Sports Marketing: The Lesson from Icasa for Clubs

Icasa became a search spike when it reached the semifinals. See how sports marketing transforms that fan attention into a base and revenue.

by Cleverson Gouvêa

Sports Marketing: The Lesson from Icasa for Clubs

Sports marketing ceased to be a privilege of big clubs the day a team from the Cearense Série B became a national topic in a matter of hours. When Icasa, from Juazeiro do Norte, embarked on its campaign towards the semifinals, the club's name skyrocketed in searches — and most teams in this situation have no idea what to do with that attention. In this guide, I show how to capture that spike and turn fandom into revenue.

TL;DR

  • Sports marketing is the use of digital presence, paid traffic, and data to transform fan passion into loyal audiences and predictable revenue.
  • The Icasa case shows a pattern: a good campaign generates a search spike — but the spike lasts hours, not weeks.
  • A regional club doesn't need a Série A budget; it needs a method: capture the audience at the right moment, nurture, and convert.
  • The five pillars: social media, content, paid traffic, data/CRM, and monetization (tickets, fan membership, store).
  • The metrics that matter are revenue per fan and acquisition cost — not the number of likes.

The Icasa case: when the campaign becomes a search spike

The Associação Desportiva Recreativa e Cultural Icasa (ADRC Icasa), from Juazeiro do Norte, in Cariri, Ceará, is a textbook case. On May 13, 2026, the club beat Guarani de Juazeiro 2-1 at Romeirão, with goals from Edson Cariús and Cássio Bruno, and secured a direct spot in the semifinals of the Cearense Série B. In the first semifinal match on May 24, they drew 0-0 with Crateús, leaving the decision for the match on May 30.

Each of these dates produced the same effect: a search spike for the club's name. Fans wanting the game time, journalists looking for the lineup, curious people checking the score. It's organic, free, and highly qualified attention — and this is where sports marketing separates those who grow from those who just play.

The problem is the window. This interest doesn't sustain itself. After the final whistle, the search curve plummets. Those without the structure to capture this audience at the exact moment miss the opportunity — and it only returns at the next big game.

What digital sports marketing is (and what it isn't)

Sports marketing is the discipline that connects fan passion to concrete club objectives: audience, engagement, sales, and sponsorship. In the digital version, this means using social media, content, paid traffic, and data to build a relationship that doesn't depend solely on the result on the field.

It's not just posting a game photo on Instagram. Posting is tactics; sports marketing is strategy. The difference lies in having a goal behind each action: is this post meant to capture an email? To sell a ticket? To reactivate a fan who has disappeared?

It's also not exclusive to elite clubs. Precisely smaller clubs — state Série B, access divisions, youth teams — have the greatest margin for gain because they compete in an environment where almost no one does their homework. A well-organized regional team digitally can have proportionally higher engagement than a first-division club on autopilot.

Why regional clubs waste the attention they gain

I've followed dozens of traffic campaigns, and the pattern repeats outside of football as well: the company invests heavily to generate interest but has no place to catch those who arrive. In sports, the waste is even more painful because the attention comes for free.

The fan searches for the club on Google or Instagram after a win. What do they find? Often, an outdated profile, no link to tickets, no way to become a member, nothing to capture their contact. The attention evaporates.

The mistakes I see most often:

  1. Not capturing contact. Without the fan's email or WhatsApp, every spike of interest has to be regained from scratch at the next game.
  2. Relying only on organic reach. Social media reach has dropped to a fraction of what it was. Without paid distribution, a good post dies within its own base.
  3. Treating social media as a bulletin board. Content only about results and lineups doesn't create a bond on days without games.
  4. Ignoring data. Without measuring where the fan comes from and what they do, decisions become guesswork.

The 5 pillars of a sports marketing strategy

A working sports marketing operation relies on five pillars that reinforce each other. None alone solves the problem.

1. Purposeful social presence

Each channel has a role. Instagram and TikTok to build identity and reach new fans; a simple, fast page to centralize tickets, fan membership, and store; WhatsApp for direct, high-conversion communication. A fan who opens a WhatsApp message has much higher intent than someone just scrolling the feed — it's worth understanding how to structure this channel with the official WhatsApp API to avoid blocks and be able to scale broadcasts.

2. Content that lives between games

The calendar has few games and many empty days. It's on these days that the bond is built: behind-the-scenes, club history, former idols, fan polls. Relationship content keeps the audience warm for when the spike of interest returns.

3. Paid traffic to amplify what works

When organic content engages well, paid traffic comes in to multiply reach and capture those who don't yet follow the club. It's the fastest way to turn a good moment — like a qualification — into base growth.

4. Data and CRM

Every interaction leaves a trace. Centralizing contacts, segmenting by behavior (bought a ticket? member? only likes posts?), and measuring the funnel is what separates marketing from guesswork.

5. Monetization

In the end, presence must turn into revenue: tickets, fan membership plans, store products, sponsor activation. Each previous pillar exists to feed this one.

As a traffic manager, I'm the first to say that ads are not a silver bullet. In sports marketing, paid traffic pays off big in some moments and burns money in others.

Situation Does paid traffic make sense? Why
Selling tickets for a decisive game Yes Urgency + hot local audience = high conversion
Fan membership campaign Yes Recurring revenue justifies investing in acquisition
Post-qualification (interest spike) Yes Retargeting those who searched for the club converts cheaply
Asking for page likes without a goal No Vanity doesn't pay the bills
Without a structured landing page No Traffic without a place to convert is money down the drain

The rule is simple: only boost when there is a clear destination and a measurable goal. For a regional club, starting with retargeting — advertising to those who have already visited the site or interacted — is usually the most efficient use of each dollar, because it speaks to people who have already shown interest.

And there's a little-used trick: geolocated campaigns in the city and surrounding area, activated in the 48 hours before the game. The audience is concentrated, the cost is low, and the urgency of the match makes the ad perform.

Turning fans into revenue

Attention that doesn't turn into revenue is a hobby, not a business. A club's funnel can be designed in four stages:

  1. Attract — organic content and paid traffic bring the fan to the club's channels.
  2. Capture — membership form, WhatsApp list, or registration at ticket purchase turn the anonymous into a known contact.
  3. Relate — ongoing communication maintains the bond on days without games.
  4. Convert — tickets, membership fees, store products.

WhatsApp is the engine of this funnel in Brazil. A segmented broadcast to the member base on the eve of a decisive game converts at a rate that no email can achieve here. For larger volumes, automating part of this service with AI agents frees the team for strategic tasks without leaving the fan unanswered.

Common mistakes that sink a club's marketing

Even with good intentions, you can make serious mistakes. The pitfalls that cost the most:

  • Buying followers. An inflated base destroys real engagement and misleads the board.
  • Disappearing between games. The algorithm and the fan quickly forget those who don't show up.
  • Not measuring anything. Without metrics, no one knows what worked — and the mistake repeats.
  • Copying the big club. The budget and audience reality is different; what works in Série A can break a regional club.
  • Outsourcing without strategy. Hiring someone who only schedules posts, without a business goal, is spending to stay still.

Metrics that matter (and the vanity ones that deceive)

Big numbers are not synonymous with results. In sports marketing, it's worth separating vanity metrics from business metrics.

Vanity metric Metric that matters
Number of followers Contact base growth (email/WhatsApp)
Post likes Conversion rate to ticket or membership
Gross reach Acquisition cost per paying fan
Video views Revenue per fan over the season

The guiding question: does this number help me decide where to put the next dollar? If the answer is no, it's vanity. Tracking acquisition cost and revenue per fan gives the club clarity to invest where returns appear — and cut what only inflates reports.

A simple content calendar for game week

Strategy without routine stays on paper. For a club with a lean structure, a predictable weekly calendar solves half the problem — the team knows what to produce, and the fan knows what to expect. A model that works in the week of an important match:

  • Four days before: a story or behind-the-scenes that builds a bond (retrospective of a classic, interview with an idol, fan memory). Relationship content, without asking for anything.
  • Three days before: ticket sales opening with a clear call and direct link. This is where geolocated paid traffic comes in.
  • Two days before: expectation content — match numbers, history, prediction poll to engage.
  • Eve: WhatsApp broadcast to the member and past buyer base, reminding them of the game and facilitating purchase.
  • Game day: real-time coverage on stories and, at the final whistle, the result content that often goes viral.
  • Next day: capture the spike. Those who searched for the club after the win should find an invitation to become a member or join the WhatsApp list.

Notice that commercial content (tickets, membership) always appears supported by relationship content. This proportion — asking little, delivering a lot — is what keeps the base engaged without tiring the fan. It's a sustainable rhythm even for someone handling the channels alone.

Conclusion: the digital game is also decided in the details

Icasa showed, in practice, that even a state Série B club can concentrate national attention when they play well. The difference between the team that grows and the one that only appears occasionally is not in the budget size — it's in having a method to capture that attention and turn it into a base, relationship, and revenue.

Start with the basics: a page that converts, an organized WhatsApp channel, and the habit of measuring. Then, use paid traffic to amplify what already works. If you want, I can help your club or business set up this sports marketing structure the right way — from the tracking pixel to the first geolocated campaign.