4.3 Article

There is no nil in NIL: examining the social media value of student-athletes' names, images, and likeness

Journal

SPORT MANAGEMENT REVIEW
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages 839-861

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14413523.2021.1880154

Keywords

athlete brand; NIL value; student-athlete; social media; collegiate sport; NCAA

Funding

  1. School of Sport, Tourism and Hospitality Management
  2. Fox School of Business
  3. Sport Industry Research Center at Temple University [2018_01]

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This research explores the NIL value of student-athletes' social media profiles, finding that student-athletes do possess value and that this value is influenced by both individual factors and institutional factors.
This research contributes to our understanding of the name, image, and likeness (NIL) value of student-athletes' social media profiles. In Study 1, we scraped data from the Twitter (N-f = 3,880; N-b = 757) and Instagram (N-f = 2,223; N-b = 647) profiles of male collegiate-level football and basketball athletes. In Study 2, we scraped data from the Twitter (N = 1,058; posts = 20,978) and Instagram (N = 1,410; posts = 16,453) profiles of all student-athletes of four (two top-tier and two mid-tier) representative universities. Applying influencer marketing industry standard rates, the current research shows that student-athletes possess NIL value. Results further indicate student-athletes' NIL value has a relationship with, but is not solely generated at, the institution level. Thus, this research contributes to student-athlete personal branding knowledge, and informs discussion around policy and industry practice related to student-athletes, university athletics departments, athletic conferences, and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).

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