Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia
Special feature

'Excitables' and 'Sociables': What F1 fan are you?

Formula 1's new owners are pushing on with their research-based approach to fanbase growth and market expansion - and the first results of that research could offer a glimpse at the sport's long-term strategy.

Fernando Alonso, McLaren, signs autographs for fans

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Motorsport Blog

Motorsport Blog

F1 is a sport that has been developed largely on instinct; Bernie Ecclestone expanded the calendar and made TV deals based on his years of wheeling and dealing and on hunches about emerging markets.

The new owners of F1 have a much more scientific approach and know that, if they are to grow the sport, they need to understand their fans better. Why have lapsed fans drifted off, for example, and can they can be re-engaged? And what are non-fans turned away by?

So one of the first hires Chase Carey and Sean Bratches made was Matt Roberts as Director of Research. He has worked with Sky and ESPN and he set to work immediately on a wide-scale international audience survey. The work was carried out by polling specialists IPSOS on behalf of F1.

The results were presented to the F1 teams in Sepang at the weekend and also to a group of media, including Motorsport.com and Autosport.

The survey focussed on sports fans (not limited to motorsport) in seven key markets: the UK, USA, Germany, Italy, Brazil, China and Russia.

In each country, the researches intensively interviewed 2,000 people – making for a total sample size of 14,000.

These people will now be tracked going forward to assess how much their attitudes change with the developments in F1. The contact will be every three months.

The audience in detail

Fans
Fans

Photo by: Sutton Images

The broad overview is that 2/3 of sports fans are interested to some degree in F1, making a total potential market of 500 million people across these seven markets.

The audience breaks down into six segments: Excitables, Purists, Sociables, Habituals, Peripherals, Incidentals.

The middle groups are the ones of greatest interest to the F1 Group at the moment as these are audiences that will watch F1 and engage with it when it is good. They need talking points to get them engaged and they need the cars to be more closely matched, so it is more about the drivers and more exciting to watch.

Of the markets, Italy has the most avid fans, while China and the USA have the least - no surprises there. The F1 Group therefore sees great opportunity in these two markets and will target effort and resource at developing the fanbase in these markets. Hence the important renewal of the race in Shanghai.

There are Excitables in China and USA; there are more Purists in Italy, UK and Germany.

What are the fans looking for?

Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari SF70H
Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari SF70H

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / LAT Images

Speed and racing were the two main things that came out on top of what people are looking for and want from F1.

Interest areas:
Racing - 58%
Speed - 48%
Cars and tech – 32%

One of the most surprising elements was the data about the drivers and how aware general sports fans are of the big names.

The top five drivers score highly and are well ahead of the others. All the other drivers had below 50% recognition from the sports fans.

Strangely, that top five doesn’t yet include either Daniel Ricciardo or Max Verstappen. Instead, the top five are all – with the exception of Hamilton – drivers who have featured prominently for Ferrari, which may give some strength to Ferrari's arguments about what they really mean to the sport of F1.

In order the most recognized names were: Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel, Kimi Raikkonen, Felipe Massa.

Roberts noted that helping sports fans to understand more about the drivers and to get to know them is a key growth area.

So what will F1 do with this information?

Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing, signs autographs for fans
Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull Racing, signs autographs for fans

Photo by: Zak Mauger / LAT Images

“If we can bring fans closer they will become hooked, especially if they have a chance to come to a race,” was Roberts' conclusion from this research. There is also a strong correlation between people attending races and going on to become more avid fans.

So F1 now feels that they have an idea of what their fans look like and they can now use the segmentation strategy to communicate much more effectively with these fans.

The next steps are to produce a database of F1 fans and communicate with them. For example, they will send messages to Excitables about the racing, the cars, the latest tech developments and try to encourage them to attend races. They will target them with digital content, especially shareable videos.

The conversation with Purists will be more about details and aspects of the TV coverage.

With Sociables, they will seek to get them to know the drivers better and to consume their content and messages.

Not every fan is the same so communication will be segmented. In addition, there will be spectator research at every race, before and after, asking the fans of their expectations and what they ultimately thought of the event.

At eight F1 races, more detailed research will be done with fans present in the grandstands.

Bringing F1 to the fans

 Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1, signs autographs for fans
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1, signs autographs for fans

Photo by: Steve Etherington / LAT Images

All of this research backs up what Carey and Bratches have been saying since day one - that the best way forward for F1 is to get closer to the fans and to bring the sport to them. So how do they do that?

Bratches has spoken recently about the strategy being to make new F1 races on the calendar street races, to bring the F1 experience into the cities. Races in new venues are more likely to be on street tracks using a Singapore model than a purpose-built circuit, a very different philosophy from Bernie's.

The new owners do not want to repeat the failures of Turkey, Korea, India - white elephant race tracks built at the cost of hundreds of millions of dollars in unsustainable markets with no promotional plan or support from F1.

Roberts did reveal that this research is central to all of Bratches' decision-making on venues, TV platforms, OTT, digital media and the rest.

It is also being used in the ongoing discussions on shaping the future rules of the sport, led by Ross Brawn, but only as an element of that process, not the driving force.

The word coming to us from F1 team bosses is that Brawn and Carey are likely to present team with their post-2020 plans in November.

This will comprise details of the cost cap, framework for new technical and sporting regulations, distribution of FOM money and so on.

It sounds like there is consensus on budget reduction, generally heading towards a $150m/160m ceiling and a glidepath down by $20m a year over five years - perhaps starting as soon as 2019 - down to the $160m ceiling for the big teams; Ferrari, Mercedes and Red Bull.

There is still a lot of negotiation to come, and the devil is in the details, but the signs are that Mercedes and Red Bull would accept this cost cap and glidepath (as long as the tech and sporting regs are correctly aligned with it).

No one is clear on Ferrari’s feelings, as Sergio Marchionne is playing his cards close to his chest. The fear is that he might use the Ferrari veto if thing get difficult.

There is clearly going to be a fight, so many teams believe that this should happen as soon as possible, so everything can be sorted out well ahead of 2020. This is exactly why the teams are pushing on Carey and Brawn to reveal the plans as soon as possible.

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article ESPN replaces NBC as F1 broadcaster in the US
Next article Alonso: McLaren could face Honda upgrade dilemma at Suzuka

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia