Sponsorship is the fastest-growing marketing communication tool, both in terms of
volume and complexity. The two central players in any sponsorship arrangement are
the sponsor and the sponsored institutions’ (sponsee). Sponsors are gradually
increasing the amounts that they invest in sponsorships and elevating outcome
requirements for their investments, as reflected in the large body of research
dedicated to sponsors’ needs in terms of brand awareness, consumer loyalty and
evaluation of results. On the other hand, the sponsees needs are relatively
neglected, especially in the arts sector, where there has been little research focused
on what arts sponsees require from a sponsorship arrangement. This research fills
this gap by investigating the sponsorship process that arts sponsees go through and
provides the first theoretical model of this process. Because of the need to
inductively explain the process, taking into account its causes and consequences,
the grounded theory method is used to develop a substantive theoretical model. Indepth
interviews with 31 arts sponsorship managers, globally dispersed and with
demonstrated experience in sponsorship, were collected, and they indicate that the
arts sponsee’s reciprocity with a sponsor in a sponsorship interaction is a highly
complex experience that involves both the internal arts sponsee and external
sponsor’s actors. Within the complexity of the experience, the relationship is
arguably not a developmentally normal experience, given arts sponsees’
professional situations. The conclusion is that the reciprocity that arts sponsees
experience throughout the sponsorship interaction is often not acknowledged or
understood and would benefit from further empirical research.
KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 2018.