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  • - [Ad Voiceover] At Intel, we're bringing Tokyo 2020

  • to the world in a way they've never experienced before.

  • (dramatic music)

  • We will host the world.

  • - [Narrator] These brands paid

  • hundreds of millions of dollars

  • to be associated with the Olympics.

  • And all this money goes

  • to the International Olympic Committee or the IOC,

  • which runs all the marketing programs for the Olympic Games.

  • But it takes more than marketing.

  • The IOC powers one of the most valuable sporting events

  • in the world through media deals.

  • - The International Olympic Committee

  • has tried to monetize these games

  • since the very first Olympics back in Greece in 1896.

  • And they've evolved every time

  • to get more TV broadcasters, for instance,

  • and other sponsors.

  • - [Narrator] So how does the IOC generate

  • billions of dollars in revenue from these rights?

  • And what do companies get in return?

  • This is The Economics of The Olympics.

  • The IOC generates billions in revenue

  • through the sale of broadcast and sponsorship rights.

  • It made a total of about $4 billion

  • from the 2006 and 2008 games,

  • over $5 billion from 2010 and 2012,

  • and almost $6 billion from the 2014 and 2016 games.

  • In comparison, FIFA, which runs the World Cup

  • made about $4 billion from the sale of television rights

  • and marketing rights for the 2014 World Cup.

  • In London in 1948, the IOC awarded broadcast rights

  • for the first time to the BBC.

  • Today, the sale of broadcast rights makes up nearly 75%

  • of the IOC's total income.

  • This year, the Beijing Olympics is being broadcast

  • in more than 220 countries.

  • China Media Group is airing the games in China.

  • Discovery is airing it across Europe,

  • and CBC is airing it in Canada.

  • Since 1997, North American companies have paid more

  • for broadcast rights than the rest of the world combined,

  • according to IOC data.

  • NBC has televised every Olympics since 2000

  • and every Summer Games since 1988.

  • - I've come to associate NBC

  • as being the channel of the Olympics,

  • and I'm sure many other Americans do so as well.

  • - [Narrator] In 2014, NBC entered into a $7.75 billion deal

  • to secure exclusive broadcast rights in the US through 2032.

  • That means the company will pay an average

  • of over $1 billion for each Olympics.

  • The deal covers all media platforms, including TV,

  • internet, and mobile rights,

  • and also restricts other media from broadcasting

  • the opening and closing ceremonies

  • and athletic competitions.

  • - When it comes down to getting these broadcasting rights,

  • it comes down to one thing which is money.

  • - [Narrator] These multi-year broadcast deals

  • include both Summer and Winter Olympics.

  • For example, NBCUniversal made

  • about half a billion dollars more in revenue

  • from the 2016 Summer Olympics

  • than it did from the 2014 Winter Olympics,

  • according to the company's financial statements.

  • - The Summer Games are a lot bigger

  • than the Winter Olympics.

  • There's about 200 countries

  • that compete in the Summer Games,

  • about only 100 in the Winter Games.

  • There's a quarter of the athletes in the Winter Olympics

  • compared with the Summer ones.

  • - [Narrator] After broadcasting rights,

  • brand partnerships are the next income driver for the IOC.

  • The Olympic Partner Program, which was launched in 1985,

  • grants exclusive marketing rights

  • to a select group of corporate sponsors.

  • There are currently 13 top tier sponsors in this program.

  • - So you have companies like Coca-Cola, been around forever.

  • So give me a Coke with a smile

  • And I promise

  • To pass it along

  • - But you also now have tech companies

  • like Airbnb and Alibaba in China who have signed up

  • in the past decade for these multi-year deals

  • to be one of the elite sponsors.

  • - [Ad Voiceover] Alibaba believes in the power of small.

  • We are proud to be the worldwide partner

  • of the Olympic Games.

  • - [Narrator] According to the latest IOC data,

  • top tier sponsors collectively paid around $1 billion

  • for the 2014 and 2016 Olympics.

  • So what do these brands get in return?

  • - They get to use the Olympic logo

  • so the iconic rings, the five interlaced rings

  • are probably the best example,

  • but also there's an official logo

  • for the Beijing Games and the Tokyo Games,

  • and all that, too.

  • - [Narrator] But buying sponsorship rights

  • is just the first step.

  • - They spend a lot of money,

  • tens of millions of dollars per Olympics

  • just to get the rights to use these Olympic logos.

  • And then they gotta spend even more money,

  • maybe triple that, to tell everybody

  • that they have these rights via TV advertising that say,

  • "Hey, look, we're helping to put up these feel good games

  • that brings the world together."

  • Or if you're Coca-Cola, they might want an athlete

  • to go around drinking a Coke at the Olympics.

  • And it also costs money just to put the rings

  • on a can or a bottle of Coke.

  • - [Narrator] These brand partnerships are multi-year deals,

  • often spanning four or five Olympics,

  • which means the IOC doesn't have to scramble

  • to find a new sponsor every two years.

  • - Airbnb just a couple of years ago, signed a 10-year deal.

  • So that'll take them

  • through the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

  • - [Narrator] This year, several Olympics sponsors

  • are keeping a relatively low profile

  • around the Winter Games in Beijing

  • due to escalating tensions between the US and China.

  • - In a normal Olympic year, these companies

  • that already spent a lot of money

  • to be a top Olympic sponsor

  • would be normally be bragging about it.

  • The 100-day countdown is usually a big thing.

  • - [Narrator] For example, ahead of the 2018 Games,

  • Coca-Cola put figure skating star Nathan Chen

  • on a billboard in Times Square

  • to mark the 100-day countdown to the games.

  • And Visa, which sponsors athletes

  • through its Team Visa program tweeted about its athletes

  • and promoted its wearable payment devices

  • in the weeks leading up to the 2018 Games.

  • - [Ad Voiceover] You dream of amazing.

  • We dream of amazing ways to pay.

  • - [Narrator] Companies make million dollar investments

  • in these sponsorship deals.

  • But this year, sponsors may risk

  • missing global marketing opportunities

  • that money bought them.

  • US officials, some Western lawmakers,

  • and human rights activists have said

  • Beijing's years long campaign

  • a forcible assimilation against the mostly Muslim minorities

  • in Xinjiang amounts to a form of genocide.

  • Beijing denies the allegation and has protested

  • what it calls attempts to politicize the games.

  • - These top tier Olympic sponsors

  • are trying to balance their business in China on one hand

  • with their reputation in the rest of the world on the other.

  • And they think the smartest thing to do right now

  • is to just not bring any attention

  • to the fact that they're sponsors outside of China.

  • - [Narrator] Coca-Cola, for example, hasn't done

  • any major advertising campaigns related to the Olympics,

  • except in China, according to a company spokesman.

  • He declined to say why the company made that decision.

  • Visa and NBC didn't respond to requests for comment.

  • The IOC says it recognizes and upholds human rights,

  • but it takes no position on the political structure,

  • social circumstances, or human rights standards

  • in the host country.

  • The committee says it must remain neutral

  • on all global political issues.

  • Looking ahead, NBC is promoting

  • its streaming service, Peacock,

  • especially as more and more people ditch cable,

  • and TV ratings for the Olympics

  • continue on a downward trend.

  • In January, Comcast said over 9 million people

  • were paying to watch Peacock.

  • The company said it would spend $3 billion this year

  • on content for Peacock, double what it spent last year.

  • The Beijing Olympics are an important opportunity

  • for Peacock, which has been called out by analysts

  • as being slow to gain traction.

  • Viewers have also complained

  • that Peacock didn't have enough live coverage

  • during the Tokyo Summer Games.

  • This time around, NBCUniversal said

  • the entirety of its Olympic broadcast

  • would be available live on Peacock's premium tiers

  • for the Beijing Games.

  • - Next step will be to see

  • whether these online broadcasting services like Peacock

  • are gonna become a bigger part

  • of Olympic deals in the future.

  • (bright music)

- [Ad Voiceover] At Intel, we're bringing Tokyo 2020

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