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<title>MARKETING MIX, MEDIA AND ECONO-GOVERNMENTAL INDICES AS PREDICTORS OF THE NIGERIA SPORTS BRAND</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2053" rel="alternate"/>
<subtitle/>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2053</id>
<updated>2026-04-09T08:47:14Z</updated>
<dc:date>2026-04-09T08:47:14Z</dc:date>
<entry>
<title>MARKETING MIX, MEDIA AND ECONO-GOVERNMENTAL INDICES AS PREDICTORS OF THE NIGERIA SPORTS BRAND</title>
<link href="http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2054" rel="alternate"/>
<author>
<name>IFETA, Olatunde Nosakhare</name>
</author>
<id>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2054</id>
<updated>2024-04-25T13:55:13Z</updated>
<published>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</published>
<summary type="text">MARKETING MIX, MEDIA AND ECONO-GOVERNMENTAL INDICES AS PREDICTORS OF THE NIGERIA SPORTS BRAND
IFETA, Olatunde Nosakhare
The Nigeria Sports Brand (NSB) is a construct that expresses Nigeria’s ultimate intentions&#13;
towards sports development, as reflected in the National Sports Policy (2009) and the Sports&#13;
Industry Policy (2020). However, the NSB still performs far below expectations in relation to&#13;
sports branding predictive indices (Marketing Mix Indices – MMI, Media Indices – MI,&#13;
Economic Indices – EI and Governmental Indices – GI). Previous studies focused largely on&#13;
sports development in Nigeria, with little consideration for these predictive indices. This study,&#13;
therefore, was designed to investigate MMI (production, price, promotion and place of sports),&#13;
MI (sports new media, sports print, sports radio and sports television), EI (Sports Gross&#13;
Domestic Product [SGDP], Sports Production and Consumption [SPC], Sports Manufacturing&#13;
and Trade [SMT] and real income) and GI (government proprietorship, government policy,&#13;
government issues and public-private partnership) as predictors of the NSB.&#13;
The study was anchored to the Ripple Effect and Maslow’s Human Motivation theories, while&#13;
the mixed methods design (QUAN+qual) was adopted. Four accessible geopolitical zones were&#13;
purposively selected, and four states were randomly selected in each zone. One hundred and&#13;
ninety-six sports policy makers and officials, 48 sports federation officers across the zones&#13;
were selected using stratified random sampling technique, while 528 athletes, 240 sports&#13;
enthusiasts and 48 sports media personnel were selected through convenience sampling. The&#13;
purposive sampling technique was adopted for the selection of 240 coaches. Key informant&#13;
interviews were conducted with zonal sports coordinators. The instruments used were&#13;
Production of Sports (r=0.71), Place of sports (0.71), Promotion of sports (r=0.72), Real&#13;
income (r=0.72), SPC (r=0.72), Price of sports (r=0.73), SGDP (r=0.73), Sports print (r=0.74),&#13;
SMT (r=0.74), Sports radio (r=0.75), Sports new media (r=0.76), Sports television (r=0.77),&#13;
Nigeria Sports Brand (r=0.77), Government policy (r=0.79), Government issues (r=0.80),&#13;
Government proprietorship (r=0.81) and Public-private partnership (r=0.81). The quantitative&#13;
data were analysed using Pearson product moment correlation and multiple regression at 0.05&#13;
level of significance, while the qualitative data were thematically analysed.&#13;
Participants were mostly male (64.4%), aged 28.65±5.39 years. Sports television (r=0.05), SPC&#13;
(r=0.05), government proprietorship (r=0.06), sports radio (r=0.08), sports new media&#13;
(r=0.09), sports print (r=0.13), Place of sports (r=0.15), government policy (r=0.26), SMT&#13;
(r=0.30) and public-private partnership (r=0.60) positively correlated with NSB. There was a&#13;
significant joint contribution of the predictors on NSB (F(4;1291)=57.27; Adj. R2=0.15),&#13;
accounting for 15.0% of its variance. Sports new media (ß=0.15), government issues (ß=-0.15),&#13;
sports print (ß=0.16), government policy (ß=-0.16), place of sports (ß=0.18), production and&#13;
consumption (ß=-0.22), sports television (ß=-0.25), manufacturing and trade (ß=0.45) and&#13;
public-private partnership (ß=-0.60) contributed significantly to NSB. Sports coordinators&#13;
indicated that, whereas policy content was consistent, NSB was mainly impeded by poor&#13;
implementation, insufficient funding, domineering role of government, poor sports pricing,&#13;
poor media, ineffective marketing, and insufficient and substandard sports production.&#13;
Place of sports, sports media, sports production and consumption, sports manufacturing and&#13;
trade, governmental proprietorship, quality government involvement and public-private&#13;
partnership positively influenced the Nigeria Sports Brand. If these are prioritised in policy&#13;
implementation, the NSB will compete effectively globally.
</summary>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</entry>
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