SPFL review delivers 'action plan' to increase income to £50m

El Bufalo

Well-Known Member
Not sure where accepting less money per match for the new TV deal fits in with the headline but it's the SPFL morons we're dealing with.


SPFL review delivers 'action plan' to increase income to £50m​

A strategic review was commissioned by Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian.

Premiership clubs who commissioned a review into the state of Scottish football have welcomed a plan that aims to almost double club income by 2029.

Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian used their own funds to employ Deloitte to conduct a “critical and transparent” review of the SPFL last year, with a view to increasing revenue and improving the league in the short and long term in every aspect of its business.

That review was delivered to league clubs and a new innovation and strategy group, comprising representatives from Celtic, Rangers, Hearts, Hibs and Aberdeen, studied the findings and put together a plan of action to implement recommendations.

The clubs who set the ball rolling on the review say it can deliver a “shared vision and set of goals to lift the Scottish game signals the beginning of a new era for Scottish football”.

The plan is designed to significantly increase the pot of income that is shared between clubs from £28.4m to £50m by 2029.

At the core of the recommendations are a plan to transform the SPFL itself from an organisation that is primarily concerned with the administrative side of organising competitions, to a body that has a “more robust and dynamic commercial structure.”

The league body has been accused in the past of failing to deliver satisfactory broadcast and sponsorship deals and the new proposals say that maximising television contracts and commercial partnerships will be a “strategic priority”.

Other aims are to improve the brand of Scottish football at home and overseas, develop the women’s game, and improve the quality of youth competitions to help young players to develop to elite level.

Hibs chairman Ron Gordon, representing the five clubs who commissioned the original review, said: “We’re very excited about this strategic action plan which sets a new tone and direction for the SPFL and the game in Scotland.

“The proposed strategic building blocks are designed to grow our clubs, the SPFL, and the men’s and women’s game at every level.

“A more substantial and comprehensive broadcast partnership, a focused and robust commercial structure and team, an investment and commitment to the growth of the women’s game, and the development of our young men’s players are all critical to reaching our aspirational goal of £50m in revenues.

“Football is Scotland’s passion – we have a dynamic and exciting league with historic clubs and passionate fans. The image and brand of the SPFL should reflect and celebrate the many positives that our clubs and league provide our communities across the country.

“I want to thank Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart and Hibs for their investment in the review, along with Celtic and Rangers for their participation and contributions in curating and refining the actionable recommendations of the study.

“Our thanks also go to the SPFL Board and Executive for their openness, receptivity and leadership in exploring and driving new ideas and opportunities to help advance, promote and grow our clubs, the league and our game.”

Neil Doncaster, chief executive of the SPFL, said: “On behalf of the SPFL, I would like to thank Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee, Dundee United, Hearts, Hibernian and Rangers for their constructive approach and their investment of time, money and expertise into this project, which will underpin the League’s strategy over the coming years.

“Their valuable work will undoubtedly enable the league to bring in additional commercial revenues for the benefit of all 42 SPFL member clubs and for Scottish football as a whole. It is an exciting time for the game.”
 
Doncaster has already sold to sky for an actual decrease per game covered

What chance di we have with this Buffon at the helm

Get rid of the idiot


licensed-image
 
After all that work and bluster, they will probably end up outsourcing to a commercial agency. Much like the Father Ted episode where the solution to an emergency was to hold another mass.

Maybe these teams could try ditching the hoofball and maybe win a few games in Europe to bring in some extra money?
 
1.Combine the SFA and SPFL into one body and remove 50% of the positions for suits and legislators. Remove all those that were placed in influential roles between 2012 and 2020.

2. Reduce the number of games to allow the players a proper pre-season and stop penalising clubs that reach cup finals in May.

3. Remove playground pitches from the four main leagues.

4. Fill stadiums in blocks to ensure that every available ticket can be sold. Remove the ridiculous situation where one end of the ground has fans locked out while the other stands are 50% full.

5. Consolidate the TV deal into one provider and allow clubs to show games not covered by that provider on their own channel.
 
Allow bigger section of away support if the rest of the ground isn't filled.

For example Pittodrie. Crowds of about 12-13k and we get an allocation of about 1500 tickets when we could sell 5k quite comfortably. An extra £150k generated.
 
Get rid of every single administration and administrator of the game and bring in someone with no baggage to sell and grow our game properly.

A Barry Hearn type though not necessarily him.

Too many buffoons and bowling club sorts hanging about with feck all to contribute.
 
If Doncaster and all the other clegnuts of Scottish football remain in positions of power then they'll be lucky to increase revenue by £50 never mind £50 million.
When the chairman of Albion Rovers or whatever diddy club has a say in what happens at the top level then they're never going to vote for change that the game drastically needs if it means them getting kicked off the gravy train.

The way Scottish Football is run is like having Stoneybridge council running the country (& in a lot of ways that's kinda what we have running things)
 
Get rid of every single administration and administrator of the game and bring in someone with no baggage to sell and grow our game properly.

A Barry Hearn type though not necessarily him.

Too many buffoons and bowling club sorts hanging about with feck all to contribute.
Mentioned Barry Hearn on another thread ,him and his son might be flash cants but they know how to stage events and make money,someone like that would be a success revamping our game given the chance .
Though the self serving blazers and clique currently in charge would be the first to be culled so no way they would go down that route .
 
Hot air. The Clubs simply need to make roads into gutting the SPFL and the SFA, get proper, talented people in the positions to serve the Leagues properly and they'd likely be looking at far more than they want within a few years.

We deserve what we get. Status quo year on year...
 
There should be a commitment from the other clubs to sell tickets to our fans if they have 3 stands which aren't full. How can we market the game properly if there's thousands of empty seats on view?

If that means clubs missing out on TV revenue then so be it.
 
If Doncaster and all the other clegnuts of Scottish football remain in positions of power then they'll be lucky to increase revenue by £50 never mind £50 million.
When the chairman of Albion Rovers or whatever diddy club has a say in what happens at the top level then they're never going to vote for change that the game drastically needs if it means them getting kicked off the gravy train.

The way Scottish Football is run is like having Stoneybridge council running the country (& in a lot of ways that's kinda what we have running things)

For anyone not knowing what you're on about :D
 
So basically a vote of no confidence in the current structure and incumbents dressed up as a review. In effect a restructure plan.
 
Realistically we should play football in the summer.

These clubs could surely get more people through the door in good weather than in the winter.

Give kids cheap/free tickets in the holidays, and try to get them hooked for life.

I know it doesn't really suit us, because we fill the stadia anyway, but the other clubs should want it. It would also allow them to have grass pitches that wouldn't become mud pits in January/February.
 
Presumably these plans didn't include a real terms reduction in the current broadcast deal to a level below the Romanian league for the next 7 years?

They clubs can commission all the reports they want, if real change is to happen in growing Scottish football the first and most important step is to clear our the SPFL and SFA Executive and replace them with forward-thinking, business-minded professionals to maximise the selling potential of the game.

Those comments from Doncaster at the end surely must be a weird parody
 
Surely the number one thing was to sack the SPFL Board and appoint competent employees to do a professional job?
Say what you like about Mr. Bisgrove, but he gets things done. We have more partners than Katie Price, there won’t be much space left for the badge the way he is going!
 
Part of the issue, and I don’t see how it is fixable in that regard, is that we have the volume of football fans in Scotland, they are just not spread out amongst the rest of the Scottish clubs. Probably about 80% of our domestic fan base, and the other mob, don’t actually go to games. So maximising the TV deals is a must, and they need to think outside the box.

For example, would streaming games live on YouTube worldwide, or in certain countries, bring in better advertising revenue? You see some folk earning £20m a year alone from YouTube, which is much more than the whole of Scottish football‘s TV rights. You also have the streaming outfits, who throw money at things for new, exclusive content.

You also want to make the game more attractive to the English market. You want it to look better on TV for starters, but what about playing some games, or at least kicking off, when there is no senior English games on?
 
Not sure where accepting less money per match for the new TV deal fits in with the headline but it's the SPFL morons we're dealing with.


SPFL review delivers 'action plan' to increase income to £50m​

A strategic review was commissioned by Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian.

Premiership clubs who commissioned a review into the state of Scottish football have welcomed a plan that aims to almost double club income by 2029.

Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian used their own funds to employ Deloitte to conduct a “critical and transparent” review of the SPFL last year, with a view to increasing revenue and improving the league in the short and long term in every aspect of its business.

That review was delivered to league clubs and a new innovation and strategy group, comprising representatives from Celtic, Rangers, Hearts, Hibs and Aberdeen, studied the findings and put together a plan of action to implement recommendations.

The clubs who set the ball rolling on the review say it can deliver a “shared vision and set of goals to lift the Scottish game signals the beginning of a new era for Scottish football”.

The plan is designed to significantly increase the pot of income that is shared between clubs from £28.4m to £50m by 2029.

At the core of the recommendations are a plan to transform the SPFL itself from an organisation that is primarily concerned with the administrative side of organising competitions, to a body that has a “more robust and dynamic commercial structure.”

The league body has been accused in the past of failing to deliver satisfactory broadcast and sponsorship deals and the new proposals say that maximising television contracts and commercial partnerships will be a “strategic priority”.

Other aims are to improve the brand of Scottish football at home and overseas, develop the women’s game, and improve the quality of youth competitions to help young players to develop to elite level.

Hibs chairman Ron Gordon, representing the five clubs who commissioned the original review, said: “We’re very excited about this strategic action plan which sets a new tone and direction for the SPFL and the game in Scotland.

“The proposed strategic building blocks are designed to grow our clubs, the SPFL, and the men’s and women’s game at every level.

“A more substantial and comprehensive broadcast partnership, a focused and robust commercial structure and team, an investment and commitment to the growth of the women’s game, and the development of our young men’s players are all critical to reaching our aspirational goal of £50m in revenues.

“Football is Scotland’s passion – we have a dynamic and exciting league with historic clubs and passionate fans. The image and brand of the SPFL should reflect and celebrate the many positives that our clubs and league provide our communities across the country.

“I want to thank Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart and Hibs for their investment in the review, along with Celtic and Rangers for their participation and contributions in curating and refining the actionable recommendations of the study.

“Our thanks also go to the SPFL Board and Executive for their openness, receptivity and leadership in exploring and driving new ideas and opportunities to help advance, promote and grow our clubs, the league and our game.”

Neil Doncaster, chief executive of the SPFL, said: “On behalf of the SPFL, I would like to thank Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee, Dundee United, Hearts, Hibernian and Rangers for their constructive approach and their investment of time, money and expertise into this project, which will underpin the League’s strategy over the coming years.

“Their valuable work will undoubtedly enable the league to bring in additional commercial revenues for the benefit of all 42 SPFL member clubs and for Scottish football as a whole. It is an exciting time for the game.”
Amazing that a "transparent" strategic review doesn't include any consultation with its customers.
 
So let me get this right. Rangers who provided an in depth report into the corruption and incompetence of the SPFL that was and still is detrimental to the whole of Scotland wasn't transparent enough? So some diddy clubs who do not have a fucking clue what's going on and cannot find a pulse between them, been sucking on Liewell's saggy diddies for years decide to bring in an independent mob at their own expence to try and get to the bottom of why they clubs couldn't rub two ha'pennies together? This is all because it is toxic to side with Big bad Rangers and to admit..."You know what? Rangers are right". Fucking morons.
 
if I'm not a Rangers fan, I'm not watching the SPFL
For some reason the idea that people support a league works well in England… they will defend their league as being one of glamour and quality all day long.
The media tell everyone that the EPL is the greatest league that has ever been 24/7 for the last 30yrs though and so it’s going to have an effect!

It’s not something that will work in Scotland. We’ve been told and have told ourselves that the league is shot since time began and the tribal factions in Scottish society/Scottish football lead to people chipping away at the credibility of our football rather than building it up.
 
So let me get this right. Rangers who provided an in depth report into the corruption and incompetence of the SPFL that was and still is detrimental to the whole of Scotland wasn't transparent enough? So some diddy clubs who do not have a fucking clue what's going on and cannot find a pulse between them, been sucking on Liewell's saggy diddies for years decide to bring in an independent mob at their own expence to try and get to the bottom of why they clubs couldn't rub two ha'pennies together? This is all because it is toxic to side with Big bad Rangers and to admit..."You know what? Rangers are right". Fucking morons.
Scottish football in a nutshell.
 
Not sure where accepting less money per match for the new TV deal fits in with the headline but it's the SPFL morons we're dealing with.


SPFL review delivers 'action plan' to increase income to £50m​

A strategic review was commissioned by Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian.

Premiership clubs who commissioned a review into the state of Scottish football have welcomed a plan that aims to almost double club income by 2029.

Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian used their own funds to employ Deloitte to conduct a “critical and transparent” review of the SPFL last year, with a view to increasing revenue and improving the league in the short and long term in every aspect of its business.

That review was delivered to league clubs and a new innovation and strategy group, comprising representatives from Celtic, Rangers, Hearts, Hibs and Aberdeen, studied the findings and put together a plan of action to implement recommendations.

The clubs who set the ball rolling on the review say it can deliver a “shared vision and set of goals to lift the Scottish game signals the beginning of a new era for Scottish football”.

The plan is designed to significantly increase the pot of income that is shared between clubs from £28.4m to £50m by 2029.

At the core of the recommendations are a plan to transform the SPFL itself from an organisation that is primarily concerned with the administrative side of organising competitions, to a body that has a “more robust and dynamic commercial structure.”

The league body has been accused in the past of failing to deliver satisfactory broadcast and sponsorship deals and the new proposals say that maximising television contracts and commercial partnerships will be a “strategic priority”.

Other aims are to improve the brand of Scottish football at home and overseas, develop the women’s game, and improve the quality of youth competitions to help young players to develop to elite level.

Hibs chairman Ron Gordon, representing the five clubs who commissioned the original review, said: “We’re very excited about this strategic action plan which sets a new tone and direction for the SPFL and the game in Scotland.

“The proposed strategic building blocks are designed to grow our clubs, the SPFL, and the men’s and women’s game at every level.

“A more substantial and comprehensive broadcast partnership, a focused and robust commercial structure and team, an investment and commitment to the growth of the women’s game, and the development of our young men’s players are all critical to reaching our aspirational goal of £50m in revenues.

“Football is Scotland’s passion – we have a dynamic and exciting league with historic clubs and passionate fans. The image and brand of the SPFL should reflect and celebrate the many positives that our clubs and league provide our communities across the country.

“I want to thank Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Heart and Hibs for their investment in the review, along with Celtic and Rangers for their participation and contributions in curating and refining the actionable recommendations of the study.

“Our thanks also go to the SPFL Board and Executive for their openness, receptivity and leadership in exploring and driving new ideas and opportunities to help advance, promote and grow our clubs, the league and our game.”

Neil Doncaster, chief executive of the SPFL, said: “On behalf of the SPFL, I would like to thank Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee, Dundee United, Hearts, Hibernian and Rangers for their constructive approach and their investment of time, money and expertise into this project, which will underpin the League’s strategy over the coming years.

“Their valuable work will undoubtedly enable the league to bring in additional commercial revenues for the benefit of all 42 SPFL member clubs and for Scottish football as a whole. It is an exciting time for the game.”
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