How La Liga continues to excel through its global fan engagement strategy

Millions of fans and consumers around the world engage with La Liga’s digital platforms on a daily basis.

This provides those in the Spanish competition’s digital strategy department with a rich depth of data to analyse and dissect.

La Liga has continued to emphasise collecting data in recent years and in turn has generated significant benefits for clubs, broadcasters, sponsors and fans of Spanish football.

The Spanish competition, through its digital strategy department, construct differing data-driven strategies with the overall intention of boosting fan engagement and fan loyalty.

Recently speaking at the Nextv Sport Europe conference, La Liga head of consumer strategy Olivia Archanco further explained: “We work on data-driven strategies that make the complex matter of big data simple. We analyse data in a structured way that helps us generate user information that can be used to build awareness, engagement and conversion, while at the same time earning greater loyalty of fans.”

Building customer loyalty

La Liga deliberately splits the users who engage with it digital platforms (such as the official competition website, its app or its OTT service LaLigaSportsTV) into three sperate categories. Those categories are guests – who navigate without signing up, prospects – who provide some demographic information and lastly, registered users.

Registered users, either through filling out an online form or signing in through their social media profile, disclose information that improves La Liga’s data ecosystem and further shape the league’s consumer strategy.

“With all this information from the different platforms that we manage, we are getting a very detailed picture of the fan,” Archanco said.

“We know if they are following a club, if they are season ticket holders, if they play our Fantasy game or if they are watching other sports on the OTT.”

Through this approach fans receive an efficient digital experience with La Liga as these data-driven strategies are more likely to show a user content or information that they are interested in.

“The information is used for personalisation purposes,” Archanco continued.

“We engage better with consumers when we know their age, the city where they live or the interests they have. We can direct fans towards conversion and, through those, can provide better services that are much more targeted and personalised. We do this in a natural way, not aggressively and not spamming people.”

Benefits for commercial partners

In addition to satisfying fans, this approach also brings significant returns for sponsors, broadcasters and other commercial partners.

“The more we know about our users, the better we can strategise and activate with wider stakeholders,” Archanco said.

“For sponsors, they are traditionally looking to generate more awareness and they ask for exposure, but this is changing,” she added.

“In this sense, we feel we are able to provide an added value as we can not only generate awareness but also engagement. We can generate leads and clicks and, on top of that, we are also helping them to generate conversation.”

In a recent example which showed how effective this can be, assisted by the competition’s business intelligence (BI) and analytics teams, one of the league’s sponsors ran a new campaign using user data from sources like Facebook, leading to thousands of customer orders. The campaign was a huge success and also saved the partner 90 percent of the cost when compared to spending in previous campaigns.

Ultimately, insights generated by La Liga highlight an asset that can benefit partners all over the world. The competition’s global network delegates, who give the league a physical presence in over 80 countries, are collaborating with BI and analytics teams and providing additional local insights that complement the data.

This information can help sponsors or broadcasters guide their own content and better position their local offerings.

“Through personalisation, we are able to provide different content for different countries or segments,” Archanco explained.

Support for clubs to become data-driven

La Liga itself is also supporting clubs who might not have the resources to efficiently gather and analyse data themselves.

“We have learned how to play the music and now we want to share it with the clubs as well,” Archanco stated.

“They can just jump in and they don’t have to invest and reinvent the wheel. We help them to go very fast.

“Instead of investing years and years in building all this infrastructure and investing a lot of money on it, what we offer clubs is almost a plug-and-play functionality,” she continued.

As well as this, the Spanish competition offers consultancy services for clubs who are interested, helping them create campaigns and acquisition strategies.

Agencies, who specialise in developing narratives and improving storytelling are also available to clubs.

“We are working to help the digitalisation process so that we can reduce the gap between the big clubs and the rest,” Archanco said.

“We think that this is going to affect the competition because we’re helping clubs to be more innovative and to build a better narrative with their consumers and fans. They will gain more support, more income and get closer to the bigger teams. I think this is something that will benefit the whole of La Liga. It’s good for everyone to be on a more equal footing.”

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GIS Masterclass: Fan Engagement and Marketing with Terry Lynam and Karen Grega

The Global Institute of Sport recently hosted a masterclass on Fan Engagement and Marketing, bringing together two industry leaders to tackle the field’s most pressing issues.

The Global Institute of Sport (GIS), which offers a Master’s in Sports Business and Sports Analytics through the University of Newcastle, regularly holds masterclasses with industry leaders as part of its curriculum.

The latest focused on fan engagement and marketing, covering two key themes: the growing tension between live sport and online streaming, and the role of data in shaping the fan experience.

The panelists 

Terry Lynam recently concluded her role as General Manager of Fan Experience and Events at Football Australia, overseeing the AFC Women’s Asian Cup on home soil.

Karen Grega is an experienced sports management consultant with a multi-code background. She currently represents Football Coaches Australia (FCA) and Heartbeat of Football, and has previously worked with Sydney Cricket Ground, Venues NSW and Sydney FC.

Live Sport and social media.

Terry Lynam opened with a pointed statement — one she acknowledged would be controversial. She argued that the sense of community unique to live sport is being eroded by social media and ‘snippet’ consumption.

Central to her concern is how marketing teams are failing to segment their audiences, treating casual online viewers the same as matchday fans.

“If they aren’t spending money on the sport we shouldn’t count them as spectators to the same level as match going fans.”

“What we want to consider as marketeers is how much we want to give away and how much we want our live sport element to remain,” Lynam said.

Grega echoed the sentiment, arguing fan engagement ultimately comes down to human connection. “It’s not rocket science.”

She suggested the industry revisit the concept of sport as a family outing to recapture that communal experience.

Data Driving Decisions

Both panelists highlighted data and analytics as central to modern fan engagement.

Grega recalled the introduction of computerised turnstiles as a turning point, enabling teams to track crowd movements and optimise staffing and entry times.

She also noted the continued value of fan surveys in informing marketing decisions.

Lynam pointed to ticketing technology as a significant data frontier.

Modern platforms like Ticketmaster’s ticket-transfer system now provide detailed customer insights.

“It allows us to have a better understanding of who’s getting the ticket and how they transport themselves there or when they arrive,”

“We can personalise their journey and sell content to them,” Lynam commented. 

The discussion also touched on data sourced from social media and on-field player tracking, as well as interactive stadium technology gaining traction in the US.

This included holographic assistants and player headset interactions that bring a broadcast-style experience to live events.

Activations That Educate

Activations rounded out the masterclass, with Lynam detailing how she created a fan zone on a modest budget for the Women’s Asian Cup.

The activation featured charitable partnerships focused on women’s health, including Heartbeat of Football, Endometriosis Australia and Share the Dignity.

“I’m very hopeful that that type of idea gets pushed through on other sporting events,” Lynam said.

Grega elaborated on the Heartbeat of Football activation, highlighting how a competitive element built around CPR and heart health kept fans engaged while also educating them.

“The whole health hub ticked all the boxes — it was immersive, it was interactive, it was there for all ages, both sexes.”

“That sort of blueprint is one that should be replicated as much as possible,” Explained Karen Grega

The masterclass offered students and industry professionals a valuable window into contemporary sports marketing.

As the competition for fan attention intensifies, the blend of live experience, smart data use, and purposeful activations can help define the next chapters of fan engagement.

More Than One in Five Football Australia Staff to Lose Jobs Amid Growing Financial Losses

Australian football finds itself in a curious position.

From the outside, the game appears to be riding a wave of momentum. Attendances, visibility and public interest have all experienced significant uplift in recent years, while major international tournaments and growing discussion around football’s future continue to place the sport firmly within the national conversation.

Yet behind that momentum, Football Australia is now confronting a far more challenging internal reality.

 

A compounding deficit

Chief Executive Martin Kugeler has reportedly indicated the governing body’s projected financial losses for 2025 are expected to exceed the organisation’s reported $8.5 million deficit from the previous year. Accompanying the financial outlook are substantial organisational changes, with reporting from Tracey Holmes indicating more than one in five Football Australia employees are expected to lose their positions through restructuring measures.

The figures represent more than a difficult balance sheet. They point toward a significant period of recalibration inside the organisation responsible for overseeing the sport nationally.

 

Losing the wisdom of existing staff members

For governing bodies, restructures are often framed as strategic necessities for future sustainability. However, workforce changes on this scale also raise broader questions around the challenges of such a transition.

People are often the carriers of knowledge, relationships and long-term strategic understanding. When organisations undergo significant structural change, the effects can extend beyond immediate financial outcomes.

 

Contradicting timing

The timing is what makes the developments particularly notable.

Football in Australia has spent recent years discussing expansion, growth and long-term opportunity. The conversation surrounding the game has increasingly centred on future potential. Often headlining stronger pathways, larger audiences, infrastructure development and greater visibility.

Against that backdrop, news of deep financial losses and substantial staffing reductions creates a different conversation: one focused not on where the game wants to go, but on what may be required to sustain that journey. Therefore, this announcement points toward stagnancy, rather than growth.

Further detail surrounding Football Australia’s strategy and long-term direction will likely emerge over coming months. For now, the developments serve as a reminder that growth stories are rarely straightforward.

Often, the periods that appear strongest from the outside can also be the moments organisations face their most significant internal tests.

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