Show Me the Money! The Business & Marketing of Sport
                                
                                Show Me the Money! The Business & Marketing of Sport Course Overview
                            
                            
                                OVERVIEW
                                    CEA CAPA Partner Institution: CEA CAPA Buenos Aires Center
                                                                    Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
                                                                    Primary Subject Area:  Business
                                                                    Other Subject Area: Marketing, Media Studies
                                                                    Instruction in: English
                                                                    Course Code: BUS333EZE
                                                                    Transcript Source: TBD
                                                                    Course Details: Level 300
                                                                    Recommended Semester Credits: 3
                                                                    Contact Hours: 45
                                                                    Prerequisites: Introductory courses in Business, Marketing, Communications, Media Studies, or with approval from the instructor
                                                                                                                                                                                             
                            
                                    DESCRIPTION
                                    
                                        There is little doubt about the central role professional sport plays in the "leisure society" of our early 21st century. In recent years however, the traditional media-sports-culture matrix has incorporated an extraordinarily powerful and innovative element: the unparalleled global commercialization of sport. This new reality is transforming the very nature of sporting competition, along with the value system that sustains it, as well as the athletes on the field who, but once marginal figures in society, have repositioned themselves to become central characters within a new and globalized social narrative. 
The role of mediated sport in contemporary culture is so omnipresent, so far-reaching and so sophisticated that any attempt at meaningful analysis must enlist the wider business perspectives of marketing, advertising, finance and commercial strategy, if sense is to be made of this striking sociological phenomenon. At the core, it is the ultra-professionalism in sport that is driving and shaping this new global business model: transforming athletes into billboards for multinational sponsors; inspiring billion-dollar agreements for media and merchandising rights; spawning new breeds of corporate intermediaries and sports agents; cross-fertilizing with entertainment industries in music, fashion and film; and creating a social omnipresence of sport heroes, team logos, icon sponsorship, global brands, and media buzz. Show me the money because sport has gone global!
This course applies the techniques of business analysis to the world of mediated professional sport, explores the underlying economics and corporate structure of sport and franchises, seeks out the commercial origins of this social phenomenon, and investigates what likely futures this business model holds for both elite professional sport and for those who most profit from it. After establishing the historical setting to this subject, you will employ mass communication principles and case study techniques familiar to business students in order to analyze more complex sports marketing phenomena such as icon sponsorship, the brand name principle, and the contemporary demands of corporate business and global capital within the economy of media sport.