The contribution of the Birkbeck Sport Business Centre to improving standards of governance in the UK sports industry.
Submitting Institution
Birkbeck CollegeUnit of Assessment
Business and Management StudiesSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services: Business and Management
Summary of the impact
The Birkbeck Sport Business Centre has been involved in research
examining governance within
the sport industry since 1999. Findings from research into the football
industry have contributed to
policy debate through parliamentary enquiries while research on the
broader sports sector has
been used by the Sport and Recreation Alliance to improve governance
practices across national
governing bodies of sport (NGBs). In particular, the research informed the
development of the
Voluntary Code of Good Governance for the Sport and Recreation Sector,
a best practice guide
that has been adopted by more than 60 National Governing Bodies of Sport
in the UK.
Underpinning research
Background context
There is a growing body of academic research examining board-level
governance within for-profit
and non-profit organisations. However, research in the sport sector is
still in its infancy. The UK is
a particularly relevant context in which to study boards of sport
organisations as recent years have
seen commercial growth, a shift from amateur to professional structures
across many sports,
instances of poor management and failures in governance at a number of
sporting organisations,
and increased levels of public funding. These factors, when combined with
the broader
modernisation reforms within the public sector carried out by successive
governments, have led to
the situation in which boards of sport organisations have had to
demonstrate increasing
accountability and transparency (3.4).
The research
The Birkbeck Sport Business Centre, a dedicated research centre within the
Management
Department has been involved in research on governance and regulation in
sport since 1999. The
initial focus was on the professional football industry with an annual
quantitative survey of all
professional football clubs in England and Scotland taking place between
2001 and 2006 (3.3, 3.6).
Further research on the governance and regulation of the football industry
has continued since
2006 although a more qualitative approach has been taken based on
interview data and the
analysis of various secondary sources of data from the football
authorities (3.1, 3.2). In 2007 a
second stream of research examined governance within the wider sport
industry, with a specific
focus on national governing bodies of sport (NGBs). In 2010 the Birkbeck
Sport Business Centre
undertook the first ever quantitative survey of the 300 NGBs that are
recognised by the four home
country sports councils in the UK — Sport England, Sport Northern Ireland,
Sportscotland and the
Sports Council for Wales (3.5). This survey was replicated in 2011
with a total of 75 NGBs
responding (3.4).
Key findings
The survey research on the football industry was published annually
between 2001 and 2006
(`State of the Game', various years) alongside other academic
outputs (Michie and Oughton, 2005;
Hamil and Walters, 2010; Walters and Hamil, 2013) (3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.6).
The findings of this body of
research demonstrated that the football industry had failed to keep pace
with the wider
modernisation of business management practices, that the industry was
plagued by poor financial
performance, that the incumbent regulatory structures do not encourage
financial stability, and that
the consequences have been multiple organisational bankruptcies across the
sector (3.1, 3.2).
The research reports from the two surveys on governance of NGBs were
published on the
Birkbeck Sport Business Centre website and demonstrated key challenges
facing NGB boards.
The findings revealed that the majority of NGB boards in the UK are
entirely volunteer-run and that
nearly two thirds of NGBs have no paid executives on their boards. This
was seen as a
contributory factor to explain the fact that almost half of NGBs in the
survey felt that board
members had insufficient time to commit to their responsibilities. The
voluntary nature of the board
potentially explains why board induction and board training are often
lacking across NGBs and why
only a small proportion of NGBs surveyed evaluated board performance (3.4,
3.5).
Key researchers
The directors of the Birkbeck Sport Business Centre include Hamil,
Trenberth, Walters and Tacon.
Other members that have been involved in the centre and the research
include Matthew Holt
(2002-2006), Professor Jonathan Michie (1999-2003), Professor Christine
Oughton (1999-2007),
and Lee Shailer (Research Officer, 2001-2004).
References to the research
3.1 Walters, G and Hamil, S (2013) The contests for power and influence
over the regulatory space
in the English professional football industry, 1980 - 2012, Business
History (published online in
June 2013).
3.2 Hamil, S. & Walters, G. (2010). Financial Performance in English
Professional Football: "An
Inconvenient Truth", Soccer & Society, 11(4): 354-372.
3.3 Michie, J., and Oughton, C. (2005) The Corporate Governance of
Professional Football Clubs
in England, Corporate Governance: An International Review, 13(4):
517-531.
Details of the impact
Significance of the Research
The findings from these research projects have a significance that extends
beyond academia. The
research on the football industry has contributed to the written evidence
produced by Hamil and
Walters for two parliamentary enquiries. In addition, individual members
of the Birkbeck Sport
Business Centre have been invited to provide oral evidence at these
enquiries starting with the All
Party Parliamentary Football Group inquiry into `English Football and
its Governance' in May 2008
(5.10). The written and oral evidence drew on the reports and
accompanying academic articles and
contributed to the findings of the Committee's final report. In
particular, oral evidence given by
Walters on the issue of club finances and debt based on the research was
cited in the final report
of the All Party Parliamentary Football Group in 2009 (5.3).
Written and oral evidence was provided
to the inquiry by the House of Commons Culture, Media & Sport
Committee into the governance of
English football in February 2011 (5.4, 5.5). The evidence
presented at this inquiry drew on the
research by Hamil and Walters (2010) and Walters and Hamil (2013) that set
out the poor financial
performance of the football industry and the issues with regulatory
structures. The oral evidence
provided by Hamil was cited in the final report (and the media) (5.6)
and informed some of the
recommendations made by the Committee, for example, in relation to the
calls for the
implementation of a club licensing scheme to promote financial
sustainability at football clubs and
the abolition of the Football Creditors' Rule (5.5).
The findings from the survey research in 2010 and 2011 on NGB governance
contributed to the
development of the principles contained within the Voluntary Code of
Good Governance for the
Sport and Recreation Sector, a code developed by the Sport and
Recreation Alliance (the umbrella
organisation for the governing and representative bodies of sport and
recreation in the UK) (5.1,
5.7, 5.8). Walters and Tacon were invited to sit on the Governance
Steering Group that was
responsible for the development of the code. The significance of this
research has been
acknowledged in the House of Lords following a debate initiated by Lord
Moynihan, then Chair of
the British Olympic Association, on the need for good governance in sport
and was referred to by
Baroness Jones of Whitchurch as "a great starting point for governing
bodies struggling to raise
their game" (5.9). It has been referenced in the publication
by the Academy of Social Sciences —
`Making the Case for the Social Sciences: No 5: Sport and Leisure' (5.2).
Expanding Reach
Although some of the findings illustrated in this paragraph are prior to
the impact period, they
provide context and background to the impact post 2008. The findings from
the annual State of the
Game survey were disseminated first through a series of annual reports
available on the Birkbeck
Sport Business Centre website (http://www.sportbusinesscentre.com/research/research-papers/).
Each
report was launched at a major event attended by representatives of all
the key football
industry stakeholders. The foreword for each report was provided by a
major public figure in order
to underline the key objective of the research, to inform the development
of best governance
practice in the industry e.g. in 2006, the Rt. Hon Richard Caborn, MP,
Minister for Sport,
Department of Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS); in 2005, by Brian
Barwick, CEO, The Football
Association, with an associated preface by Lars Christer Olsson, CEO,
UEFA, the governing body
of European football; in 2004 by Kate Barker, Chair, the Financial
Advisory Committee, The
Football Association; in 2003, by the Rt. Hon Tessa Jowell MP, Secretary
of State for Culture,
Media and Sport. The support provided underlined the authority which the
State of the Game
research brought to the argument, promoted by leading government and
football industry figures,
to promote better governance standards in the industry. Data from the
surveys informed the
analysis in a number of academic journal articles through which the
research findings were
disseminated to the wider academic community.
Hamil and Waters were able to build on the pre-2008 research activity to
extend the depth, but
critically the scope, of the Centre's research agenda, most notably by
expanding the coverage to
include investigations into the quality of governance in major sports
beyond football.
The findings from the survey research in 2010 and 2011 on NGB governance
have been
disseminated in a number of ways. Presentations of the results were made
to more than 40 NGBs
at two events held at Birkbeck in 2010 and 2011. These were in
collaboration with Timothy Dutton
QC, author of a major report into governance standards at NGBs, and funded
by the governing
funding agency SportEngland, delivering the keynote address:
http://www.sportbusinesscentre.com/events/good-governance-in-sport-the-road-to-sporting-success/.
All NGBs within the UK have received copies of the final reports in order
to raise awareness of
issues around the role and responsibilities of the board. The findings
have been used by the Sport
and Recreation Alliance, first as a way to draw attention to particular
issues when presenting to
NGB board members and second, to inform the development of the Voluntary
Code of Good
Governance for the Sport and Recreation Sector. (5.1) This
code has been adopted by more than
60 National Governing Bodies of Sport in the UK (5.8) and is
helping to raise standards of
governance within the boards of sport organisations. Further this code has
formed the benchmark
against which the Sport and Recreation Alliance have developed a
governance guide for European
sports organisations, having been the lead on an EU Commission funded
project between 2011
and 2013. Walters and Tacon have been involved in providing research
support for this project.
Sources to corroborate the impact
5.1 Referee who can corroborate the impact of Good Governance in
Sport:
A Survey of UK National Governing Bodies of Sport.
Governance and Compliance Officer
Sport and Recreation Alliance.
5.2 Academy of Social Sciences (2011) Making the Case for the Social
Sciences: No 5: Sport and Leisure, London: The Academy of Social
Sciences.
5.3 All Party Parliamentary Football Group (2009) English Football and
its Governance:
http://www.allpartyfootball.com/APFG_Report_on_English_Football_&_Its_Governance_April_2009%5B1%5D.pdf.
5.4 House of Commons Culture, Media & Sport Committee (29th
July, 2011). Football Governance.
HC 792-I. Volume I: Report, together with formal minutes.
5.5 House of Commons Culture, Media & Sport Committee (29th
July, 2011). Football Governance.
HC 792-I. Volume II: Oral and written evidence. Written evidence
submitted by Mr Sean Hamil
& Dr Geoff Walters, Birkbeck Sport Business Centre, Birkbeck College,
University of London.
5.6 Conn, D (2011) `Lord Triesman reveals a bullied and impotent FA to
Commons inquiry', The
Guardian (8th February 2011) www.guardian.co.uk/football/david-conn-inside-sport-blog/2011/feb/08/lord-triesman-fa-commons-inquiry
(Birkbeck Sport Business Centre member
Sean Hamil's contribution to the House of Commons Culture, Media &
Sport Committee's
enquiry into the governance of English football is quoted in The
Guardian).
5.7
Sport and Recreation Alliance (2011) Voluntary Code of Good
Governance for the Sport and Recreation Sector, London: Sport and
Recreation Alliance.
5.8 Sport and Recreation Alliance `Organisations signed up'
(feature on the Sport and Recreation
Alliance website
http://www.sportandrecreation.org.uk/smart-sport/voluntary-code/organisations-signed.
5.9 The transcription from the House of Lords debate (2010)
www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201011/ldhansrd/text/101111-0003.htm#10111158000604.
5.10 Walters, G., and Hamil, S. (2008). All Party Parliamentary
Football Group: Inquiry into English
Football and its Governance: Memorandum of Evidence, Birkbeck Sport
Business Centre.