DaveK said:
What I posted was that 'added money' comes from sponsors advertising budgets, which come from the sponsors profits, which come from their customers, who I am assuming are pool fans. I believe this was fundamentaly the argument put forward by Jeff.
I agree that the 'gate' at pool tournaments is extremely trivial, but again, I did not say anything about the paid attendance (gate), only the nebulous 'fan'. As an example, there is a Joss tour. Joss sponsors these events, and their benefit is advertising/promotion leading to brand recognition which leads to the sales of their cues. Their sales are to a lot of people who do not attend the Joss Tour events, but nonetheless contribute to the Tour funding by buying Joss cues.
Dave
I hesitate going back to baseball again, as I really am not a baseball fan. But in some ways proves my point.
Thursday night, a friend calls and ask me to attend his nephew's Senior high school baseball game later in the day. So, I go there, even though I haven't been to a hs bll game for decades. His nephew was pitching and this kid is good. So good that there were several scouts there. He'll go in the draft for maybe a million dollars next week.
Anyway, at this Senior High School baseball game, were about 1,000 (!!!) people packed into the park. I had to stand the whole game as did about half of the crowd. It cost $5 to enter, so do the math. I was amazed at the high interest level from people who were NOT parents.
Now, this kid got 15 strikeouts in the seven innings and really showed his stuff, so the crowd got a good show. Eveyone was talking about the 5 or 6 jugs (speed guns) the scouts were using. "96 miles an hour...wow!" The excitement level was high. The announcer was great and really wipped up the crowd. And the money flowed from the happy fans like wine.
My point is and has always been, that, in this example, if one lousy hs baseball game can generate that kind of interest and money, why can't the same happen for a major pool tournament? The answer, as I see it, is that pool is not promoted and marketed as well as it can be. Every tournament needs, without question, a dedicated marketing director who devotes every ounce of energy to getting fans to come and to be entertained
and to pay for it all. Not simply putting flyers in a gas station, but planned, detailed, integrated, far-reaching, marketing methods designed to get some new and old faces coming through the gate.
Raising the entry fees only makes the problems worse as it reduces the amount of money the players have to make the tourney. And it merely moves the same money around to the same people. This isn't building a sport; it's locking in pool to losersville, man. Perpetual poverty...yuk!
Market, market, market... all the time to pool fans and potential fans. This is the ONLY place EVER that real money will flow. And everone of us here can help in that endeavor. One simple idea is to just have a few seats available for fans to watch league play in a bar, and maybe a score board so they know what's happening. If there's no place or no way for fans to be fans, there will never be any. This is just one simple, little idea to add to the fan base. There's a million more ideas that would help and that cost little to implement. Think of a few and go with 'em and see what happens.
Once this begins to happen consistently and often enough, the money problems begin to disappear. And I'll say it again, everyone of us can help in this endeavor, everyday, with everyone we meet and talk to.
Jeff Livingston