It is 2026. According to Pantone, the world is retreating into safe neutrals. That phrase could also describe my beloved Watford FC’s transfer policy over the past few seasons. 

As work resumed in January, the predictions arrived. A new year, we’re told, will bring change. It always does. Sports marketing, like sport itself, is obsessed with what comes next. We analyse how younger audiences engage digitally, while older fans pay for tickets. We assess new formats and breakaway leagues. We watch athletes build followings and businesses beyond the field of play.

Yet amid all this movement, are we asking the important question: what stays the same? To coin Jeff Bezos; “you can build a business strategy around the things that are stable in time.” The same applies to brand strategy. In sports marketing, constants often matter more than the latest trend. The principles that underpin success will endure, and in 2026, five of them will continue to shape how brands operate in sport.

Sponsorship choices will remain top-down, not bottom-up 

Despite real progress in understanding sponsorship effectiveness, many deals remain shaped by personal preference at the top. Ask why a sponsorship exists, and too often the answer is familiar: “Because the CEO likes that sport.”

Important work by Rory Natkiel and others has advanced the case for evidence-led sponsorship, and the discipline is maturing. But defaults will persist. Pulling brands away from instinctive choices and towards more strategic, demonstrably effective investment remains one of the industry’s most important, and unresolved, tasks. 

Reach will remain as a low bar for brands in sport 

Sponsorship comes with commercial ambition, but also responsibility. The furore surrounding FIFA’s approach to ticket pricing for the 2026 World Cup has intensified scrutiny on how all governing bodies promote accessibility to live events, and brands willing to partner must recognise the chance for residual impact.

Edelman’s Pushed to the Limit study shows fans believe sponsors take more than their fair share from sport. In an inflationary environment, visibility alone no longer earns credibility for brands. Brands can’t lower ticket prices, but must be additive, be it making experiences better or the ecosystem stronger. As ever, brands need fans to be glad they are there. 

Engaged fans remain the real prize 

Keeping fans at the centre of decision-making is not new, but it remains decisive. The brands that succeed in sport continue to invest in deep relationships and meaningful experiences, in stadiums and niches that fandoms inhabit. In community marketing circles, success relies on turning anoraks into advocates. 

In 2019, comedian Stewart Lee called his tour Content Provider to satirise digital dystopia. In 2026, it’s no joke for brands in sport. Engaged fans spend six times more than casual ones. That has shifted competition off the pitch, as brands and rights-holders weaponise content provision to chase global fan bases that sustain sponsorship, broadcasting, and merch revenues. 

Consistency compounds value in sponsorship 

As in other areas of brand building, consistency remains undervalued in sport sponsorship. Longevity and repetition drive impact, yet sponsorship is still too often treated as a series of short-term activations. Guinness’s commitment to rugby stands out as the exception that proves the rule. 

Effective sponsorship should function like a long-running brand platform, anchored in a single idea that endures for the life of the deal. In practice, activation budgets are frequently contested, with CFOs seeking clearer proof of return. Securing the investment required for long-term creative consistency remains a battleground for brands aiming to maximise the commercial value of sport. 

Athlete welfare looms large as sport’s most overlooked risk 

The public has always been capable of compassion, but social media has stripped away the mythic armour of elite sport, revealing athletes as people first and performers second. In UK professional sport, athlete welfare remains the most significant unmanaged risk in the eyes of fans. How organisations protect, support, and listen to athletes directly shapes trust, credibility, and the relationship with fans. 

Support cannot be symbolic. Sixty-six per cent of fans believe sporting organisations neglect athlete mental health, and nearly half believe retirement transitions are poorly handled . Failures in welfare can damage brands faster and more deeply than poor performance or commercial misjudgement. 

In a year dominated by talk of change, it is these principles – familiar, persistent, and at times uncomfortable – that will continue to determine outcomes for brands in sport. 

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.


Will Butterworth is Strategy Director based in London.