Courtside Perspectives

Just in time for the NBA Finals!

Sit courtside with Drew Van Meeteren, President of Business Operations for the Iowa Wolves. The G League connects basketball players and leaders to each team in the NBA. EP93 is packed with fast-paced collisions that’ll leave you thirsty for overtime.

The Minnesota Timberwolves had a remarkable run and Ben sits courtside at the Iowa Wolves, who also had another howling good minor league season. The business of sports is BIG, so find your seat, hit the bonus materials below, and get set… tip-off is now!

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BONUS MATERIALS

https://iowa.gleague.nba.com

Iowa Wolves 🏀💨 Courtside – https://youtu.be/Hv_lfxh2G78

https://BenMcDougal.com/Hole-in-One

https://x.com/BENovator/status/1722345784941625630

http://Courtside-Perspectives.YouDontNeedThisPodcast.com

Roasted Reflections Break: One & Only

https://now4next.nbaplayerdev.com

https://pgatour.com/korn-ferry-tour

EP23 – Make It Rain 🎙️ Adam Viet

EP28 – Let’s Get Phygital 🎙️ Sachin Sehgal

EP82 – Base Camp 🎙️ Jon Kallen

http://YouDontNeedThisPodcast.com

http://BENBOT.ai

By Ben McDougal, ago

Super Sentence

Football is a battle between modern gladiators. Did you know there are only 11 minutes of live action in an average game? Even with such a small window of actual gameplay, think about the endless pregame analysis, commentary, predictions, production, and post-game highlights.

Each week, this machine churns attention, but the Super Bowl takes it to another level. With two weeks leading up to game day and another week for post-game highlights, the Super Bowl lasts three weeks. That’s up to 30,240 minutes of potential attention the National Football League can earn from each consumer. With those 11 minutes of live action representing only 0.04% of this three-week long spectacle, clearly the Super Bowl is about more than the game. It’s also about the host city coming to life, a stadium full of fans, the TV commercials, the halftime show, the food, and everyone sharing the spectacle together.

This is not by accident. The NFL understands their audience. They’ve achieved product-market fit, and since 1920, they’ve built around what they do best. This entertainment behemoth does American football really well, but $15 billion in annual revenue doesn’t come from 150 snaps per game. It comes from being outstanding at one thing, while not getting complacent. This strengthens an existing fan base while allowing experimentation to guide strategic initiatives to further increase the audience.

Extra Shot

If your company was given a free Super Bowl commercial, who would be your target audience? What story would you tell? What action would you want viewers to take, and would you be ready to convert attention into trust when they took that action?

The NFL makes product-market fit look easy, but building something that satisfies true demand is harder than it sounds. Avoid getting sacked by admitting that your idea isn’t special and the future of your business relies on your ability to consistently execute. Trust that early success relies on clarifying your value proposition and evolving your business based on continued customer discovery and your ability to collaborate with those around you. This takes finesse, thick skin and a peculiar combination of urgency mixed with patience. As you secure more paying customers, you may be given a chance to broaden the impact.

Can you describe what you do in one super sentence? Now, what’s another concise sentence to highlight your current quest? Let’s have a sequenced follow up. Finally, articulate how this work feels like play, celebrate members of the team, or highlight other fundamental elements of the business.

When these super sentences come together, you’ll have a playbook to better understand the realities of your work and how to earn first downs in the market. Over time, with an advancing playbook, small wins lead to larger victories on and off the field.

By Ben McDougal, ago