49ers Foundation Challenges Bay Area Students With Finding New Fans


On Tuesday, the San Francisco 49ers Foundation hosted 47 teens at a mini-hackathon at Levi’s Stadium. The students, who ranged from eighth through 10th grade, were given three hours to come up with a way for the 49ers to attract new audiences to Levi’s, turning non-fans into the Faithful.

The event was a lead-in to the Beyond Innovation conference hosted by the 49ers and Beyond Sport on Wednesday. The conference itself focuses on how sports can be used to support science, technology, engineering, and math education. And all of the students participating are part of the 49ers STEM Leadership Institute, which currently works with 240 kids spread across nearby Cabrillo Middle School and Santa Clara High School.

Jennifer Lee, program director of the institute, explained that its focus mixes empowering the students’ interests in STEM with empowering them with leadership and critical thinking skills. “We teach them the design thinking cycle,” Lee said, “and really trying to train them on not limiting themselves to what might be the ‘right’ answer.”

Students from the 49ers STEM Leadership Institute brainstorm at a hackathon on May 22, 2018. (Courtesy of the San Francisco 49ers)

The walls of the Brocade Club in Levi’s Stadium on Tuesday were plastered with pink, blue, and yellow Post-It notes. The kids’ stream of consciousness scribbled down on small pieces of paper. WHY NONFANS DON’T LIKE FOOTBALL, asked one. TOO BORING. DON’T UNDERSTAND, another answered. PRE-GAME CLASS ON HOW FOOTBALL WORKS, suggested a third.

This was the aftermath of a brainstorming process the eight groups of six students had run through to kick off the hackathon. Basically, Lee said, the plan was to “get as many ideas out of your head and down onto paper.”

Some ideas noted the obvious. FREE FOOD was underlined. Another pointed out that engaging families will bring in more paying customers than reaching out to individuals alone. IF 1 TEEN COMES, 1 MORE WILL COME: 1 PARENT (MAYBE 2).

The hackathon was run by Matt Mead, head of education at the Chelsea Foundation, the charitable arm of English Premier League soccer team Chelsea F.C. Mead and his 49ers counterpart, Jesse Lovejoy, had met at the inaugural Beyond Innovation meeting last year, spurring a collaboration between their efforts that has also brought Lovejoy and the 49ers across the Atlantic to teach students in the U.K.

After brainstorming, the students at the hackathon were tasked with fine tuning their proposals around what they thought might be an ideal user, and coming up with a one page business plan. Then their teams pitched their ideas one-by-one to a panel of three judges: Hannah Gordon, the 49ers chief administrative officer and general counsel, Nick Keller, founder and president of Beyond Sport, and Scott Leatherman, COO and VP of Marketing and Communications of SAP Silicon Valley.

Mead highlighted how the students picked out ideas that adults might have put less emphasis on. “Engaging, especially this millenial group, with things that interest them,” he said. Most of the proposals were for apps, with points and incentives, and a strong social media component. Gordon remarked that they all zeroed in on one key concept: FOMO, the fear of missing out.

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The seventh team to pitch presented an app dubbed “First Faithful,” making a connection to the nickname of diehard 49ers fans. The app gave away loyalty points for in-stadium activities and targeted young fans with big families. The team’s presentation and business plan was polished and detailed, and the three judges picked the group out as the winner. The winning students then had the chance to pitch again at an ESPN leadership dinner hosted later that night. Gordon was impressed by the general level of professionalism by all the students. In comparison, she said, “most adults do a terrible job at PowerPoint presentations.”

Not everyone had an app, though. Technology might not always be the answer. The first team up designed a marching band competition that could bring in children from different Bay Area schools to compete against each other at halftime of every home game. The aim, the students said, was to “show that band people can be champions too.”

Beyond developing a real fan engagement strategy the 49ers could roll out, the hackathon, the STEM Leadership Institute, and Beyond Sport might have a simpler motive. They give and have given students a change to learn about new topics and engage their interests. “For a lot of the kids,” Lee said, “the experience has just been exposure.”