Brock Lesnar file photo: Sherdog.com
You do not need a flow chart and financials to understand why the UFC will, for the foreseeable future, remains MMA’s strongest (and possibly only viable) brand. Their media reach has been perfectly structured to marinate the 18-34 demographic in whatever they choose to promote. It has become virtually impossible to visit a supermarket, toy store, Web site, or cable box without getting the message. It is literally a perfect assembly of awareness, and it’s reached a pitch with “Brocktober,” four weeks designed to maximize anticipation for Lesnar’s title defense against Cain Velasquez. The UFC has commandeered an entire calendar month for the occasion.
If you’re a promotion looking to edge out even a single percentage point of market share, how do you compete with this? If you’re smart, you don’t try: don’t do something the UFC does well and do it poorly in comparison. Instead, do something they don’t do: network television (Strikeforce), gimmicks (celebrity fights, tournaments), or create your own avenues of marketing (aside from Kimbo Slice, Bellator is the only company to truly “get” the viral video market).
It’s still an uphill climb, but at least you’re not in a head-on collision. As for “Brocktober”: while Lesnar remains the UFC’s biggest draw and its most intriguing personality, the UFC is only two fights away from having to get creative with its matchmaking.
That’s a concern for 2011, if ever. But if Lesnar winds up running through the UFC’s toughest heavyweight division in its 17-year existence, he deserves at least two months named after him.