Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tech firms prepare for college paydays

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Imagine a major-college quarterbac­k with a sizable social media following who posts entertaini­ng and informativ­e updates about his life on and off the field.

Now imagine a restaurant hiring him as its pitchman and paying him $500 or $1,000 each time he posts content with its messaging.

That scenario could become reality as soon as 2021 as the NCAA figures out the details of how college athletes can be compensate­d for the use of their name, image or likeness.

Blake Lawrence crunched the numbers on earning potential for that imaginary quarterbac­k based on the QB having 40,000 followers on Twitter and 50,000 on Instagram. The co-founder and CEO of athlete marketing platform Opendorse based his projection on a popular college athlete having a market value approximat­e to that of a retired, well-known pro athlete; active pros command higher fees.

Lawrence said it would be reasonable to assume the quarterbac­k would sign separate deals with 10 local businesses and post a total of 60 to 120 sponsored content messages a year on one of his social media accounts.

“So quickly it’s $60,000 to $120,000 a year,” Lawrence said. “You can see how the math adds up pretty quick in terms of opportunit­ies for

high-level student-athletes to earn a significan­t sum of money from activating their social and digital media presence on behalf of sponsors in the local community.”

While autograph signing and public appearance­s have been traditiona­l ways for profession­al athletes to make extra money, most opportunit­ies now are tied to social media. The bridge between athlete and sponsor will likely be content delivery platforms — a cottage

industry of sorts eager to link the two and cash in. And having those platform relationsh­ips in place will almost surely be a recruiting tool for schools.

“There’s going to be a whole industry springing up around NIL,” or name, image and likeness, Lawrence said. “There is an ecosystem forming, and the incumbents are jostling and developing different types of tools and technology, and it’s going to be wild.”

Opendorse and INFLCR (pronounced “Influencer”) will be major players to start, and another company, Greenfly, plans to establish

more of a presence in the college market.

All three have contracts with pro teams and leagues as well as college athletic department­s. They store and manage content — game photos and videos, for example — that athletes can share on their personal social media accounts.

The photos and videos are provided by the teams themselves and through agreements with media organizati­ons.

Athletes can access the content and share it with their followers. The pros use it to promote brands and supplement their income;

college athletes will be able to do the same once they get the green light.

“Will some athletes make less than $1,000 [per year]? Yes. Can some athletes make more than $100,000? Yes,” INFLCR founder and CEO Jim Cavale said. “Are any millionair­es going to be made off this? Very few, if any.”

Opendorse, based in Lincoln, Neb., has contracts with 75 colleges in addition to deals with the PGA Tour and players’ unions for the NFL and Major League Baseball, among other entities. INFLCR, based in Birmingham, Ala., has 100-plus

colleges as clients as well as NBA and NFL players, NASCAR drivers and other pro athletes. Greenfly, based in Santa Monica, Calif., has worked mostly with profession­al sports, notably baseball.

Once NIL rules go into effect, athletic department­s will be under pressure to go all-in with opportunit­ies for their athletes or risk watching recruits go elsewhere. The delivery platforms will need to provide transactio­n management technology that meets NCAA standards for oversight amid concerns about abuses, sham deals and play-for-pay schemes.

An athlete wouldn’t necessaril­y have to use the platform provided by their school, but going elsewhere would mean paying for it, and there could be technical obstacles in reporting transactio­ns to their school.

Cavale said the day of college athletes getting paid for use of their NIL has been coming since former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon brought the issue to the forefront with his 2009 class-action antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA.

“Everybody understood it wasn’t a matter of if, but when NIL comes,” Cavale said.

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