Fanbase – The Ticket to Modernisation
Scottish football is modernising across the board at the top
level with the introduction of VAR across the Premiership and in the nation’s
premier cup competitions. However, the lower levels of the game in this county
remain as they have done for decades, at least on the park.
Ticketing and fan engagement company Fanbase are making an
impact at this level off the park with both supporters and with clubs
themselves, offering a digital ticketing service for lower league clubs.
Fanbase’s customer
success manager Ruaridh Allen explained the company’s aim, he said: “it is to
give the 99% access to the same technology as the 1%” by providing this new
online service via their app.
Fanbase work with
clubs to offer their supporters the chance to pre purchase tickets for their
matches through their app. This allows them to keep the ticket saved on their
phones nullifying the need for a physical, traditional paper ticket. For
Ruaridh the biggest benefit of this to the clubs is the time saving aspect this
provides.
The use of the app allows fans to quickly scan their tickets QR
code at the turnstile and quickly enter the ground.
Further positives are mentioned by Ruaridh, he said: “it does give
you a certain coverage if, for example, a game's postponed if you've lost your
physical ticket, your game is postponed, how are you going to get a refund?
“Whereas you've got proof in the pudding right there, you have
paid for your ticket, the whole transaction is there, you can get your refund
easily enough” offering peace of mind to supporters at a country where the game
is at the mercy of the elements for a lot of the season, increasingly so at the
lower reaches.
As expected, however, this has been met with some negativity and
fightback from supporters at this level with many in the lower reaches of the
game in Scotland being more traditionalist and older in terms of demographic.
There are complaints from some supporters, Ruaridh said: “A lot of them is just people not being
confident with tech, really. That is a lot of it. People think that we're
charging a fortune to clubs, which isn't true, but people seem to think that.
It's mainly technophobes.
“We have had the
odd person say that they don't like their details being in the system and
stuff. We have had some people say that they just prefer collecting tickets and
don't like having it on their phone and then it is disappearing afterwards.”
However, Ruaridh
maintains that the reception overall has been positive in the majority.
The reception from
clubs has also been positive, with the company beginning operations in 2019
they were one of the few to benefit from the covid-19 pandemic with lots of
clubs needing to transition to digital ticketing in order to keep an income
flow.
Ruaridh did state
that there have still been some growing pains with clubs, he said: ”one of the
biggest things that people in lower league football get caught up in is cost
and nostalgia, for example people wanting physical tickets constantly despite
it being less cost effective.”
Being a start-up
company, they had to be cost efficient in terms of advertising, with higher end
marketing strategies unaffordable Fanbase chose to go down a modern route,
creating partnerships and sponsorships with football content creators on video
sharing site YouTube.
Ruaridh was very
complimentary in particular with the company’s partnership with Sam North
otherwise known as Footy Adventures on the site, of whom he said: “I couldn't tell you from a commercial
standpoint, but I definitely think from a brand awareness point, [and] people
trusting us more as a company, it was more beneficial through Sam.”
Ruaridh added
that these content creators are now getting to a level of recognition matching
those in the mainstream Scottish football media circuit “I've seen first-hand
when I've been at games and I've run into Sam, how many people approach him for
photos and to talk to him, that sort of thing.
“I've
arrived at the same time as James McFadden for BBC, you get the odd person
maybe coming up, but it's not the same and if you think about their stature in
the game, McFadden scored that goal against France, but Sam North gets the
reception, so I definitely think it's shifting towards people on YouTube and
Twitter and stuff.”
The company
has also received backing in terms of investment to show its success with UKTN
stating that they had received investments of over £1million including £250k through the Microsoft startup
accelerator programme, which included financial backing of more than £250,000.
Scottish
football is a stickler for tradition but the impact of Fanbase in the lower
reaches cannot be understated and they are showing that there is a place for
the modern digital world in the land of terracing, grass and mud, the future is
here and integrating itself quickly into the fabric of our game- at all levels.

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