NASCAR sets records for fan engagement during Daytona 500
Feb. 24, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Sunday’s
Daytona 500 provided fans with the closest finish in the history of the
Great American Race when winner Denny Hamlin edged runner-up Martin
Truex Jr. by .010 seconds
— roughly four inches on the track. But Hamlin’s impressive victory at
Daytona International Speedway wasn’t the only record-setting event of
the day.
On
Wednesday, NASCAR released social media numbers generated from its
biggest race, and Sunday's Daytona 500 produced a litany of milestones.
The
2016 Daytona 500 set a record for most social impressions generated in
one day by NASCAR’s social channels, with race-day impressions up 63
percent over last year’s Great
American Race.
Engagement
with NASCAR social media content -- likes, comments and shares --
increased threefold over the total generated during the 2015 Daytona
500.
"Social
media gives fans a chance to get to know their favorite driver outside
the track - their likes, dislikes and all-around personality,"
JTG/Daugherty Racing driver AJ
Allmendinger said. "It allows fans to feel closer to their driver, and
that helps push our sport forward into a new generation."
The
reasons for the spike are plenty, most notably the celebrity factor
that the Daytona 500 often attracts. Singer Justin Bieber tweeted a
photo of a NASCAR racing helmet
to his 76 million followers. Ditto for actor Ashton Kutcher to his 17.4
million followers. Among the celebrities in attendance on Sunday,
Baseball Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr., actor Gerard Butler, WWE
wrestler John Cena, rapper Wyclef Jean, National League
MVP Bryce Harper and comedian Gabriel Iglesias all tweeted from the
grounds.
This
year’s race dominated the Twitterverse. The Daytona 500, which peaked
at 14.1 million television viewers tuned in for the checkered flag,
generated more tweets than any
other TV program on Sunday, beating second-place WWE Fastlane by 66
percent.
“The
Daytona 500 is one of the biggest sporting events in the world and this
year millions of fans consumed the race across television, radio,
digital and social media,” said
Steve Phelps, NASCAR executive vice president and chief marketing
officer. “Sunday was especially a huge success for our social platforms,
with race-day conversation around the Daytona 500 at an all-time high.
“By
delivering original content via social channels during the race, we
were able to engage with millions of passionate fans worldwide and set a
single-day record for NASCAR
social media impressions.”
NASCAR’s
digital platform racked up 2.1 million unique visitors and 13 million
page views. Fans spent a record 2.8 million minutes watching Daytona 500
content on a new race
viewing product called NASCAR Drive, recently launched on NASCAR.com.
More
than 23,000 unique Twitter users competed in the Hashtag 500, a “race”
to be the 500th person to tweet unique hashtags, with race-used
memorabilia as prizes. A tweet promoting
the competition to win Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Daytona 500 firesuit
generated the most NASCAR-related mentions in 60 seconds since the debut
of the NASCAR Fan and Media Engagement Center, which measures such
things.
A
new partnership with Snapchat enabled NASCAR to reach millions of users
with videos and photos uploaded as Daytona 500 content for the first
Snapchat Live Story of 2016.
Sunday’s race was the first installment of 2016, with several more
races to follow.
Overall,
the 2016 Daytona 500 saw more NASCAR-related social conversation than
had previously occurred on any single day since the inception of the
NASCAR Fan and Media Engagement
Center. Social conversation was up 44 percent compared with last year’s
race.
For
Daytona 500 race week, total consumption in terms of page views per
visit of NASCAR’s digital platform—NASCAR.com, mobile web and mobile
apps — was up six percent over
last year, making it NASCAR’s second-highest race week consumption rate
of all time.
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