Rio ferdinand in a suit speaking during a meeting gesturing with his hand while making a point

Man United’s Rio Ferdinand on Football’s Business Potential Beyond TV

Beyond linear TV, football’s next revenue curve runs through OTT, athlete‑led media, women’s football, and venue experiences. Ferdinand’s playbook for clubs, brands, and creators.

Former Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand has a clear message for club owners, sponsors, and creators: the next growth curve in football will be built beyond linear TV—on direct-to-fan platforms, creator media, live experiences, and data-driven commerce.

In a wide-ranging conversation, Ferdinand outlined how clubs and athletes can turn audiences into durable cash flows through content, community, and IP control.

Highlights

  • From broadcaster to platform: Rights holders that build their own DTC/OTT funnels and creator networks capture higher ARPU and richer data.
  • Creator flywheels: Player‑led media like Vibe With FIVE turns attention into sponsorships, live events, and merchandise, without waiting for TV windows.
  • Content monetization is fragmenting: Case studies from MLS–Apple and FIFA+ show how football is shifting to flexible streaming economics.
  • Women’s game surge: Capital is flowing to women’s football with multi‑year commercial commitments, creating new inventory for brands.
  • Risk & regulation: Gambling sponsorship rules, data privacy, and AI/deepfake concerns demand tighter governance for athlete IP and fan data.
  • Africa & emerging markets: Mobile‑first audiences and new venue investment are opening fresh revenue corridors beyond Europe.

The Shift: Football’s Next P&L Is Bigger Than TV

For two decades, European football relied on broadcast rights escalators. That model still matters, the Premier League’s 2025–2029 domestic deal set a new record, but the growth frontier is now multi-channel: owned apps, social video, short‑form, podcasts, and live experiences that sell tickets, merch, and memberships directly.

Beyond TV: The New Revenue Rails

1. DTC/OTT (own the pipe)

  • League–platform deals like the MLS–Apple 10‑year partnership rebase economics around subscriptions, global reach, and uniform production standards.
  • Federation hubs such as FIFA+ aggregate live matches and archives, building global fan funnels that complement local TV.

2. Creator‑led IP (attention becomes a balance sheet)

  • Ferdinand’s Vibe With FIVE shows how athlete‑anchored channels monetize via sponsors, branded content, and live events, while compounding audience equity over time.
  • Similar flywheels power The Overlap and club-embedded studios; content that travels natively across YouTube, TikTok, and podcasts.

3. Live experiences & community commerce

  • Docu‑storytelling can unlock real‑world revenue: Welcome to Wrexham boosted global awareness, driving merchandise and attendance growth alongside sponsor demand.

4. Women’s football as growth engine

5. Data, licensing, and responsible betting

  • First‑party data (emails, preferences, purchase history) underpins dynamic pricing, CRM‑driven memberships, and sponsorship ROI.
  • Clubs must navigate changing gambling‑sponsorship rules (e.g., the Premier League’s 2026 front‑of‑shirt ban) and protect fan privacy.

Industry Context: Why This Is Happening Now

  • Attention fragmentation: Sports viewing is splitting across broadcast, streaming, and creator media, making an omnichannel presence a necessity.
  • Production deflation: Remote and cloud production cut costs, letting clubs and athletes ship studio-quality content weekly, not seasonally.
  • Global fanbases: Digital distribution makes mid-table clubs and women’s teams investable IP globally, not just locally.

Investor & Operator Lens: Where Private Capital Can Play

  • Club studios & creator networks: Finance in‑house content teams and multi‑show slates anchored by athletes and legends. Package sponsorship + commerce + events.
  • Venue tech & live formats: Cashless stadiums, flexible seating, and hospitality micro‑experiences that integrate with content calendars.
  • Women’s football platforms: Acquire and professionalize assets across media, performance, and grassroots to capture a long runway of growth.
  • Data & payments rails: Single‑fan IDs, loyalty, and embedded checkout to lift conversion from content to commerce.

Risk, Governance, and the IP Perimeter

  • Rights fragmentation: Over‑splitting packages confuses fans; retention relies on clear bundles and transparent pricing.
  • Regulatory drift: Expect more oversight on betting ads, deepfakes, and athlete likeness; audit data flows now.
  • Economic cycles: When ad markets soften, diversified direct revenue (memberships, events, merch) stabilizes cash flow.

What to Watch Next

  1. Club studios announcing year‑round slates with athlete hosts and brand underwriters.
  2. Women’s football M&A and league‑wide media packaging.
  3. Membership + commerce bundles tied to OTT access and ticket priority.
  4. Creator–club JVs where players own equity in production and merchandising.
Tumisang Bogwasi
Tumisang Bogwasi

Tumisang Bogwasi, Founder & CEO of Brimco. 2X Award-Winning Entrepreneur. It all started with a popsicle stand.