in developing the imagery of
the race team and the marketing strategy necessary to effectively support the sponsor’s products from
season to season.
Business-to-business partnerships are another benefit realized through racing. These key partnerships
can create a solid platform for sponsors to develop the important relationships critical for increased
market share and customer satisfaction. OnTrack Marketing will work with your marketing team to
attract and develop a solid strategic plan.
The decals on a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series pickup identify the sponsors who
help fund the race team. NASCAR has strict rules about decal placement.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
NASCAR requires identification numbers that are at least 21 inches high with a four-inch stroke. Metallic or reflective numbers are not permitted.
The roof number always faces the driver side
Headlight, taillight and turn signal decals are required.
The “Craftsman” decal on the top of the windshield is required. The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series is the only NASCAR division that permits or
requires windshield decals.
Decals are not permitted on the rear spoiler, except a small decal on the leading edge of the spoiler (to be picked up by the in-truck camera)
Only a decal or logo of the truck manufacturer is permitted on the rear bumper, or forward of the front hood pins.
Only decals of series sponsors and contingency sponsors are permitted in front of the numbers on the front fenders. These sponsors have posted
various awards for the trucks based on using the products, running the stickers and/or how they finish. NASCAR prescribes the layout of contingency
sponsor decals.
Each truck must carry a “NASCAR Craftsman Race Truck” decal at the base of the A-post
9.
Team sponsors can require their decals on the rear fenders, tailgate, bed cover and hood. Primary sponsors typically have te top of the fenders, with
associate sponsor stickers along the bottom. The sponsors and teams determine the layout, although NASCAR must approve all graphics.
10.
The tailgate, or “TV panel,” is a very desirable place for a sponsor decal because it shows up on in-truck camera shots from the truck behind.
11.
TV cameras are mounted on the roof, inside the cockpit and on the rear roll cage to show racing action and also feature sponsor decals. Although they
appear very large on TV, the decals in front of the roof cameras are only two inches wide.
12.
Each wheel must have the truck number on it.
13.
The driver’s name above the door is optional.
14.
Goodyear labels each Racing Eagle tire with a stamp and paint. “Goodyear” is in yellow on the radial tires used in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck
Series, Winston Cup and Busch Grand National, and in white on bias-ply tires used in other divisions.
On Track Marketing
Sponsorship Opportunities for Guthrie Motorsports
Six race sponsorship package
Hood
$225,000
Rear Bed Cover
$200,000
Spoiler
$100,000
Quarter Panel
$90,000
Side Panel
$250,000
Struts
$60,000
Dash
According to
sponsorship level
Logos appear on:
Helmet
Driver Uniform
Pit Crew Uniform
Team Uniforms
Leave your mark with the TJ Gutherie Team!
Premier brands in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
Examples of brands that rely on the NASCAR
Craftsman Truck Series
Return on Investment … Speaks for Itself
The Nascar Phenomenon

The distinguishing success of NASCAR as a marketing vehicle has been credited to the incorporation of the brand
into the lifestyle of its many fans: “The loyalty (NASCAR) fans feel for sponsor’s products is unmatched among
professional sports and entertainment properties.” (Pyne, 2002).

Due to the television contract and an extensive racing schedule, the well-educated, relatively affluent and
remarkable geographically diverse audience is consistently reached.

From the Sponsor’s mouths:





“Our teams and drivers have done a wonderful job of communicating to the fan that the more Tide (laundry
detergent) they by, the faster Ricky Craven’s going to go.” (Napoli, 2003).
According to UPS spokesperson Susan Rosenberg, “NASCAR fans are three times more likely to try or buy the
produt or services of NASCAR sponsors.” (Godwin, 2004).
Dodge research indicates a new awareness of the Dodge brand following its involvement in NASCAR. “The
NASCAR fan has a 50 percent greater consideration of Dodge than the non-fan,” says Bo Puffer, Dodge
motor sports marketing manager.
What motives explain the intense corporate interest in NASCAR sponsorships?
1.
Hospitality
2.
Networking
3.
Reduction of media clutter
4.
Image transfer and sport/sponsor linking
5.
Merchandise tie-ins
6.
Cross-marketing opportunities
7.
Managerial self-interest
Pricing also enters into the NASCAR sponsorship equation. Some authorities believe that NASCAR fans are willing
to pay as much as 10 percent more for a NASCAR sponsored product than for a competing, non-NASCAR brand in
large part because of fan awareness surrounding the need for sponsorship. (Johnsen, 2004).
ROI Con’t


Excerpt from Forbes article – The Big Money of Motorsports, 2006
1.
NASCAR has lapped every sport for regular season ratings, except the National Football league.
2.
According to marketing analyst Joyce Julius and Associates, a top 25 finisher in the Daytona 500 got
airtime equivalent to $7 million worth of 30-second commercials on average, given how often the car’s
logos had “in-focus exposure time” in front of viewers.
3.
The apparent return on investment can be considerable with the best drivers and cars. In 2005 Dale
Earnhardt Jr.’s Chevrolet won only one race during the 36-race season, barely missing the checkered flag
several times. But Joyce Julius estimates Earnhardt reaped $149 million in televised exposure time for
lead sponsor Budweiser. By that calculation, Anheuser-Busch got a bargain. It is believed to have spent
only $15 on the sponsorship.
A 2004 NASCAR sponsorship study published in the Journal of Advertising Research concluded:
1.
Large and statistically significant increases in stock prices at the time of initiation of 24 primary NASCAR
sponsorships undertaken between 1995-2001 offers “strong support for the proposition that these
highly visible and hugely expensive marketing programs, are, overall, viewed extremely positively on Wall
Street.”
2.
The fact that the average NASCAR sponsor experienced a staggering increase in shareholder wealth of
over $300 million ($500 million in the case of companies with direct ties to the consumer automotive
industry), net of all of the costs expected to be associated with the sponsorships, tells its own tale. This
is the largest documented increases in shareholder wealth ever observed in response to a voluntary
marketing program. No previous empirical study-not corporate stadium sponsorships, nor Olympic
sponsorships, nor celebrity endorser signings-has registered a mean net increase in shareholder wealth
even approaching $300 million.
3.
Across the universe of sponsorship possibilities, it is possible that NASCAR sponsorships represent the
gold standard of accountability success – at least when viewed from the “bottom line” standpoint of
investor approval of the programs.
4.
“Investors believe NASCAR sponsorships are an economically advantageous method of cutting through
the clutter to reach literally millions of demographically desirable consumers.”
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES 2007 SCHEDULE
Date
Race
Venue
02/16/07
TBD
Daytona International Speedway
02/23/07
TBD
California Speedway
03/16/07
TBD
Atlanta Motor Speedway
03/31/07
TBD
Martinsville Speedway
04/28/07
TBD
Kansas Speedway
05/18/07
TBD
Lowe’s Motor Speedway
05/26/07
TBD
Mansfield Mostorsports Speedway
06/01/07
TBD
Dover International Speedway
06/08/07
TBD
Texas Motor Speedway
06/16/07
TBD
Michigan International Speedway
06/22/07
TBD
The Milwaukee Mile
06/30/07
TBD
Memphis Motorsports Park
07/14/07
TBD
Kentucky Speedway
07/27/07
TBD
O’Reilly Raceway Park
08/11/07
TBD
Nashville Superspeedway
08/22/07
TBD
Bristol Motor Speedway
09/01/07
TBD
Gateway International Raceway
09/15/07
TBD
New Hampshire international Speedway
09/22/07
TBD
Las Vegas Motor Speedway
10/06/07
TBD
Talladega Superspeedway
10/20/07
TBD
Martinsville Speedway
10/27/07
TBD
Atlanta Motor Speedway
11/02/07
TBD
Texas Motor Speedway
11/09/07
TBD
Phoenix International Raceway
11/16/07
TBD
Homestead-Miami Speedway
MEDIA COVERAGE OF TJ
Richmond.com
The Business of NASCAR
Business aspect of NASCAR complicates dreams of young drivers
Matt Deegan
Monday March 27, 2006
His dad wants him to plunge into a racing career. His mom wants his mechanical engineering degree at Virginia Commonwealth
University to be his first priority. But the frustrating reality for 22-year-old T.J. Guthrie is that neither experience behind
the wheel nor a college diploma can ensure a fast track to NASCAR stardom.
Professional baseball has the minor leagues, where players hone their skills and ascend the ranks as far as their talents and
pregress allow.
In the racing circuit, however, talent alone does not guarantee notoriety.
“The sad thing is that in racing there are no set stepping stones,” Guthrie said. “A lot of it is about how much money you can
raise. If you don’t have the financial backing, you won’t make it.”
Knowing the hardships, Guthrie’s father sent an e-mail to the Web site of racing guru Larry McReynolds, a former NASCAR crew
chief who helped Dale Earnhardt finally ride to victory lane at the Daytona International Speedway in the 1998 Daytona 500.
McReynolds responded quickly and, three months later, the Guthries met him for breakfast and he agreed to be an advisor
for T.J. as he develops as a driver.
“I had a good first impression of [T.J.] and I told him that this business is a matter of getting the right break,” he said.
McReynolds can relate to Guthrie’s position because he has a teenage son, Brandon, who currently races and knows his quest for
sponsorships will be major roadblock.
He said the almighty greenback did not used to run the sport.
When he started as a crew chief 20 years ago, the most talented drivers received the sponsorships, McReynolds said. Today,
divers must add “salesman” to their repertoire.
“Sponsors now want drivers to be a spokesperson for their company,” McReynolds said. “You have to know how to present
yourself, and they want to see hwo you are going to sell their product.”
Guthrie’s thirst for speed began when he steered go-karts around the local King George Speedway at age 7. He recalled feeling
timid about climbing into a go-kart for the first time. Alone on the track, his father helped with his cold feet.
“I remember when my dad said, ‘Here we go,’ I didn’t want to do it,” he said. “I was thinking, ‘So this is it,’ and I got scared. And
my dad said, ‘Just do two laps and see how you like it.’ I ended up doing around 50 and he had to pull me off the track.”
He has always been infatuated with breakneck speeds.
“I love trying to go as fast as you can with what you have,” Guthrie said.
By 16, he had graduated to stock car racing, which he said felt like a natural adjustment. He currently races in the Rolling Thunder
Modifieds racing series. He finished 14th in last year’s points standings and, although back surgery last June has limited his action, a
newer car helped him finish in the top five in his last three races.
T.J. also works at Stock Car Products in Richmond, a racing car garage he likes because of the friendships he has kindled there.
Tony Culley, who has worked with Guthrie for five years and shares his passion for racing, has been a crew chief on local circuits for
eight years. Like Guthrie, he started racing go-karts when he was 12 years old, but Culley abandoned his racing dream for a more
lucrative position as a crew chief once he realized the sport had become more than one’s affection for it.
“As a driver, I didn’t have the money or the pretty boy looks,” he said.
Culley said the 46 or so drivers that sit at the starting line of NASCAR races are not the best racers in America.
“There are better drivers sitting in the grandstand,” he said. “It’s a shame racing has gotten that way.”
Paychecks from sponsors give the top drivers little incentive to invest all their energy in preparing for races, Culley said.
“It seems as their pockets get heavier, their feet get lighter,” he said.
Culley did not like the notion that a driver could sustain himself without winning.
“It’s the same way in professional baseball or football,” he said. “It would be nice if a player could be rewarded after the season for how
he performed, rather than before the season.”
McReynolds used Mike Waltrip, who has raced in more than 700 NASCAR races and won three times, with two of them coming in Daytona
500, as an example of a driver who is a sponsor’s dream despite not having sustained success. He has never finished higher than 12th in
the points standing.
Culley, who is 10 years older than Guthrie and has seen he emergence of many young riders, feels he has the talent and ambition
untainted by the lust for money.
“He is so outgoing and someone you can have a good time with,” he said. “When I’m working with him it doesn’t feel like ajob. He givers
110 percent and doesn’t complain and whine when things don’t go his way like some people I work with.”
In Culley’s eyes, Guthrie has the good-natured, talkative personality that would be attractive to sponsors.
“He’s smart and you can sit down with him and have a conversation about a lot of things, whether it be racing or politics,” he said.
With so much politics in the racing world, it is easy to become discouraged. But McReynolds insists that if a driver thinks money can buy
victories, he will not be driving for very long.
When he would interview crew team potentials, he said if one of the first questions that came out of the candidate’s mouth was, “How
much money will I make,” it was always a short meeting.
McReynolds said that working in racing is a sacrifice that requires a driver to surround himself with a crew team that will throw
themselves at their work.
“Racing is not a job, not a career,” he said. “It’s a life. I would rather have a team that believes in you than top-notch mechanics who
don’t.”
In a sport in which the necessity of sponsorships has complicated the racing dreams of young hopefuls, passion and
camaraderie are still essential ingredients for success.
Drivers like T.J. Guthrie, who were not born with a silver spoon in hand, can still steer their way to success. But not without
adversity.
“It’s frustrating, but I don’t get my hopes up too much,” Guthrie said. “I just try to go out and have fun with it.”
A service of Richmond.com
All material copyright ©1999-2003 Richmond.com and Partners.
SPREADING THE WORD WITH PUBLIC RELATIONS
A comprehensive public relations program is essential in increasing awareness of XXXX’s sponsorship for NASCAR Craftsman
Truck Series to drivers and fans alike. The car serves as a natural billboard while on the track, but with corporate
sponsorship involvement at an all-time high, it is necessary to compliment your sponsorship off track with an extensive
public relations program. OnTrack Marketing (OTM) is your communications and marketing arm. We have a proven
track record across a wide range of industries including the ever-expanding activities of motorsports communications.
Strategic Planning
Prior to each race, OTM and GRCC will meet to establish the goals and objectives for a successful public relations support
program. This will include agreement and dissemination of a consistent brand message for GRCC. OTM’s objective is
to increase media exposure of GRCC’s sponsorship throughout the NASCAR Craftsman Series season by providing a
creative and continuous flow of GRCC Racing information to national media and to promote heightened interest in
GRCC on-track performance.
The Core Program
Support of GRCC NASCAR Craftsman Series sponsorship will be implemented through a complete
communications/marketing support program. This plan includes the following elements:
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Develop and distribute a comprehensive preseason media advance kit featuring GRCC team and driver bios, driver and owner
quotes and vital statistics on the GRCC Racing team, as well as corporate background information on GRCC.
Coordinate driver/executive media interviews including television, radio, Internet and print.
Pre-race advance feature on the GRCC Racing team and subsequent e-mail distribution to national and local media for each
race.
Qualifying and race results published and distributed to local and national media along with extensive driver and team quotes
and event facts for each of the NASCAR Craftsman Series races.
Coordinate and manage press conferences where applicable.
Develop a GRCC Racing photo library for use throughout the season as well as coordinate event photography (as requested).
Write and arrange placement of event program stories where available.
Coordinate all winner’s circle activities including GRCC winner’s circle hats and photography.
Develop, design, produce and package GRCC Racing press event materials and/or CD/ROM.
Coordinate entertainment venues to connect key media with GRCC team/driver and other key personnel including golf
outings, dinners and special on-track activities.
Coordinate with GRCC ad agencies to leverage race print advertising and to pitch additional editorial placement.
Schedule driver appearances at local functions in conjunction with NASCAR Craftsman Series events along with GRCC driver
appearance requests and requested charity appearances.
Edit and forward all editorials to GRCC Web server for posting on the GRCC Racing Web site.