Draft:Matt Levine (sports marketer)
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Submission declined on 19 July 2024 by SafariScribe (talk). This submission is not adequately supported by reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be verified. If you need help with referencing, please see Referencing for beginners and Citing sources. This submission's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article—that is, they do not show significant coverage (not just passing mentions) about the subject in published, reliable, secondary sources that are independent of the subject (see the guidelines on the notability of people). Before any resubmission, additional references meeting these criteria should be added (see technical help and learn about mistakes to avoid when addressing this issue). If no additional references exist, the subject is not suitable for Wikipedia. Declined by SafariScribe 4 months ago. |
- Comment: May or may not be notable – the text would need to be entirely rewritten to become encyclopedic. bonadea contributions talk 14:20, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
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- Comment: Sources must meet WP:RS before accepted. However, Wikipedia is not a reliable source. Safari ScribeEdits! Talk! 20:27, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
Matt Levine | |
---|---|
Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | February 18, 1939
Education | Trinity College (CT), Columbia University Graduate School of Business |
Spouse | Diane Duerr-Levine |
Children | Arielle Levine, Sarsh Levine |
Matt Levine is a sports industry business pioneer and marketing professional, called “the ‘father’ of modern sport marketing.....[1],” who is best known as a branding and technology innovator. He is credited with having played a pivotal role in Major League Baseball’s computerized embrace of Sabermetrics originally employed by the ‘Moneyball’ Oakland A’s in 1980, the launch and branding of the National Hockey League San Jose Sharks in 1991 and from 1974-2020 advancements in capitalizing on understanding fan behavior and motivations[2] using digitally-based analytics to help increase attendance.
Sports career
[edit]Beginning in 1974, Levine transitioned his firm to helping major league pro sports franchises and venues better understand how their fans made ticket purchase decisions and how to increase the productivity of ticket and sponsorship sales, public relations and community development functions. He also provided litigation support and expert witness services on issues of intellectual property, licensed merchandise retailing and franchise relocation conflict. His clients included the four major United States pro sport leagues (NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL), their law firms, more than 50[3] professional franchises, a major university athletic department, the event promoters of professional tennis, mixed martial arts, equine polo and 3x3 basketball as well as the operators of sports stadia and racetracks.
Major League Baseball
[edit]In 1979, Levine’s company was retained by new Oakland A’s ownership (the Levi Strauss-leading Haas family) to recruit marketing leadership and guide development of a marketing plan to turn around the image and attendance fortunes of the franchise[4].
In response to the request of team president Roy Eisenhardt to help increase the listenership and viewership of its radio and television broadcasts, Levine[5] proposed adding engaging statistical content to the franchise’s broadcast talent’s commentary as well as provide the team manager and coaches with more in-depth player performance and game tactics planning insight. This led to creating and installing the ‘EDGE 1.000’[6] computer system and software (developed in collaboration with Dr. Richard Cramer and Dr. Steven Mann). The new technology would facilitate digitally gathering, analyzing and graphically depicting in-game pitch-by-pitch and hitting pattern data in real time. The system also included portably stored digitized in-house amateur and professional scouting databases.
Levine secured financial support for the development hardware components from Apple, Corvus (portable storage systems), D.C. Hayes (modems) and Digital Equipment Corporation.
Building on the successful A’s installation and their validation of the system’s value in 1981 Levine launched Sports Team Analysis & Tracking Systems (STATS) as a Pacific Select Corp subsidiary (with Cramer and Mann), that led to other teams acquiring the systems, notably the Houston Astros, New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox.
The story of the A’s use of the newly accessible information made possible by EDGE 1.000 became the foundation for the best-selling book “Moneyball” by Michael Lewis published in 2003 by W.W. Norton & Company, further popularized in 2011 by the movie of the same name featuring Brad Pitt and distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing.
National Basketball Association
[edit]NBA Commissioner David Stern retained Levine to develop[7], produce and distribute an unprecedented television-based way to reach a younger generation of fans built around the star-studded Los Angeles Lakers featuring Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Levine, along with Bob Brand, a Hollywood television producer, director and writer, collaborated with MCA Records and the company’s chairman, Irving Azoff, to conceive a first-of-its-kind music video featuring in-game Lakers highlights[8] and the song ‘My Secret (Didja Gitit Yet?)’ performed by the popular teen-focused Boston-based group New Edition. The video was featured on the 1985 CBS television broadcast of the 1985 NBA Finals as well as on MTV and other prominent music video channels.
San Jose Sharks
[edit]Levine, as its second employee[9] and EVP Business Operations, gained prominence for heading the branding efforts of the new San Jose Sharks franchise[10] who began play during the 1991-92 National Hockey League season, a foundation that has anchored the franchise for a run of success and popularity through the subsequent decades.
The four building blocks of his approach included:
- Developing intellectual property (team name, logo family and colors) using consumer packaged goods marketing research tools that catapulted awareness and popularity of the team around the world. Its licensed merchandise accounted for the largest team share of National Hockey League retail sales during the franchise’s first two years, generating the second most club licensing revenue across all major pro sport leagues with the exception of the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls. The Hockey News called the Sharks original jerseys the best in NHL history[11]
- Conceiving community grass roots programs that spread the understanding of hockey, strengthened connections to families with school-aged children and cemented relationships with recreational facilities and elementary school educators. These were accomplished through – (a) the groundbreaking “Sharks & Parks” street hockey program subsequently adapted by the NHL, (b) “S.J. Sharkie’s Think Tank,” a graphical educational tool for 4th through 6th graders teaching geography, mathematics and science concepts using hockey facts & figures and the interactive “The Science of Hockey[12],” a joint venture with the San Francisco-based Exploratorium[13]
- Reinventing the staging and presentation of NHL games, employing a new animated laser technology to tell a dramatic story during the team’s opening week, hiring a Disney spin-off company to build a signature two-ton, 22-foot tall sharkhead tunnel[14] through which players continue to skate onto the ice to open games and installing a shark fin atop the team’s ice-refreshing Zamboni machines.
- Converting traditional events into globally covered media news, including introducing the team’s first uniforms in an on-ice media conference featuring hockey legend Gordie Howe and Sharks owner George Gund III that ESPN called “the hockey play of the week” and birthing new mascot S.J.Sharkie out of CO2-spewing Zamboni[15] on the Madison Square Garden Network that was shown during the evening sports news in virtually all top 50 U.S. media markets, receiving the same ESPN accolades.
Community service
[edit]Over the course of his career Levine has provided pro bono marketing advisory services to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Houston Grand Opera, the York Theatre Company[16] (New York), American Musical Theatre San Jose, the Tech Museum of Innovation (now Tech Interactive) in San Jose and Lyric Theatre (San Jose)
He serves on the Board of Trustee of Palo Alto University[17] where he sits on the Executive Committee, chairs the Infrastructure and Environment Committee and is an Advancement Committee member.
With the Commonwealth Club of California, he serves on the Membership & Marketing Committee and the Silicon Valley Advisory Council[18]
Awards
[edit]Levine earned a myriad of honors and awards in his distinguished career, including:
- He was selected by the national trade publication Advertising Age in the July 6, 1992 edition for its first ‘Marketing 100’ class honoring the top marking executives in the nation, citing his excellence in brand marketing[19]
- He was featured in the ‘New Directions in Differentiating and Positioning’ video case study in 1993 by Philip Kotler, internationally acclaimed marketing consultant and professor at Northwestern University’s J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management.
- He was selected by the San Francisco Focus as part of the ‘Bay Area Brain Trust,’ featuring ‘101 achievers who make this the smartest place on Earth’ in July 1995.
- He was inducted into the Northern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2018[20] along with national TV sports commentator Chris Berman and columnist Mike Silver.
- Received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2018 Sports and Entertainment Analytics Conference under auspices of the Vinik Sports & Entertainment Management Program at the University of South Florida.[21]
Personal life
[edit]Levine and his wife Diane Duerr-Levine live in Los Altos in Northern California and have two children, Arielle and Sarsh.
References
[edit]- ^ Mullin, Bernard James; Hardy, Stephen; Sutton, William Anthony (July 22, 2024). Sport Marketing (4th ed.). Human Kinetics. p. 152. ISBN 9781450424981.
- ^ Kennedy, Ray (April 28, 1980). "MORE VICTORIES EQUALS MORE FANS EQUALS MORE PROFITS, RIGHT? WRONG, WRONG, WRONG". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved July 25, 2024.
{{cite magazine}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Hepler, Lauren (July 12, 2013). "Meet Matt Levine, the Sharks' No. 2 Hire". Silicon Valley Business Journal. Retrieved July 25, 2024.
- ^ Fitelson, Neil (1982). "Apple Magazine".
- ^ Fitelson, Neil (1982). "The A's Have It". Apple The Personal Computer Magazine. pp. 8–15. Retrieved July 25, 2024.
- ^ Kennedy, Ray (July 22, 2024). "It's the Apple of His Eye". Sports Illustrated Vault. Retrieved July 22, 2024.
- ^ Levine, Matt (July 22, 2024). "Marketing to Teens with our Music Video". Retrieved July 22, 2024.
- ^ Sterling, Scott T. (2017-01-17). "New Edition: The Videos, The Music, The Drama". VIBE.com. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ Levi, Ryan (2018-02-17). "San Jose Rubber Puckies? How the Sharks Became the Sharks | KQED". www.kqed.org. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "San Jose Sharks Team Name | San Jose Sharks". www.nhl.com. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ Kennedy, Ryan (2015-12-04). "The Top 50 jerseys of all-time: Nos. 10-1". The Hockey News. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Science of Hockey | Exploratorium". www.exploratorium.edu. 2023-03-15. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Sport! Science: Credits & Acknowledgements". annex.exploratorium.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Ever wonder where Sharks' giant head came from? It involves Disney". NBC Sports Bay Area & California. 2020-04-02. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ Sharkie Is Born | Happy birthday, S.J. Sharkie! Seems like just yesterday you were born from a zamboni... | By San Jose SharksFacebook. Retrieved 2024-07-19 – via www.facebook.com.
- ^ "Staff & Board". The York Theatre Company. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Board of Trustees | Palo Alto University". www.paloaltou.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Silicon Valley Advisory Council". www.commonwealthclub.org. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "White Sox' Rob Gallas named to Ad Age 'Marketing 100' - UPI Archives". UPI. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Matt Levine - Northern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame". Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Students, Visiting Faculty and Marketing Professionals Examine Cutting Trends in the Sports and Entertainment Industry | USF Muma College of Business". www.usf.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-19.