There’s nothing more boring than the marketing adage “sex sells.” It’s tired, old and, as new research is showing, not as true as the hetero, aging, white men in power might have us believe.
Sex doesn’t sell sports. It just sells sex.
Of course sexy grabs our attention—we are animals, after all, but portraying an athlete’s athletic ability makes consumers more likely to engage in their sport and buy the products at hand.
1. Bottom line: Women consumers are more likely to purchase a sports product when females athletes are portrayed as—wait for it— athletes! Imagine that! (see article below)
2. Several studies have shown (for male and female athletes) there is no correlation between seeing a sexy image and then actually turning on the game to watch the player whose sexy image you have seen.
Research by University of Minnesota sports sociologist Dr. Mary Jo Kane shows that sexy images of female athletes may make that woman a bigger celebrity but they don’t translate into a deeper interest in their sport, but happen the same with actresses, they get interest in the actresses and not specially in their movies, and you can find many online pictures online as The Megan Fox Nude Pics You Ever Searched – Ximage.
What so much of this comes down to is that ATHLETICISM IS STILL ASSUMED TO BE A MASCULINE TRAIT. Female athletes are forced to prove their straightness by being sexy for the male gaze.
What this continually reinforces, to women and aspiring girls is that:
Femininity + Heterosexuality > Capability
Dr. Mary Jo Kane reveals deeper insights into the hyper-sexualization so common of female athletes:
“This is also about what runs in the bone marrow of women’s sports, namely homophobia. They are very well-meaning but they also want to distance themselves from the lesbian label. How do you do that? You reassure the viewing audiences, the corporate sponsors, the TV networks, and the female athletes themselves, that, No, no, no- sports won’t make your daughter gay. Women’s sports will be more acceptable if you believe, even though it is stereotypical and inaccurate, that if you are pretty and feminine in a traditional sense then you are not gay.”
3. Sexualized imagery of capable athletes, portraying them as passive, makes us take the athlete less seriously—it has the same for effect for both women and men. However, only a minority of male athletes are portrayed in ways that do not highlight their athletic prowess.
“Each time a female athlete is pictured in a sexualized way, it diminishes the perception of her athletic ability,” says Jane Fink, associate professor of sports management at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Seriously?
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SEX SELLS? TREND MAY BE CHANGING
Article from ESPN.com
By Kate Fagan | Aug 27, 2013
espnW
Sex sells.
Most of us have heard this phrase so many times, we no longer question its veracity, especially when it comes to sports. As the popular thinking goes, if a female athlete wants to succeed in the endorsement game, she should be willing to trade on her body and her looks first, her athletic talent second.
Just take a glance in the rearview mirror. Over the past 15 years, some of the female athletes who have won biggest in the race for sponsors are Danica Patrick, Maria Sharapova and Anna Kournikova.
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New Film—
Nine for IX: Branded
We look at the marketing of female athletes leading into the premiere of the Nine for IX film “Branded,” which premieres Aug. 27 on ESPN (8 p.m. ET):
• Watch: Exclusive clip from ‘Branded’ »
• Directors’ Moment: Pivotal scene from ‘Branded’
• The Vault: Skylar Diggins on marketing athletes »
• ‘Branded’: Learn more about the film »
• Nine for IX: Complete guide to the films »
• Buy: Download IX on iTunes »
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In the Nine for IX film “Branded,” premiering Tuesday on ESPN (8 p.m. ET), filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady tackle the age-old question in women’s sports: Will sex appeal always supersede achievement?
But before we try to answer that, we need to ask ourselves a few more: Does sex really sell now? How do we know for sure? What if I told you it doesn’t?
What if I told you there is research to the contrary? As in, research showing that consumers, when deciding whether to buy a sports-related product, respond more to advertisements that portray female athletes as — get this — athletes.
Because that’s exactly what grassroots studies have shown, according to Janet Fink, an associate professor in the department of sports management at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “Another thing we are finding, and this makes sense, is that each time a female athlete is pictured in a sexualized way, it diminishes the perception of her athletic ability,” said Fink, who specializes in sports consumer behavior, as well as media and marketing depictions of female athletes.
This perception is true for men, too: When you see a sexualized picture of a male athlete, say David Beckham modeling underwear or Tom Brady wearing Uggs, your subconscious tends to put a little black mark next to his athletic endeavors. Doubt creeps in where none might have existed before, and you begin to question Beckham’s soccer skills or Brady’s superiority as a quarterback.
Even though this kind of marketing can undercut both genders, the real damage has been done on the women’s side, because nearly all of our popular, mainstream representations of female athletes play up their off-the-field appeal, with performance taking a backseat.
In light of the research conducted by Fink and other academics in recent years, just think of the negative effects these marketing images have had on how we, as a society, view women’s sports. It goes a long way toward explaining why a highly successful female athlete can often feel like Sisyphus, pushing the rock up the hill only to watch it roll back down — because the sports world is still mostly operating as if bikinis on soccer players and slinky dresses on tennis stars are where the money is.
Changes are coming, though, and some are already upon us, providing a glimpse of how female athletes might be marketed in the future, when we will likely see a wider range of women as endorsers, rather than just a select handful (those traditionally deemed the sexiest and prettiest, within narrow parameters).
Consider WNBA rookie Brittney Griner. In rejecting the age-old marketing model for female athletes — to begin with, she is the first openly gay athlete to sign with Nike — she has made it clear she wants her brand to represent her authentic self, not an ideal that Madison Avenue has created. While Griner and Nike are still determining the exact approach they’ll take, both sides have said they want to “break the mold.”
Likewise, young girls who are just starting out in sports will take note when they see a fierce competitor like soccer star Abby Wambach pitching Gatorade with a take-no-prisoners attitude on the field. Tough. Sweaty. Strong.
“If girls see more images of female athletes as athletes, then it shifts their thinking,” said Nicole Lavoi, a professor at the University of Minnesota and the associate director of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sports. “That’s the game-changer. It opens up the idea that we can see and celebrate all female athletes.”
Usually a company wants to work with a male athlete if he can check at least one of the following boxes: seems trustworthy, possesses expertise, looks attractive. The more boxes, the higher his worth. But with women, there is typically only one box that marketers care about. “What we seem to do with female athletes is focus on their attractiveness,” Fink said. “It’s the only thing we sell about them. So if you look at female endorsers, sometimes they are not even the best in their sport.”
And then the rock rolls all the way back downhill and we start again.
“The blame isn’t on the athlete,” Fink continued. “They’re playing the only game that exists. I think soon the marketing executives and mainstream media need to realize how the next generation wants to see its female athletes. And that’s simply as athletes.”
The irony, as both Fink and Lavoi point out, is that some female athletes, and entire leagues, are still glamming themselves up in the name of mainstream appeal, even though several studies have shown (for male and female athletes) there is no correlation between seeing a sexy image and then actually turning on the game to watch the player whose sexy image you have seen.
“Actually, what helps, believe it or not, is to show their true athletic ability,” Fink said.
Talent sells.
That might not sound as sexy, but for the next generation of female athletes, it could prove more rewarding.
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