Three Things I Learned In SaaS, Sports, Tech & Live Events Podcast

Tony Knopp

The Three Things I've Learned in sports, tech and live events is the podcast for entrepreneurs in software as a service, technology, sports business and sponsorships professionals. My name is Tony Knopp and I've been working in Saas, tech, sports and live events for just over 20 years now where I've been surrounded by super impressive people who have taught us quite a bit and invested in us as we make mistakes and iterate in tech, sports and live events. Each week, we share what we learned either this week or from our twenty years at the Dodgers, LA Kings, AEG, StubHub's very early days and here at TicketManager where we've exited multiple businesses. We hope you enjoy our insights and those of our guests!

  1. Volatility, the truth, and working in sports

    5月2日

    Volatility, the truth, and working in sports

    You can say whatever you want when it’s the truth. This week, a staffer was deposed in a case. It was his first experience with a process we’ve, unfortunately, gotten to know too well over the past few years when dealing with some bad actors. After talking to the lawyers, he called for advice. It’s simple: tell the truth and sleep well. The truth is easy to remember, consistent, backed up by evidence, and, most importantly, noble in a world that becomes more devoid of it every day. If it’s the truth, you’re protected by the First Amendment. Just another reason to always tell the truth. Working in sports vs being the customer I have a fun job. And I go out of my way to post the fun things our team gets to do. But that's just a sliver of what we do. (and we do it because it works). So many people apply to work in sports thinking they'll "get to go to all the games." We hear things like: "I'll go to the game, get to know everyone, see their activations, and help make them better." Yes. That is 1% of that job. We also have a number to hit. A business to build. Customers to get in front of so we can learn about their needs and how we can help them. Do you know who gets to have all the fun at the games with no responsibility? The customers being entertained. So if you want to go to games and have a great time, there is a job for you: Build a huge business that people want as a customer. Then they'll take you to the games and you can enjoy. As for the rest of us, my team included, going to the games is 1% of the gig. Work in sports because you love it and its meaning. But know, you're not going to actually watch much of the game if you're doing it right. (Sidebar: I got to do it the fun way on Wednesday. And it was pretty great.) Volatility and opportunity Scary times for some. That's the time to move. In the winter of 2021, the "delta" variant of COVID was all over the news. Live events were closed. Companies in our industry were dying. Our bank, Pac West, essentially dropped us, offering us a "renewal" at punitive terms. We had been building out our events technology, which we now call "GMC"—guest management and credentialing. We had identified a company we wanted to acquire. The only problem was that nobody wanted to invest in live events—and I mean nobody. So what did we do? We took on expensive debt—12%+—and used the cash on our balance sheet to buy the company. It was expensive. It wasn't reckless; we were in a position to be fine if it didn't go well, but we believed the bounce back in the economy was closer than others thought. It worked. We've integrated that business and thrived. Even more so, the debt was bought out within a year. A home run. Only because we were willing to take a calculated risk when nobody else was. Courage is a competitive advantage.

    4 分钟
  2. Tariffs, The Slow Death of The Marketplaces, and The Strength of The Masters (and StubHub breaks orders)

    4月11日

    Tariffs, The Slow Death of The Marketplaces, and The Strength of The Masters (and StubHub breaks orders)

    There’s always turmoil - tariff volatility is just today's I’ve been doing this at TicketManager for going on 18 years. I can’t remember a period longer than 30 days when there wasn’t some crazy turmoil in the world. It’s a selling point for the news and something people say to each other all the time to justify whatever they’re looking to justify—whether it’s anxiety, poor performance, or a lack of vision for the future. Since we started this company, we have had a Global recession, a Series A squeeze, a global pandemic, the city around our HQ burned down, a Covid bounce, a white-collar recession, historic inflation, and on and on. Today, it’s the tariff volatility Tomorrow it’ll be something else. That’s the game. As an entrepreneur, complaining about it and yearning for certainty is a waste of time. If it were easy, everyone would do it. There’s nothing better than thriving through those things. It brings a sense of accomplishment I didn’t understand going in. StubHub pulls its IPO as the ticketing darlings of the mid-2010s are cratering. When I left StubHub in 2007, I had drinks with a couple of executives there. They couldn’t believe why I was leaving. I told them, simply: I don’t think you have any defensible moat. Eventually, the content providers, tours, bands, and teams are going to find a way to get back control of what they’re selling. And I believe they should have that control. Then what? It turns out I was very wrong about how long it took, but we’re here now. The primaries are stronger than ever. Ticketmaster and Live Nation are thriving, Tickets.com is doing well, and AXS is growing and has found its market. All three are monetizing their tech and including secondary in their offerings. The secondary, however? Behind the scenes, there are a lot of phone calls from investors and weary CEOs looking for homes for companies that were supposedly worth hundreds of millions or “billions” just a few years ago. StubHub can’t find a way to service its debt Vivid Seats' market cap has dropped to under 600 million, making it nearly impossible for them to go private. Meanwhile, investor Todd Boehly is getting heat in London for his involvement in the secondary. The list goes on and on. There are many other darlings who raised too much money and still can’t turn a profit. If they stop paying for CAC, the numbers get terrifying (StubHub is in this boat - anyone who read their S1 saw the inefficient marketing spend). The spigot has closed. And some big names are starting to look like they're about to become zombies if someone doesn't pick them up on the cheap. I believe there will be at least two transactions and two CEO scalps by Q2 2026. Augusta further proves the big are getting bigger. The Masters market went bonkers this week. It’s a trend that’s been happening recently with major events that have a static home. The sought-after events that have a regular home are becoming increasingly powerful, while events and teams in smaller markets are struggling. Companies are still spending; they’re just moving the spending around as they become more sophisticated. I had lunch with a mentor several years ago, and he said something that still bothers me today. He was talking about how AI is coming and it’s probably going to wipe out the middle class. He used the example of truck drivers, thousands of whom were going to be out of work in the near future. He told me, "You have to get on the other side of the fence before there is no middle class, because that’s how it is in most of the world" (he is not from the United States and does not live here). That gap seems to be growing in live events right now. People can’t get enough of the top events, like The Masters, The Kentucky Derby, The US Open of Tennis, and The PLAYERS; they're all thriving. There seems to be no end in sight to their hospitality offerings. The customers can't get enough. To that end, our team on the ground is reporting a number of broken StubHub orders. Customers coming to us asking for help after they went to pick up their badges and were turned away. Augusta is going to shut down the secondary market. And we’re here for it.

    6 分钟
  3. Super Bowl Week: Three Things I Learned from a wild week in NOLA

    2月14日

    Super Bowl Week: Three Things I Learned from a wild week in NOLA

    Three Things I Learned In SaaS, Sports, Tech, & Live Events    A wall-to-wall week in New Orleans and what I learned:    1) Sometimes an event outgrows it's home. The Super Bowl has outgrown traditional hosts in Miami, Tampa Bay, and New Orleans    The thesis going into the event was that hotel rooms are going to be an issue. They were.    New Orleans is amazing. I hadn't spent much time In the city before last weekend. I'd heard it is "not for me," but I had a different experience. I really enjoyed it and had a fantastic Super Bowl experience.    I'm not sure that's the same experience most fans had. Due to a lack of rooms, many had to drive into the city for the festivities - and that was near impossible come the weekend. The one venture we made out of town was to take an airboat tour of the bayou. Upon arriving back, our Uber would have taken an hour-plus to go the final mile. And that was on Saturday. Sunday was worse.    It's not just a New Orleans thing. The game is too big now. As much as I enjoy many of the great host cities, I think we're going to see a lot more of the more traditional conference cities hosting the game.   Miami and Tampa will still host, but I'll be surprised if New Orleans does again in the next ten years. Especially after how well LA, Phoenix, and Las Vegas did hosting the games.    2. Miami and Las Vegas broke our expectations for the Super Bowl market    I was very wrong, publicly, in my estimation of what the Super Bowl tickets would cost. Part of that equation was the hotel rooms. The bigger part? New Orleans was actually a fairly expensive game, we just remember the outliers more.    In "Thinking Fast and Slow," Daniel Kanhemann lays out, in great detail, the case that we remember and over-index to extremes in most situations.    I believe that's what happened this year as the internet oversold the weakness of the market.    Ratings were as high as ever (ignore discussions of records. Everything is a record now since they changed the way they count ratings) and the market was fairly strong when compared to the first match-up between the Eagles and Chiefs in Phoenix in 2023.    It just didn't match Miami or Vegas - and that's a great thing. Tickets need to be affordable to fans. A $5k get-in is not.    Since 2000, only a few Super Bowl's stand out with get-ins over $2500: Phoenix in 2015 (and for no-longer-existent market reasons), Miami in 2020, and Las Vegas 2024.    Most other Super Bowls are well-under $3k with some under $1k.    I, like many, was starting to think maybe the maker is just more expensive now.    Maybe not.    Good thing that's not my job    3. Thank You    I started the Three Things as a journal for my kids.    The support I get from friends and even strangers who walk up to me and say they enjoy reading my LinkedIn posts makes me so happy.    People actually read it.    Crazy.

    4 分钟

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The Three Things I've Learned in sports, tech and live events is the podcast for entrepreneurs in software as a service, technology, sports business and sponsorships professionals. My name is Tony Knopp and I've been working in Saas, tech, sports and live events for just over 20 years now where I've been surrounded by super impressive people who have taught us quite a bit and invested in us as we make mistakes and iterate in tech, sports and live events. Each week, we share what we learned either this week or from our twenty years at the Dodgers, LA Kings, AEG, StubHub's very early days and here at TicketManager where we've exited multiple businesses. We hope you enjoy our insights and those of our guests!

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