• Loading stock data...
Friday, September 12, 2025
Tuned In is Almost Sold Out! Limited Tickets Remain!

Women’s Sports Still a Rare Investment Among Fortune 500 Companies

  • Only 33 companies have sponsorship deals with the WNBA, NWSL, and PWHL, according to data provided exclusively to “Front Office Sports.”
  • Of 40 industries studied, not one sponsors women’s sports exclusively.
Jul 17, 2024; Arlington, Texas, USA; Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) reacts during the first half against the Dallas Wings at College Park Center.
Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

The rise of professional women’s sports is hard to ignore. Unless you’re a Fortune 500 company. New data shows the vast majority of the U.S.’s biggest companies are not spending their ad dollars on women’s pro sports. 

Only 33 companies in the Fortune 500 (6%) have league or team sponsorship deals with the WNBA, NWSL, and PWHL as of June 30, according to data provided exclusively to Front Office Sports by consulting agency Gather. Twenty percent of Fortune 500 companies sponsor comparable men’s sports leagues (NBA, MLS, and NHL).

“There was nothing surprising to me about that,” says David Gaspar, the head of innovation at Gather. “It confirmed that there’s a disparity; however, there is a tremendous amount of optimism in the data. Those companies that decided to sponsor women’s sports are really doing it in a pretty big way, and they’re really putting energy behind it.”

Ally Financial is one of the more notable examples among that 6% of Fortune 500 companies that sponsor women’s sports. Over two years ago, Ally launched its 50/50 Pledge with the aim of parity in ad dollars spent in men’s and women’s sports. 

“We are a very ‘deeds not words’ type of company in everything we do,” says Ally Financial CMO Andrea Brimmer. “The other thing really was this notion of looking at the data and seeing around a corner what was coming next in terms of the rise in the popularity of women’s sports. It was only a matter of helping move the marketplace to provide more access for consumers so that they could discover how good women’s sports really are.”

It had been a slow simmer since Title IX was expanded in 1972 to include equal access to women and girls in high school and college sports. A year later, Billie Jean King helped secure equal pay for women’s tennis players at the US Open. The LPGA, launched in 1950, the Olympics, and the U.S. women’s national soccer team’s 25-year run of success are some of the other drivers. 

Bill Moseley, director of sponsorships and experiential marketing at AT&T, credits the “Wubble”—the WNBA’s 2020 season inside a Bradenton, Fla., bubble amid the pandemic—as one of the initial catalysts behind the recent rise of women’s sports visibility. 

“It contributed to this dynamic because that opened the aperture for fans,” Moseley says. there was a demand for inclusion. I think women’s sports helped fill that. … There is an audience [for women’s sports] if you put the content in the right place and expose it to the right eyeballs, the viewers are there and engaged.”

Women’s college hoops has continued to surge as well, powered the past few seasons by Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese before they entered the WNBA where established stars like A’ja Wilson and Breanna Stewart had already proved the league’s meager TV deal ($60 million per year) vastly undervalued the new fans drawn to the sport. Last month, the WNBA agreed to a new 11-year, $2.2 billion deal ($200 million per season). 

The overall sponsor dollars won’t see a comparable jump, at least immediately. 

“While some brands have shifted some of their spend from men’s to women’s sports, it’s more likely you’re going to see a slower, steadier increase in the investment [in women’s sports] versus this big spike,” Moseley says. “That tends to be more sustainable.”

Ally’s spending on women’s sports—from the NWSL to being the title sponsor of the ACC Women’s Basketball Tournament and the ACC Women’s Soccer Championship—has boosted the brand. A report by the firm Brand Finance showed Ally’s brand value jumped 31%, its highest jump in five years, when the financial services industry overall saw brand values decline 3%. 

“What was different from year to year? It was the lean into women’s sports,” Brimmer says. “And while we can’t point to that data and say, ‘Hey, it’s entirely attributable to everything that we did in women’s sports,’ it doesn’t take a genius to figure out that a heck of a lot of it was probably attributable to that.”

Among 40 total categories studied, 24 industries sponsor both men’s and women’s basketball, hockey, and soccer pro sports leagues—including beverage, hotels, and apparel—but not a single industry sponsors women’s sports exclusively.

“If there’s an ROI, they’re going to do it,” Gaspar says. “No one’s doing this because they think it’s nice. They’re doing it because they think there’s a return on investment here. Full stop. And that’s what we counsel our clients about as well. This is about return. I think the numbers will continue to go up, and, when it comes to ROI, there’s a fantastic investment to be made in women’s sports right now.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Eagles-Chiefs Super Bowl Rematch Could Set More NFL Ratings Records

Fox will nationally televise Sunday afternoon’s matchup.
Jun 27, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view of a Wilson basketball and the Dallas Wings logo during the game between the Wings and the Indiana Fever at the American Airlines Center.

Democratic Women’s Caucus Urges WNBA to End CBA Stalemate

The league and WNBPA must reach an agreement by Oct. 31.
Mar 4, 2025; Washington, DC, USA; House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., speaks with Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, R-Ga., ahead of President Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on March 4, 2025.

House Republicans Delay SCORE Act Vote Tentatively Planned for Next Week

They didn’t believe they had enough votes to pass the bill.
[Subscription Customers Only] Jul 9, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Real Madrid CF forward Kylian Mbappe (9) reacts after a semifinal match of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium.

CVC Builds Out Sports Division Amid Crowded PE Market

The firm’s sports portfolio is reportedly worth $13.6 billion.

Featured Today

ESPN’s ‘MNF’ Ratings Up 8% As NFL Surges to Strong Start

ESPN posts its second-best Week 1 “Monday Night Football” audience.
Sep 7, 2025; Orchard Park, New York, USA; Buffalo Bills fans react during the fourth quarter against the Baltimore Ravens at Highmark Stadium.
September 9, 2025

As Bills Ascend, Their Next Frontier Lies in Canada

Buffalo and the powerful Canadian entity MLSE come together in a new pact.
opinion
September 9, 2025

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly from NFL’s Week 1 Broadcasts

Many viewers decried the addition of ads to “NFL RedZone.”
Aug 23, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen (17) leads the team onto the field for warm ups before a game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium.
September 7, 2025

Slow Burn: The NFL’s Private-Equity Era So Far

Three deals have been struck to date. But the league is bullish.
Jonathan Mariner

Former MLB CFO Jumps to PE, Says Teams Are Undervalued

Mariner worked in Major League Baseball for 24 years.
March 20, 2025

Nike Struggles Continue, but Signs of Turnaround Appear

The embattled company beats tepid expectations in both revenue and earnings.
James Harden
April 24, 2025

Adidas Posts Big Profits in First Quarter Without Yeezy

Profits and sales are up after selling off remaining Yeezys last year.
Sponsored

How World Series Champ Dexter Fowler Became a Premier League Team Owner

Dexter Fowler discusses navigating retirement and embracing new roles as an owner & investor.
Oracle Park
March 18, 2025

S.F. Giants Selling Stake to Private Equity to Pay for Facility Upgrades

The team said the cash would not be used to grow payroll.
Aug 11, 2024; Paris, France; Medals are carried out on Louis Vuitton trays after the women's volleyball gold medal match during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at South Paris Arena
February 16, 2025

LVMH’s New Push: World’s Most Powerful Luxury Group Is Coming for Sports

LVMH is making long-term deals—and they’re not done.
February 14, 2025

DraftKings Turns First Full-Year Profit, Stock Up 47% in 2025

The company’s sports betting business continues to grow despite headwinds.
Billie Jean King
February 13, 2025

Billie Jean King: ‘Billionaires, Not Millionaires’ Are Fueling Women’s Sports Boom

Billie Jean King wants more women involved in team ownership, too.