Most minor league teams market in isolation, relying entirely on their own channels, budgets, and audiences to drive awareness and attendance. This approach misses a significant opportunity: partnerships with organizations that already reach your target audiences.
Tourism boards, hotels, attractions, restaurants, and local businesses are actively looking for content and activities to promote. They have established audiences, marketing budgets, and promotional channels that can amplify your reach far beyond what you could achieve alone.
Strategic partnerships create mutual value: partners gain content and activities to promote, while your team gains exposure to new audiences without proportional marketing spend.
This post covers the framework for identifying partnership opportunities, structuring mutually beneficial arrangements, and implementing co-marketing initiatives that expand your digital reach.
Understanding Partnership Value
Before pursuing partnerships, it’s important to understand what you offer and what you need.
What Your Team Provides to Partners
For Tourism Organizations:
- Activity content for their websites and promotional materials
- Authentic local experience they can promote to visitors
- Family-friendly entertainment option
- Group activity for tour operators
- Content for social media and newsletters
For Hotels:
- Activity recommendation for guests
- Package opportunity (hotel stay + game tickets)
- Value-add amenity for booking incentive
- Content for property marketing
For Local Attractions:
- Complementary activity for multi-day itineraries
- Cross-promotional opportunities
- Shared audience development
- Joint package possibilities
For Restaurants and Businesses:
- Foot traffic opportunity (pre-game or post-game)
- Event marketing opportunity
- Community connection and visibility
- Corporate outing venue option
What Partners Provide to Your Team
Audience Access:
- Established email lists
- Social media followers
- Website traffic
- Physical foot traffic
Promotional Channels:
- Website features and listings
- Email newsletter mentions
- Social media posts
- Print materials and maps
- Hotel room materials
Credibility and Trust:
- Third-party endorsement
- Association with established brands
- Tourism board seal of approval
Potential Revenue:
- Package sales and commissions
- Group bookings through partners
- Corporate event referrals
Partnership Categories and Opportunities
Different partner types offer different opportunities and require different approaches.
Category 1: Official Tourism Organizations
Partners: Convention & Visitors Bureaus, Tourism Development Councils, Destination Marketing Organizations
Typical Structure:
- Listed on official tourism website
- Included in visitor guides and maps
- Featured in seasonal campaigns
- Social media promotion
- Potential cooperative advertising
Value Proposition for Them:
- Free, family-friendly activity to promote
- Authentic local experience
- Content for tourism marketing
- Activity for slow tourism periods
How to Approach:
- Research your local tourism organization
- Identify their marketing objectives and gaps
- Propose specific ways you fill those gaps
- Offer to provide content, photos, promotional support
- Request specific promotional placements
Example Partnership Elements:
- Featured listing on “Things to Do” page
- Inclusion in official visitor guide
- Social media posts during baseball season
- Joint promotional campaign for “Family Fun Summer”
- Cooperative advertising for specific game promotions
Category 2: Hotel and Accommodation Partners
Partners: Hotels, resorts, vacation rentals, B&Bs
Typical Structure:
- Game schedule in hotel rooms
- Tickets available at front desk
- Package deals (room + tickets)
- Promotional materials at property
- Cross-promotion on websites
Value Proposition for Them:
- Activity recommendation for guests
- Differentiator from competitors
- Value-add for booking conversion
- Content for property marketing
- Corporate event venue option
How to Approach:
- Identify hotels that cater to families or leisure travelers
- Propose specific package structures
- Offer promotional support (social media mentions, website reciprocal links)
- Make ticket redemption process easy for hotel staff
- Provide updated schedules and promotional materials
Example Partnership Elements:
- “Stay and Play” package (discounted tickets with room booking)
- Game schedules placed in every room
- Ticket vouchers sold at front desk
- Hotel featured on your group sales page
- Joint social media promotion
Category 3: Local Attractions and Entertainment
Partners: Museums, aquariums, amusement parks, other entertainment venues
Typical Structure:
- Cross-promotional agreements
- Multi-attraction packages
- Reciprocal discounts
- Joint marketing campaigns
- Shared audience development
Value Proposition for Them:
- Extended visitor itineraries (more reason to visit area)
- Complementary activity (different from their offering)
- Shared marketing costs
- Audience cross-pollination
How to Approach:
- Identify non-competing attractions
- Propose mutual benefit arrangements
- Structure reciprocal promotional agreements
- Create joint packages or “attraction passes”
- Share marketing costs for broader campaigns
Example Partnership Elements:
- “3-Day Fun Pass” (your games + their attraction + one other)
- Reciprocal ticket discounts (“Show your baseball ticket, get $2 off”)
- Joint social media campaigns
- Cross-promotional materials at each venue
- Shared email marketing to combined lists
Category 4: Restaurants and Local Businesses
Partners: Restaurants, breweries, family entertainment centers, retail
Typical Structure:
- Pre-game or post-game dining partnerships
- Corporate outing packages
- Cross-promotional offers
- Game day specials
- Shared advertising
Value Proposition for Them:
- Foot traffic on game days
- Association with community entertainment
- Corporate event add-on option
- Marketing exposure to your audience
How to Approach:
- Identify businesses near ballpark or on common routes
- Propose game day specials or package deals
- Offer promotional support through your channels
- Structure mutually beneficial discount arrangements
- Make partnership easy to implement
Example Partnership Elements:
- “Dine and Play” packages (dinner + game tickets)
- Game day specials at partner restaurants
- Post-game dessert partnerships
- Partner featured in game day emails
- Joint social media contests and promotions
Category 5: Corporate and Community Partners
Partners: Large employers, chambers of commerce, youth sports organizations, schools
Typical Structure:
- Group outing partnerships
- Employee appreciation packages
- Youth sports team relationships
- Community event collaborations
- Cause marketing initiatives
Value Proposition for Them:
- Employee engagement and morale
- Client entertainment options
- Youth program enrichment
- Community involvement visibility
How to Approach:
- Identify large employers and active community organizations
- Understand their employee engagement or community goals
- Propose specific programs aligned with their objectives
- Offer turnkey solutions with minimal effort required
- Demonstrate community impact and value
Example Partnership Elements:
- “Corporate Appreciation Nights” with company recognition
- Youth sports team discount programs
- School reading achievement rewards (free tickets)
- Non-profit fundraising opportunities
- Community cause nights with donation portions
Partnership Development Process
Successful partnerships follow a systematic development process.
Step 1: Research and Identification
Identify Potential Partners:
- Review local tourism board website for contact information
- List hotels within 10 miles of ballpark
- Identify complementary attractions
- Note restaurants and businesses in your area
- Research major employers
Prioritize Targets:
- Which have largest reach?
- Which align best with your audience?
- Which have existing partnership programs?
- Which are easiest to approach?
Step 2: Value Proposition Development
Define What You Offer:
- Audience size and demographics
- Promotional channels (email list, social media, website)
- Specific promotional opportunities
- Flexibility in partnership structure
Research Partner Needs:
- Review their marketing objectives
- Identify gaps you can fill
- Understand their audience
- Note their current partnerships
Step 3: Initial Outreach
Outreach Template:
Subject: Partnership Opportunity: [Your Team] & [Partner Organization]
Dear [Contact Name],
I’m reaching out from [Your Team] to explore a potential partnership that could benefit both our organizations.
We’re looking to expand our reach to [specific audience], and I noticed [specific observation about their organization/goals]. I believe there’s an opportunity for us to work together in a way that provides value to both our audiences.
Specifically, I’m proposing [brief description of partnership idea], which would:
- [Benefit #1 for them]
- [Benefit #2 for them]
- [Benefit #3 for them]
Would you be open to a brief conversation to explore this further? I’m happy to work around your schedule.
Best regards, [Your Name] [Your Title] [Contact Information]
Step 4: Partnership Proposal
Proposal Elements:
- Partnership overview and objectives
- Specific activities and commitments from both parties
- Timeline and schedule
- Promotional plan
- Success metrics
- Terms and duration
Keep Initial Proposals Simple:
- Start with one season or specific timeframe
- Define clear, achievable commitments
- Build complexity as relationship develops
Step 5: Implementation and Management
Make It Easy for Partners:
- Provide all necessary materials (logos, photos, copy)
- Send regular updates and reminders
- Track and report performance
- Respond quickly to questions
- Fulfill commitments reliably
Regular Communication:
- Monthly check-ins during season
- Share performance data
- Gather feedback
- Adjust as needed
Step 6: Evaluation and Renewal
Measure Success:
- Track attributable traffic and sales
- Monitor promotional reach
- Gather partner feedback
- Calculate return on investment (time and resources)
Renewal Decisions:
- Continue successful partnerships
- Adjust underperforming arrangements
- End partnerships that don’t provide value
- Expand partnerships that exceed expectations
Digital Integration Strategies
Partnerships work best when they’re integrated into your digital presence.
Website Integration
Partner Pages:
- Create dedicated “Partners” or “Packages” page
- Feature hotel and attraction partners
- Link to partner websites
- Include package details and booking information
Cross-Linking:
- Link from partner sites to your schedule
- Link from your site to partner offerings
- Use tracking parameters to measure effectiveness
Package Landing Pages:
- Create specific pages for each major partnership
- “Stay and Play” page for hotel packages
- “Dine and Play” page for restaurant partners
- Optimize these pages for relevant searches
Social Media Integration
Co-Promotion:
- Tag partners in relevant posts
- Share their content when appropriate
- Create joint contests and giveaways
- Feature partner offerings
Content Collaboration:
- Co-create content (videos, photos, guides)
- Share behind-the-scenes from both organizations
- Highlight partnership success stories
Email Marketing Integration
Partner Features:
- Include partner specials in game day emails
- Feature package deals in promotional campaigns
- Co-brand emails when appropriate
- Cross-promote to combined email lists (with permission)
Analytics and Tracking
Track Partnership Performance:
- Use UTM parameters on all partner links
- Monitor referral traffic from partner websites
- Track package sales and attribution
- Measure social media engagement on co-promoted content
Common Partnership Challenges
Challenge 1: Unequal Value Exchange
Problem: Partner feels they’re providing more value than receiving
Solution:
- Clearly define value metrics upfront
- Provide regular performance reports
- Adjust commitment levels to balance value
- Be willing to increase your promotional efforts
Challenge 2: Inconsistent Execution
Problem: Partner doesn’t follow through on commitments
Solution:
- Simplify requirements to reduce friction
- Provide all necessary materials
- Send regular reminders with specific asks
- Consider whether partnership is worth continuing
Challenge 3: Measuring Impact
Problem: Difficult to attribute results to specific partnerships
Solution:
- Use unique tracking links and codes
- Survey attendees about how they heard about games
- Track referral sources in analytics
- Focus on directional trends rather than perfect attribution
Challenge 4: Partnership Overwhelm
Problem: Too many partnerships become difficult to manage
Solution:
- Start with 3-5 key partnerships
- Develop systems for routine communications
- Use templates for common materials
- Prioritize partners providing greatest value
Partnership Success Timeline
Partnerships develop over time rather than delivering immediate results.
Months 1-2: Foundation
- Identify and research potential partners
- Develop value propositions
- Initial outreach and conversations
- First partnership agreements established
Months 3-4: Implementation
- Materials created and distributed
- Cross-promotional campaigns begin
- Systems and processes established
- Early performance tracking
Months 5-8: Optimization
- Evaluate partnership performance
- Adjust promotional approaches
- Expand successful partnerships
- Add new partners based on learnings
Season End: Evaluation
- Comprehensive partnership review
- Calculate total value generated
- Gather partner feedback
- Plan for next season improvements
When Partnerships Make Sense
Partnerships aren’t equally valuable for all teams:
Partnerships Are Priority When:
- You’re in a tourism market with active tourism board
- Hotels and attractions nearby serve similar audiences
- You have capacity to manage relationships
- You can provide consistent promotional support
Focus Elsewhere First When:
- You lack basic digital infrastructure (fix technical foundations first)
- You don’t have capacity to fulfill partnership commitments
- Limited tourism or entertainment infrastructure in your market
- Other revenue channels offer better return on effort
What’s Next in This Series
Post 7: Search Visibility Strategy – Deep dive into SEO methodology for teams in tourism markets and competitive entertainment landscapes
Post 8: 90-Day Implementation Roadmap – Putting it all together with a realistic implementation timeline and priority framework
About Base Path Media
Base Path Media helps baseball organizations develop strategic partnerships and co-marketing initiatives that expand audience reach and create shared value through systematic relationship development and implementation frameworks.

