It’s not just broadcast rightsholders, accredited media and outside publishers who are building online tools and destinations for this summer’s Olympic Games. Organisers and even sporting teams are vying for audience share, too…
Team GB (AKA the British Olympic Association) will debut two of its own new digital products next Monday – a “Team GB Live” mobile and web app to give fans customisable real-time data, and a fan gallery that is intended as a digital legacy project.
Team GB digital marketing manager and online editor Joe Morgan told me, in a video discussion at Team GB House on the Olympic Park:
Several of the Games’ key stakeholders have each been building their own online and social products to engage and inform fans…
- For instance, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is making a song and dance about social.
- Aside from its London2012.com website, the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (LOCOG) has debuted the “official results app”, also packing results tables, news and advertising.
As they do so, they risk pushing out overlapping propositions. But do they also replicate the traditional role of media in giving information and data to sports fans?
IOC communications director Mark Adams told paidContent:
Team GB’s focus is purely domestic and centred on relationship-building, Morgan said:
Each organisation sees their online efforts as complementary to, rather than competitive with, broadcaster and publisher digital output. But it is often the case that “media” companies are disintermediated by groups which don’t see themselves as media companies.