Digital rights inventory is endless. Attention isn’t.
Your sponsorship activation plan needs to be as dynamic as your digital asset licensing, ensuring fans stay hooked. In today’s crowded landscape, a winning sponsorship strategy hinges on how you activate your digital rights, not just own them.
Fans have more control over what they see, when, and how. If a brand activation isn’t relevant, immediate, or fun, it becomes a victim of the doom scroll.
That means activations shaped by fan behaviour, not brand timelines, need to become a broader part of the solutions. And designed to live as part of an ecosystem, not a content calendar.
The average fan’s feed is packed, and sports content is everywhere — highlights, promos, previews, behind-the-scenes clips. It’s never been easier to publish, but it’s never been harder to stand out. Just having rights isn’t enough. Algorithm-driven feeds mean fans are flooded with content they didn’t ask for, and traditional sponsorship placements — logos, standard posts, static branding — get lost in the scroll. Three key challenges of digital‑only sponsorship strategies are:
Without an evolving sponsorship campaign optimisation framework, even the best content rights management falls flat. Brands need to activate their digital rights by offering something fans actually want.
To make an impact, sponsors need to stop thinking just in terms of visibility and start thinking in terms of experience. That means activating digital rights in ways that feel relevant, real-time and rewarding. Sport holds one trump card against the rest of the entertainment industry: Live, unpredictable moments. It remains one of the only appointments to view content pieces in the world of entertainment. This emotional core is what makes sport a uniquely valuable space for brands, considering also that sports content generates significant higher engagement compared to other content types across social platforms. The emotional charge of the game is still a magnet — but only if brands show up in meaningful ways. AR filters, virtual access, gamified content (once seen as gimmicks) are beginning to have more of a hold on fan engagement than ever before.
This shift is already visible. Bundesliga’s Roblox activation gave fans an interactive, gamified way to connect with teams and players — a campaign built for how fans behave, not for how brands traditionally operate.
In the age of social media and personalisation, visibility might get you on the screen. But a memorable experience gets you into the feed — and the fan’s head. Sponsorship activations must work across a constellation of platforms and content formats. That means aligning internal marketing, content and partnership teams, often bringing in external expertise that can manage complexity at scale.
Fans react in real time, remix highlights, and curate their own feed, creating their own experience before some rightsholders have even shown up to the show. Highlights, commentary, creator clips — with 43% of fans using social media just to keep up with what’s trending in sport (GWI). If your sponsorship strategy isn’t meeting them there, in those moments, it’s already behind. Sponsorship has tomust match their energy and pace. That’s why modern programmes adopt a fancentric sponsorship model, blending social media usage rights with instant engagement.
The most effective campaigns now behave like ecosystems. They’re flexible, coordinated across teams, and capable of adapting in real time. That means moving past the old model of “visibility during the live match” and into activations shaped by context and behaviour.
Ten years ago, the challenge was attention. Now it’s relevance. Brands that win are those investing in the right infrastructure which tracks rights, personalises messaging and responds in real time. And increasingly, that means working with rightsholders who can support beyond the contract — with packaging, delivery and creative thinking. Take Vodafone’s work with the Turkish Volleyball Federation. A localised, emotionally -led campaign reached 2 million fans and saw 6.6% engagement. Why? Because it didn’t talk at fans. It spoke with them — in their language, their moment, their medium.
Digital sponsorship rights are not inherently valuable and must be activated. According to Nielsen Sports, digital-first campaigns with personalised delivery outperform traditional sponsorships in both conversion and trust. Personalisation, localisation should be the starting point as we shift towards a world where technology enables limitless content generation. The value lies not in more, but in better. AI can streamline your digital licensing agreements and automate metrics for sponsorship success reporting in real time.
The elephant in the room is AI, and how it is reshaping sponsorship. Among all the fear-mongering, it is crucial to remember that the technology can actually help power creativity, not replace it. When used well, AI is a tool that helps brands personalise content, spot high-impact moments and deliver campaigns with precision. It’s already powering smarter sponsorships — from personalised highlight reels and real-time localisation to targeting fans when engagement is peaking.
But the distinction is that whilst AI can decide when and how; only people can define why. Brands using AI to automate bland, volume-driven content are part of the noise. The ones using it to elevate human storytelling — with relevance, timing and emotional tone — are cutting through.
Sponsorship that works in 2025 isn’t passive. It’s participatory, personal, and always-on.
The brands that win will be the ones that treat digital rights as the start of a conversation — not the end of a media plan.
The rest? Scrolled on.