FIFA & EA Sports - Taking Back Control

FIFA & EA Sports - Taking Back Control

Why FIFA & EA Sports' parting of ways is a bold and positive step .. for both

The significance of this week’s launch of EA Sports FIFA 23 to the sport industry is considerable: the last edition of the smash-hit FIFA game to be published (with co-naming rights) by EA Sports.

It follows the video game publisher’s decision not to renew its longstanding licence with football’s global governing body - a move that generated much comment when it was announced back in May, but which should really be viewed in the context of FIFA’s far-sighted D2C strategy and as a lesson for all rightsholders in this new era.?

Let’s first recap the story of one of sport’s most successful collaborations - a relationship that dates back almost 30 years to the launch of the first game in 1994. In the years since, EA Sports’ FIFA title has exploded in worldwide popularity, driving interest in football and all the major leagues featured, with FIFA's name and proprietary assets helping boost global awareness and interest in the title, and FIFA profiting in return from more frequent brand engagement and the chance to break out of its four-yearly World Cup window with a 24/7/365 presence in fans’ lives.?

This was a relationship that was delivering for both parties, including a healthy licensing fee to FIFA. So why have the two industry heavyweights decided to part ways? And why now??

The easy answer is the price point for renewal, rumoured to have doubled to more than $1bn for the next World Cup cycle. But stop there and you fail to see what the episode tells us about the direction of travel for the sport industry as a whole. Indeed, EA Sports is on record as saying that the real sticking point in negotiation was FIFA’s reluctance to allow the publisher to introduce new features to the game, such as NFTs.

Beware the iceberg

Seen in the context of the industry’s shift towards fan-centric revenue generation, it’s understandable that FIFA perceived increasing demands as the threat of an iceberg. Because the value of such rights depends increasingly not on brand and visibility, but what lies below the water: first-party data, audience insight and direct monetization opportunities. There’s enormous value in the engaged digital fanbase held by EA Sports, which FIFA, as a smart and far-sighted rightsholder, wants back in its own control.

The value of owning your own fans

The price FIFA placed on its gaming community is a clear indication of the importance of digital fanbases to the future of sport business, set against the backdrop of declining broadcast rights and the rewiring of the sponsorship industry around digital inventory and first-party data.

It was a price that ultimately proved too high for EA Sports; and FIFA is now freed up to pursue a truly owned gaming strategy, having already committed to work with a third party to create a new simulation game by 2024..... not easy.

Credit to both parties, the partnership did what all great partnerships do, got it to where it is now. Similarly it will be interesting to see how EA Sports market their new game, without their partner.

Will the new game be able to compete with EA Sports’ own-brand title? In a way, it doesn’t matter. Because every percentage point of the market gained represents a part of the audience that FIFA would not otherwise control.

It’s a long-term play that, when seen alongside FIFA+, the newly-launched direct-to-consumer OTT platform, shows FIFA as an organisation ahead of the curve in seeking to revolutionise its whole approach to digital content, fan engagement and revenue generation.

All the best partnerships come to an end and a parting of the ways should be just seen as an evolution, a celebration of their success and the dawn of a new strategy and era.

Best of luck to them both.

This article was also published on iSportConnect

Jody MacDonald

Partner (Sport, Digital, Technology)

2 年

Great read Rupert

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Simon Miller

International Partnerships Director @ Headspace | Mental Health Solutions (ex AXA & CVS Aetna)

2 年

This is super interesting from a partnerships perspective Rupert Pratt but also helps me explain to my son what on the surface seemed mad to him (and all his mates who were similarly only a step away from an EA FIFA tattoo). FYI Craig Kingham (ACMA, CGMA)

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