Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

LIV Golf's CEO reveals that its sovereign wealth fund backer evaluates the venture on two types of ROI: financial 'Return on Investment' and brand-enhancing 'Return on Image.' This dual-metric approach justifies investments that also drive economic impact, tourism, and global influence for the funding nation.

Related Insights

The Bay Area Host Committee defined Super Bowl success beyond the game itself. Their key metrics were legacy-focused: building a new sports field in each of the nine local counties and launching the first-ever Super Bowl Innovation Summit. This ensures lasting community benefit and reinforces the region's brand.

Sixth Street's sports strategy views iconic teams like FC Barcelona or the New York Yankees as global consumer brands, not just local franchises. This "local to global, enabled by technology" lens opens up investment opportunities based on brand value and consumer reach, moving beyond traditional sports team valuation metrics.

To combat golf's stuffy image, LIV integrates concerts, walk-up music, and a festival-like atmosphere into its events. This strategy successfully attracts a new, younger demographic—with 60% of attendees under 40—by turning a sports tournament into a broader cultural experience.

Wix's CMO views expensive brand activities like Super Bowl ads through a dual lens. While building the brand is key, the investment must also generate a measurable spike in relevant user traffic to be considered successful. All marketing, regardless of type, must be treated as an investment.

To grow a sports franchise's value, owners must heavily invest in the fan experience and player talent. Magic Johnson's group spent hundreds of millions on stadium upgrades for the Dodgers. This upfront spending drove higher revenues and caused the team's valuation to skyrocket, proving the investment thesis.

CEO Scott O'Neil clarifies a common misconception about LIV's massive player payouts. The league is essentially acquiring a player's existing sponsorship rights (e.g., from Callaway, Rolex) for a lump sum, which LIV then monetizes. This reframes the deals as a financial strategy, not just exorbitant salaries.

LIV Golf’s CEO avoids direct domestic competition with the PGA Tour by focusing on the massive, untapped international market. He frames this not as a competition but as a completion of the global golf landscape, taking a bet on the 199 countries outside the U.S.

Qualcomm's Manchester United sponsorship delivered massive brand awareness (9.5 billion impressions) even while the team was underperforming. This shows that for globally recognized sports franchises, the brand ethos and massive, passionate fanbase provide value that is largely independent of the team's current win-loss record.

Unlike traditional sports leagues, LIV structures its top players as business partners with equity in their teams. This model shifts their focus from just prize money to long-term franchise value, aligning their incentives with the league's growth and creating a powerful partnership dynamic.

The motivation for buying a Formula 1 team is not financial return but the acquisition of an unparalleled personal brand and networking tool. Like owning a major league sports team, it instantly redefines one's public identity and provides access to an exclusive global elite, a value that "you can't put a price on."