Sport Digital Advisory · What to Expect
One of the most common reasons advisory relationships fail is misaligned expectations at the start. The client expects something the advisor isn’t delivering. The advisor is delivering something the client isn’t measuring. Neither party is wrong — they simply weren’t explicit about what success looks like, what the process involves, and what roles each party plays.
This post is about transparency. Here is what a sport digital advisory engagement with Brand & Story actually looks like — week by week, deliverable by deliverable, and in terms of what you own at the end.
The first two weeks are diagnostic. Before any recommendations are made, the current state needs to be accurately mapped — not based on how the organisation describes itself, but based on what the infrastructure actually does.
This involves reviewing:
The output of this phase is a structured infrastructure audit: a clear-eyed view of where the organisation is, what is working, what is not, and what the gap is between current state and a functioning Fan Relationship System.
What does not happen in weeks 1–2: no recommendations are made, no platforms are evaluated, no content strategies are developed. The temptation to skip directly to solutions is always present. The audit phase exists precisely to resist that temptation — to ensure that what gets built is designed for the actual problem, not the assumed one.
Once the audit is complete and the architecture is defined, weeks 3–8 focus on building the foundation and producing the first demonstrable proof of value.
Foundation work typically includes:
First proof of value is typically a working registration mechanism — the simplest possible version of an owned fan relationship, producing real first-party data. Not a full platform. Not a content programme. A working foundation that demonstrates the logic in practice and produces the first measurable owned audience data.
Why this matters: proof of value at week 8 changes the internal conversation. It turns an abstract strategic argument — “we should own our fan data” — into a demonstrated capability with real numbers attached. Stakeholder alignment is significantly easier when there is a working system to point to, even a minimal one.
At the end of an 8-week engagement, you own three things:
1. A documented architecture. A clear blueprint of what needs to be built, in what sequence, for what commercial outcome. This document is yours — it doesn’t sit in a consultant’s head, and it doesn’t disappear when the engagement ends. It is the strategic foundation for every subsequent digital investment.
2. A working foundation. A functional, minimal version of the fan registration mechanism — not a complete platform, but a working proof that the logic is sound and that owned fan data can be collected within your existing constraints.
3. Internal capability. The team members who have been part of the engagement understand the architecture, the data logic, and the operating model. The goal is not dependency on external advisory — it is building internal capability to own and operate the system.
Transparency requires being as clear about what is not included as what is.
Brand & Story does not produce ongoing content. The content system design is part of the engagement. The content itself is an internal execution responsibility or an agency relationship — not a consulting deliverable.
Brand & Story does not manage vendor relationships on an ongoing basis. The vendor selection framework and evaluation criteria are part of the engagement. Vendor management is an internal operational function.
Brand & Story does not guarantee platform outcomes. The engagement produces strategic architecture and operational foundation. Platform performance depends on execution quality, which involves internal teams, external agencies, and technology partners beyond the advisory scope.
Brand & Story does not offer retainer relationships that substitute for internal capability. The goal is to make the advisory relationship unnecessary — by building an organisation that understands its own digital infrastructure and can develop it independently.
The audit phase requires 2–4 hours per week from the relevant internal stakeholders — typically the digital lead, the commercial director, and one or two platform owners. The foundation phase requires more active involvement: 6–10 hours per week for the primary project owner. This is not a passive engagement — internal capacity is a prerequisite.
This is one of the most common situations. Part of the operating model design addresses exactly this question — who should own digital strategy internally, what the role requires, and how to structure the function given current organisational constraints. The absence of a dedicated digital lead is a starting condition, not a blocker.
Yes. A standalone infrastructure audit — without the foundation phase — is available as an entry point. It produces the structured diagnosis and architecture blueprint without the implementation work. Many organisations use this as the basis for an internal decision about whether and how to proceed.
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The audit phase requires 2–4 hours per week from the relevant internal stakeholders — typically the digital lead, the commercial director, and one or two platform owners. The foundation phase requires more active involvement: 6–10 hours per week for the primary project owner. This is not a passive engagement — internal capacity is a prerequisite.