CLUB IMAGE AND VALUES

Thiago Calderaro

TL;DR — the 15-second answer
A mini brandbook shows who your club is, what it stands for and which sponsors genuinely fit. It includes mission, values, target group, tone of voice, design basics, visual style, sponsor-fit criteria and clear do’s and don’ts for partnerships.
Rule: A strong sponsor fit is not created by money alone. It is created through shared values, aligned target groups and credible impact.
1) Why club image matters so much in sponsorship
Sponsorship is always a public connection.
When a sponsor becomes visible at your club, a relationship is created in people’s minds.
The sponsor stands next to your club logo.
The club stands next to the sponsor’s brand.
The community notices this connection.
That is why sponsorship is not only an income question.
It is also an image question.
A good sponsor can strengthen your club image.
An unsuitable sponsor can cost trust.
Typical questions:
Does the sponsor fit our values?
Does the product fit our target group?
Would parents, members and teams understand the partnership?
Does the sponsor strengthen our image?
Are there reputational risks?
Does the sponsor’s tone fit our club?
Do we want to be publicly connected with this brand?
A mini brandbook helps you avoid answering these questions from gut feeling every time.
It gives your club a clear foundation for sponsor selection, communication and external image.
If you want to start sponsorship systematically, this work comes directly after responsibilities and the advertising space inventory. You can find the foundation in Starting Sponsorship in Your Club.
2) What is a mini brandbook?
A mini brandbook is a short, practical brand and values overview for your club.
It is not an 80-page corporate design manual.
It is a compact document that creates clarity internally and externally.
It answers:
Who are we?
What do we stand for?
Who do we reach?
How do we speak?
What do we look like?
Which images fit us?
Which sponsors fit us?
Which partnerships do we not want?
How should sponsors present our club?
For sponsorship, a mini brandbook is especially valuable because it turns your club into a clearer brand.
Not artificially.
Not over-staged.
But understandable.
3) What a mini brandbook must achieve for sponsorship
A mini brandbook should do three things.
1. Provide internal orientation
Everyone in the club understands what the club stands for.
This helps with:
sponsor selection
communication
approvals
social media
sponsorship deck
press work
conflicts
2. Create external clarity
Sponsors understand faster whether they fit.
This helps with:
sponsorship conversations
offers
co-branding
campaigns
activations
long-term partnerships
3. Protect club identity
The club does not sell every space to every sponsor.
This helps with:
reputation protection
governance
youth and family environment
values
credibility
long-term trust
Especially when sponsorship grows, a mini brandbook protects you from arbitrary decisions.
4) Building block 1: Mission and club purpose
The mission explains why your club exists.
It should be short, clear and emotional.
Examples:
“We create a place where children and young people experience sport, team spirit and community.”
“We connect people from our neighbourhood through football, volunteering and club life.”
“We promote movement, fair play and togetherness — on and off the pitch.”
“We make sport accessible, familiar and reliable.”
A good mission is not too abstract.
It shows the impact your club wants to create.
Check:
Why does our club exist?
Who do we help?
What do we make possible?
What role do youth, volunteering and community play?
What should become better in the region through us?
The mission matters because sponsors do not only buy spaces.
They support an impact.
The more clearly you formulate that impact, the easier sponsorship becomes to explain.
5) Building block 2: Values
Values are the guardrails for behaviour and decisions.
They show what matters to your club.
Possible club values:
fairness
togetherness
respect
openness
responsibility
commitment
reliability
joy
courage
diversity
youth development
volunteering
regionality
transparency
Important: do not choose ten values that sound good.
Choose three to five values that are genuinely lived.
Example:
Value 1: Togetherness
We believe that a club is more than sport. We create places where people support one another.
Value 2: Fairness
We want sporting competition, but with respect towards teams, referees, parents and opponents.
Value 3: Youth development
We invest time, energy and partnerships in children and young people.
Value 4: Openness
People should feel welcome here regardless of origin, gender, performance level or experience.
Values like these help you later answer the question:
Does this sponsor fit us?
6) Building block 3: Target group and community
Sponsors want to know who your club reaches.
Your mini brandbook should therefore describe your community.
Possible target groups:
children
young people
parents
families
coaches
members
fans
volunteers
visitors
local businesses
schools
neighbourhood or municipality
other clubs
regional sports community
Do not only describe numbers, but also context.
Example:
“Our community consists of youth teams, parents, families and local supporters from the direct club environment. On match days and at tournaments, an environment is created where regional companies can become visible in a credible way.”
Possible metrics:
number of members
number of teams
age groups
visitors per match day
participants per tournament
newsletter list
website views
social media reach
regional catchment areas
This target group description later helps you with sponsorship offers, packages and pricing logic.
7) Building block 4: Tone of voice
Tone of voice means: how does your club speak?
A club can feel friendly, familiar, sporty, direct, modern, traditional or professional.
What matters is that the language fits your club.
Possible tone axes:
relaxed or formal
emotional or factual
traditional or modern
local or national
performance-oriented or grassroots and family-focused
direct or explanatory
young or classic
Example:
“We speak directly, positively and clearly. We use informal language with our community on social media, remain professional with sponsors and always explain partnerships from the club perspective: What is being made possible? Who does it help? Why does it fit us?”
Tone of voice is especially important for:
social media
sponsor posts
press work
sponsorship deck
website
newsletter
co-PR with sponsors
When your tone is clear, sponsorship content feels less artificial.
8) Building block 5: CI basics
CI stands for corporate identity or corporate design.
For clubs, a simple overview is often enough.
Record:
club logo
logo versions
colours
fonts
crest
visual marks
kit colours
hashtags
slogans
spelling of the club name
Important:
Which logo file is official?
May the logo be placed on a coloured background?
Are there minimum clear spaces?
Which colours may be used?
Which spelling is correct?
May the crest be changed?
May the sponsor use the club logo?
Who approves designs?
These basics protect your club image.
Especially in co-branding, merch or sponsor posts, logos should not be used randomly.
More on this under IP and Usage Rights.
9) Building block 6: Visual style
Images shape how your club is perceived.
You should therefore define which visual style fits you.
Suitable motifs:
real match scenes
teams
training moments
volunteering
youth development
tournaments
celebrations
fair play
community
clubhouse
local environment
sponsor activations
behind the scenes
Less suitable:
staged images without club connection
overloaded logo collages
blurred or dark photos
images without consent
images that show individuals unfavourably
overly promotional motifs without community context
Also define:
Which images may sponsors use?
Which images may be shared with media?
Which images may be used for adverts?
Who approves images?
What applies to children and young people?
Visual style is not only aesthetics.
It is also a question of rights, data protection and trust.
10) Building block 7: Sponsor-fit criteria
This is where the mini brandbook becomes especially important.
Define which sponsors fit you.
Check:
Does the company fit our values?
Does the product fit the target group?
Is the sector appropriate in the club environment?
Is there regional relevance?
Is there clear added value for the community?
Is the sponsor’s communication reputable?
Are there reputational risks?
Does the activation fit children and families?
Does the sponsor respect our rules?
Can the partnership feel credible long term?
You can divide sponsors into three groups.
Ideal fit
Companies that strongly complement values, target group and club environment.
Examples:
local employers
sports shops
health providers
educational offers
family offers
regional service providers
Review fit
Companies that could generally fit, but need closer review.
Examples:
national brands
highly promotional offers
products with benefits that need explanation
sectors with mixed perception
No fit
Companies that do not fit the club, target group or values.
Examples:
unserious offers
aggressive advertising
products with risks for children or young people
sponsors wanting too much influence
partnerships that could damage the club image
This classification helps decisions become faster and cleaner.
11) Building block 8: Do’s and don’ts for sponsorship communication
Do’s and don’ts make your brandbook practical.
Do’s
present sponsors as enablers
put club impact at the centre
explain sponsor fit
use clear language
use real images
follow labelling rules
check rights before publication
document sponsor services
show community value
communicate with appreciation
Don’ts
present the sponsor as bigger than the club
make unclear promises
write in an overly promotional way
use images of children without review
publish sponsor posts without labelling
distort or misuse logos
promote sensitive topics carelessly
enter partnerships without fit
continue using old sponsor logos
leave benefits in return verbally open
Rules like these help especially when several people in the club create content.
They prevent everyone from interpreting sponsorship differently.
12) Connect the mini brandbook with the sponsorship deck
The mini brandbook is not only an internal document.
It also improves your sponsorship deck.
From the brandbook come:
mission
values
club profile
target group description
visual style
tone of voice
sponsor fit
clear partnership logic
This makes your sponsorship deck more professional.
Instead of only saying:
“We are looking for sponsors.”
You can say:
“We stand for youth, community and regional togetherness. We are looking for partners who share these values and want to reach our community in a meaningful way.”
That is stronger.
It turns acquisition into brand and partnership logic.
13) Connect the mini brandbook with the website
Your website also benefits from the mini brandbook.
Use the content for:
about us page
sponsorship page
homepage
media kit
sponsor page
tournament page
social media bio
newsletter
press profile
A club feels stronger when the same identity is visible everywhere.
Not worded identically.
But consistent.
If your website should convince sponsors, the article Website Readiness can also help.
14) Create a mini brandbook in 90 minutes
You do not need a long workshop.
To start, 90 minutes with the board, sponsorship lead, communications and youth representation are enough.
Part 1: Identity
Questions:
Who are we?
What makes us special?
Why does our club exist?
Which three values do we truly live?
Part 2: Target group
Questions:
Who do we reach?
Which people are active around our club?
Which numbers can we mention?
Which community moments are especially strong?
Part 3: External image
Questions:
How do we want to sound?
Which images fit us?
Which logos and colours are binding?
Which mistakes do we want to avoid?
Part 4: Sponsor fit
Questions:
Which sponsors fit ideally?
Which sponsors do we review more closely?
Which sponsors do not fit?
Which boundaries do we set?
After 90 minutes, you have enough material for a first version.
The brandbook can become perfect later.
What matters is that you start.
15) Common mistakes in club brandbooks
Mistake 1: Formulating too generally
“Fair, modern, successful” says little.
Better: Explain values specifically.
Mistake 2: Choosing too many values
In the end, nothing sticks.
Better: define three to five real values.
Mistake 3: Leaving out sponsor fit
The brandbook looks nice, but does not support decisions.
Better: include clear fit and no-fit criteria.
Mistake 4: Not defining image rules
Photos are used randomly.
Better: define visual style, approvals and usage.
Mistake 5: Not connecting it with the sponsorship deck
The brandbook sits internally unused.
Better: use content directly for website, deck and acquisition.
Mistake 6: Wanting to start perfectly
The club waits for the ideal document.
Better: create a simple version and improve it each season.
16) Checklist: Is your mini brandbook sponsorship-ready?
Check:
Is there a clear mission?
Are there three to five real values?
Is the target group described?
Are important club numbers included?
Is the tone of voice defined?
Are CI basics included?
Are there logo rules?
Is there a visual style?
Are image rights and approvals considered?
Are there sponsor-fit criteria?
Are there no-fit criteria?
Are there do’s and don’ts?
Is it clear who approves content?
Can the brandbook be used in the website and deck?
Is it updated at least once per season?
If several points are missing, your brandbook is not yet ready for professional sponsorship communication.
17) FAQ
What is a mini brandbook for clubs?
A mini brandbook is a compact overview of your club’s mission, values, target group, tone of voice, design basics, visual style and sponsor fit.
Why does a club need a brandbook for sponsorship?
Because sponsorship means public connection. A brandbook helps select suitable sponsors and protect the club image.
How long should a mini brandbook be?
5 to 10 pages are enough to start. What matters is that it is practical to use.
Who should create the brandbook?
Ideally the board, sponsorship lead, communications, youth representation and people who know the club well.
What are sponsor-fit criteria?
They are criteria used to check whether a sponsor fits the club’s values, target group, sector, communication and environment.
What does not belong in a brandbook?
Too many internal details, empty phrases, excessive design rules or statements that are not truly lived in the club.
How often should the brandbook be updated?
At least once per season or when target groups, website, sponsorship strategy or club positioning change.
Does a brandbook also help with sponsor acquisition?
Yes. It makes your club profile clearer and helps companies understand faster why a partnership credibly fits.
How Club Identity Becomes a Sponsorship Advantage
Sponsorship becomes stronger when your club knows what it stands for.
A mini brandbook makes this identity visible:
mission, values, target group, tone of voice, visual style and sponsor fit.
This does not only make your club more professional externally.
It also makes selection clearer.
And that is exactly the difference between just any sponsor and a partnership that truly fits.
Disclaimer
This article does not constitute legal advice, data protection advice or individual brand advice. Club image, sponsor fit, logo usage, image rights, advertising labelling, data protection, co-branding and partner selection depend on the specific club, sponsor, medium, agreement and individual case. Please clarify open questions with the board, legal adviser, data protection adviser or professional brand and communications support.
Continue Reading
This might also interest you:



