Topic

  • HR/Talent/Inclusion

More than three million people tuned into Coco Gauff’s U.S. Open last week, making her victory the most-viewed women’s major tennis final ever on ESPN. It points to the surging popularity and viewership of women’s sports. And where viewer’s eyeballs go, advertisers follow.

As women’s sports continue to gain traction, brands are more willing to shell out marketing and ad dollars to reach those viewers. Looking to capitalize on that momentum, Rain the Growth Agency, a Portland-based ad agency, created a dedicated internal team to focus on women’s sports in June.

The eight-person team, called HypeHer, offers strategy and research, media buying and planning, media partnerships, social media and influencer marketing, creative as well as analytics and measurement.

“A lot of brands and advertisers are focused on men’s sports, but we see women’s sports as a huge up and coming opportunity,” said Robin Cohen, executive vice president of integrated media investment and planning at Rain the Growth Agency. “We just keep seeing these attendance numbers grow and the opportunity.”

Gauff’s historic win is just one example of the growing interest in women’s sports. In August, the University of Nebraska women’s volleyball team set a new world record for attendance at a women’s sporting event, packing 92,003 fans into the university’s football stadium. Meanwhile, audience numbers for the U.S. women’s national soccer team have broken records.

Surging viewership in women’s sports has sparked client curiosity about marketing and advertising in the space, per Cohen. The practice is newly launched and the agency is currently in the process of pitching HypeHer services to clients, she added. Some clients, including Oofos shoe brand, have been invested in women’s sports marketing campaigns since at least last year. The shoe brand partnered with Dawn Staley, a three-time Olympic gold medalist and head coach for the South Carolina Gamecocks, and sponsored the 2022 U.S. Gymnastics Championships.

“They’ve been participating and buying into different women’s sports to determine their opportunity for their brand with different sports, to figure out where to put [spend] moving forward,” Cohen said. “They’ve been going sport by sport to determine where we could see success in the future.” Specifics of Oofos’ spend in women’s sports were not disclosed.

Read the article on Digiday.