GOOD.is
GOOD is a collaboration of individuals, businesses, and nonprofits pushing the world forward. Get involved.
  • Home
  • |
  • Columns ▶
    • BoingBoing on GOOD
    • Joe Ippolito on Business
    • Carol Coletta on Cities
    • Alissa Walker on Design
    • Ben Jervey on the Environment
    • Peter Smith on Food
    • Truman National Security Project on Foreign Policy
    • Picture Show
    • Mark Peters on Language
    • Anne Trubek on Literature
    • See All Columns
  • |
  • Video
  • |
  • Infographics
  • |
  • Community
  • |
  • Events
  • Follow GOOD:
  • twitter
  • flickr
  • facebook
  • youtube
  • rss feed
  • Business
  • |
  • Cities
  • |
  • Culture
  • |
  • Design
  • |
  • Education
  • |
  • Environment
  • |
  • Food
  • |
  • Health
  • |
  • Media
  • |
  • People
  • |
  • Politics
  • |
  • Technology
  • |
  • Transportation
  • 4
  • 1

Go Team

  • Posted by: Alex Goldmark
  • on August 7, 2008 at 6:34 pm

Visit any sports stadium and you’ll inevitably find thousands of

fans certain that they could run their team better than the people in charge. The folks behind Project Franchise tend to agree. They’re planning to raise enough money from fans and advertisers to buy a minor-league sports franchise, and put every management decision—from what coach to hire to which beer to serve—up to a vote. It’s a wisdom-of-the-crowd experiment, in the hands of disgruntled Monday-morning quarterbacks from around the world.

“We want to take fan involvement to the next level, to control the consumer experience, too,” says Grant Cohen, one of four college friends behind the project. Voting memberships (right now Project Franchise has thousands of members; the number should increase when the site fully launches in the fall) will likely start in the $5 to $10 range. The low price, they reason, will attract enough fans to interest sponsors, who will throw in the rest of the money needed to buy a team, which they plan to do by the end of the year.

Fan-Owned Teams:

Cleveland Indians
Went public in 1998; despite a winning season, the team was back in private hands the next year.

Green Bay Packers
Since 1923, the nonprofit team has been owned by 100,000 fans and won 12 league championships.

Ebbsfleet United
Bought in 2007 for $1.2 million, collected online from more than 21,000 British soccer fans. The United won their conference title that season.

Schaumburg Flyers
This Independent League baseball team in Illinois let fans vote on management via MSN.com in 2006. The team lost in the playoffs, and most of the players quit.

  • Filed under: Magazine : Look
  • Share
  • Discuss
  • Mark it good!
  • Facebook
  •   Twitter
  • Digg
  • Stumble
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
Direct link to this post:
Send as an Email:
Your email address:
Recipient's email address:
Message:

X
DISCUSSION: 1 Comment
    • Posted by: Bert
    • on August 21, 2008 at 9:42 am

    Fantasy is reality in the world today… do owner-fans get dividends if the team turns a profit?

Login or Sign up to discuss this article

About The Contributors

  • Alex Goldmark

    Alex Goldmark

     

Recent Readers

  • Amrit
  • toekneebullard
  • Michelleno
  • Price
  • joepeach
  • Hope
  • olivelife
  • morganclendaniel
  • arjun
  • Will Etling
  • steveshane
  • patrickjames
See all

Related Content

  • Video : Look

    Cambodian Sports

    Decades of war and internal strife have left Cambodia with one of the highest proportions of people disabled by land ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Magazine : Transparency

    Transparency: Who Is Playing Sports?

    It's baseball season again, but what you might not notice amid the crack of the bat and ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Fantasy Non-Sports

    Tired of everyone in your office wasting their time on their fantasy sports teams? Well, now the playing field of ...
    Read & Discuss

  • Magazine : Provocations

    Serenity Now

    How fan culture is reshaping the business of entertainment.
    Read & Discuss

  • Blog : GOOD Blog

    Choose GOOD with GlobalGiving

    The recession marks a major challenge for nonprofit funding.  Our partners at GlobalGiving have responded ...
    Read & Discuss

This Week In Magazine

  • Most Discussed
  • Most GOODMarked
  1. Transparency: The Effects of Bike Commuting on Obesity
  2. The GOOD 100: Cowpooling
  3. The GOOD Guide to COP15: An Introduction
  4. The Kids Are All Right
  5. Picture Show: Four Days in Dubai
  6. Picture Show: Breach
  7. LOOK: On the Road with Ethos Alliance
  8. Transparency: How Education Spending Affects Graduation Rates
  9. Action, In Words and Pictures
  10. COP15: The Issues
  1. The GOOD Guide to COP15: The Fire this Time: Copenhagen and the War for the Future
  2. Picture Show: Breach
  3. The GOOD Guide to COP15: An Introduction
  4. The Kids Are All Right
  5. Picture Show: Four Days in Dubai
  6. The GOOD 100: Cowpooling
  7. Transparency: The Change in Carbon Emissions
  8. The GOOD Guide to COP15: The Treaty
  9. The GOOD Guide to COP15: The Players
  10. Action, In Words and Pictures

GOOD Magazine
About
|
Join
|
Sign In

Categories

  • Business
  • Cities
  • Culture
  • Design
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Health
  • Media
  • People
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Transportation

Special Features

  • Blogs
  • Events
  • Infographics
  • Look
  • Picture Show
  • Q&A
  • Video

Community

  • Community Board
  • Member directory
  • Join the Community

Social

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Flickr

Magazine

  • Current issue
  • Back issues
  • Subscribe
  • Gift a gift
  • Renew/Service

GOOD

  • What is GOOD?
  • Make GOOD better
© GOOD Worldwide LLC. - all rights reserved
  • Company details
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • RSS
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Powered by Verkata