26/03/2026
Most sponsorship are not lost at the table of negotiation. They are lost before the conversation even begins.
Two mistakes come up repeatedly, and both have the same effect. They remove your leverage before the sponsor has made a single decision.
The first is revealing your minimum position too early.
Every property should know, internally, the lowest value it is willing to accept. That is part of preparation. The problem is when that number becomes visible during the conversation. Once a sponsor understands your floor, the negotiation is no longer about value. It becomes a process of settling close to that number.
The pattern is familiar in everyday transactions. If a seller reduces the price before you ask, you rarely push further. The same applies here. The moment a club signals what it is willing to accept, it has already narrowed the outcome.
The second mistake is signalling urgency.
When a club communicates, directly or indirectly, that it needs the sponsorship to meet immediate financial obligations, the negotiation changes. The sponsor now understands that walking away is difficult for the property. At that point, pricing power shifts.
I have seen this play out in practice. We experienced it ourselves in 2023 in a discussion with a real estate company. The urgency was visible, and it was used against us. This is not unique to smaller properties. Even established clubs have found themselves in similar positions when financial pressure becomes part of the negotiation environment.
The issue is not that the property lacks value. It is that its position has been weakened before that value is properly presented.
Financial realities must be managed internally. They should not shape the posture of the negotiation. The stronger position is always the one where the property can evaluate the offer on its merits and, if necessary, walk away.
That is what protects value.
The discipline is simple, but not always easy to maintain. Know your minimum position, but keep it internal. Manage your financial pressures, but do not allow them to define the conversation.
The outcome of most negotiations is determined by these two factors long before terms are agreed.
Chidi J. Myles | Sponsorship Strategist
11/03/2026
Home of Ballers has been engaged by Unizee Football Academy to support the strengthening of the academy’s institutional and commercial foundations.
The engagement reflects a structural challenge common across African football. Many academies and clubs are built on genuine sporting merit and strong community presence, yet remain commercially underbuilt. As a result, they struggle to attract the level of corporate partnership, governance credibility, and long-term investment their potential warrants.
Working alongside the academy’s leadership, Home of Ballers will support the development of the institutional architecture required for sustainable growth. The work will focus on strengthening governance structure, clarifying commercial positioning, and improving the academy’s readiness for meaningful corporate engagement within the football ecosystem.
The decision by Unizee Football Academy to undertake this process signals a broader shift within African football. Forward-looking institutions are increasingly recognising that long-term sustainability requires not only sporting development but also disciplined organisational structure.
This engagement reflects the growing role of firms such as Home of Ballers in supporting the structural evolution of African sports properties into credible, commercially viable institutions.
Chidi J. Myles
CEO, Home of Ballers
25/02/2026
The Nigeria Beach Soccer League has formally executed a partnership agreement appointing Home of Ballers as its Official Consulting Firm.
Under this mandate, the commercial and sponsorship strategy for the League will be led by Chidi J. Myles in his capacity as Sponsorship Strategist.
This engagement is designed to strengthen the League’s commercial architecture, refine its sponsorship positioning, and develop structured partnerships aligned with long-term institutionall growth.
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Beach soccer in Nigeria carries untapped commercial potential. The objective of this partnership is to translate that potential into measurable revenue frameworks, credible brand alignments, and sustainable funding pathways.
The work begins immediately.
12/02/2026
Another sponsor says, “We’ll get back to you.”
Three weeks pass. No response.
Most club owners assume the sponsor lost interest. In reality, silence is usually a structural response, not an emotional one.
Across the sponsorship mandates we have handled, proposals fail for one recurring reason: they describe activity, but they do not quantify value.
Sponsors do not fund effort. They fund clarity.
When a proposal highlights passion, community presence, and ambition without defining measurable commercial return, it creates uncertainty. Corporate decision-makers are trained to avoid uncertainty.
The “we will revert” line is often a soft rejection of an unclear value proposition.
Clubs that consistently secure sponsorship operate differently. Their presentations are structured around:
• Clearly defined audience assets
• Quantified exposure and conversion pathways
• Alignment with the sponsor’s stated commercial objectives
Without these elements, even credible tournaments and well-run academies struggle to convert conversations into contracts.
This is not a marketing problem. It is a structural one.
We are currently documenting the recurring structural gaps in sponsorship proposals submitted by clubs and tournament organisers across Nigeria, along with the corrective framework we apply in our consulting engagements.
For directors and administrators serious about improving sponsorship outcomes, the insights will be shared through our Sponsorship Mastery Africa channel.
Chidi J. Myles
Sponsorship Strategist
Home Of Ballers