Transcript for:
Why Red Bull Owns a Football Club

In 2023, Red Bull sold one and a half cans for every person on the planet. That's more than 12 billion cans per year. But, as the avid athletic interest viewer knows, Red Bull does much more than selling an energy drink. They own two Formula One teams, two ice hockey teams, sponsor thousands of athletes, and let them compete in crazy events. They spent a lot of money on marketing. Their budgets can compete with the likes of Nike, Pepsi, or McDonald's. But those are much bigger companies. So. Relatively speaking, nobody spends more on marketing than Red Bull. But is all that really just marketing? If you dig a little deeper, you find that at one point in their history, Red Bull changed their strategy. And it was an unlikely change. Red Bull got big by focusing on extreme sport. Jumping from space, driving fast cars, bikes, and whatever this is. The more extreme, the better for Red Bull. Traditional sports? Too boring. Until the founder had a conversation that would change the Red Bull brand forever, and led them to become one of the most influential companies in the most popular sport in the world, and one of the most controversial ones. Welcome to Athletic Interest, and why Red Bull owns a football club. In the summer of 1982, the Austrian businessman Dietrich Mateschitz found himself suffering from jet lag during a business trip to Thailand. He tried a local drink called Krating Deng, which improved his jet lag substantially. Krating Deng can be translated to Red Gower, a huge bison from Southeast Asia. So it basically means Red Bull. Inspired by the magical qualities of the product, Mateschitz decided to bring it home in the format of a brand new product category. The Energy Drink. Potential investors told Mateschitz that there was no market for the product, so he decided to create one. Mateschitz adapted the formula and flavor for the European market and successfully launched the product in Austria in 1987. Because the drink was initially banned in Germany, Red Bull profited from the reputation as an outlaw brand. Many young Germans would cross the border to Austria to buy the banned drink, and Red Bull sold over a million cans in their first year. From Austria, it quickly spread across Europe. First to Slovakia and Hungary in 92, and then to Germany and the UK in 94. When they entered the US market three years later, Red Bull was selling over a million cans every day. The secret ingredient for this success has always been Red Bull's unique corporate structure. Red Bull itself doesn't actually produce the drink. Production and filling of the cans is outsourced, so Red Bull can fully commit its resources to selling the drink. And that's something that Red Bull has mastered. Initially, the focus was on the club scene. Jäger shots with Red Bull, those weird mini-cars outside of university. But clubbing is a relatively small business. Red Bull wanted to go global, and Mateschitz understood that Red Bull needed something bigger to grow the brand. As an avid sports fan himself, he turned to sports marketing. But there was a problem. Red Bull didn't exactly fit in as a Wimbledon or a golf tournament. An outlaw brand trying to create an entirely new category of drink didn't mix with traditional sports. So Red Bull decided to create its own sport. The Red Bull Dolomitenmann. An extreme relay race with four unique physical tests. Run, fly, bike and kayak. It was the beginning of a new strategy for Red Bull. If it couldn't find a sport that aligned with its values, it simply invented one. 92 was the first year of the so-called Flugtag, where people jump off high platforms strapped to homemade flying machines. Or in 2000, when Red Bull launched the Soapbox. A race through city streets with homemade vehicles. Red Bull ripped up the sports marketing playbook. It wasn't even trying to convince you that it was good for you. Red Bull is fun and exciting. So those are the sports it aligned with. But there was still one major sport that Red Bull went into that was not niche, although also extreme. Formula One Austrian driver Gerhard Berger became the first Red Bull athlete in 89. In 95, Red Bull started sponsoring the Sauber F1 team. In 2004, they purchased the Jaguar team. And Red Bull Racing has since become one of the most successful Formula One teams in history. These sports all have one thing in common. They look spectacular and create spectacular content. This content is packaged and distributed by Red Bull's own in-house media team. While most brands have to invest a lot in paid media to get any reach, Red Bull's channels are among the most popular in sports with millions of organic views. This is another benefit of Red Bull's extreme sports strategy. You cannot show highlights of Wimbledon or the FIFA World Cup on your brand accounts, because the broadcasting rights are usually sold exclusively and for billions of dollars. But if you own the event, and you've invented the sport anyway, You can use the content however you like. That means that for a long time, a sport like football didn't fit the Red Bull model. Too slow, too expensive, and too little adrenaline. So Red Bull stayed out of it. Until one day, everything changed. And ironically, it was Bayern Munich who changed their minds. Speaking of changing other people's minds, one of the questions we get the most is how we do the research for our videos. There's so much information out there that can be hard to verify. especially with the impact of algorithms and filter bubbles. That's where our sponsor, Ground News, comes into play. Designed by a former NASA engineer, Ground News helps you navigate the crowded field of global media and identify media buyers. It compiles articles from over 50,000 sources worldwide, letting you see how different media outlets cover the same story. You can learn more by going to ground.news.com to experience it for yourself. Take a look at this story about Red Bull, for example. It was covered by more than 97 sources. Of those 97 sources, 31% lean left and 30% lean right, showing that there is equal interest from both sides of the political spectrum. But using the bias comparison, you can quickly identify that the headlines do use different language. While the center is using explanatory wording and keeps it very factual, both the left and the right use more loaded words and include personal details about Horner's family. Ground news also shows the raw stats. like media bias, factual reliability, and even the ownership of the source. This makes biases more transparent and helps you think critically about the information you consume. It's not only helpful for research, but also a mission that we genuinely support. Curious to see how it works? Visit ground.news.com and get an exclusive 40% off their Vantage plan. It all went down in the cozy little town of Salzburg, Austria, right next to the Alps. This is where Dietrich Mateschitz met with his good friend, football icon Franz Beckenbauer. A World Cup winner both, as a player and a coach, Beckenbauer left his mark on German football like no other. At the time of their meeting, he was president of Bayern Munich. And in Salzburg, with its picture-perfect views, Beckenbauer gave Mateschitz a game-changing piece of advice. If you really want to make a splash in sports marketing, football is where your money should go. Taking this to heart, Mateschitz didn't just step into the world of football. He dived in headfirst. Red Bull started buying clubs. First, Mateschitz settled on the small Austrian club of Austria-Salzburg. He renamed the club Red Bull Salzburg. The club now plays in the Red Bull Arena. Its colors are red and white, and its club crest contains the Red Bull logo. Beckenbauer claimed that Mateschitz would have given up without his support, and that the Euros in 2008 only came to Austria because of Red Bull. He should have known. He was the one bringing the World Cup to Germany two years before that. Bayern Munich even provided expertise and players in the early days. Aging stars moved from Munich to Salzburg. Hansi Flick even joined the coaching staff. At this point, nobody really took the project too seriously. The press called the Salzburg club a Bavarian sausage outlet. But this would change soon. A few years later, Beckenbauer told Mateschitz to buy another club, but this time in Germany. SSV Markranstedt, a fifth Tierclub in Leipzig. The club colours were changed to red and white, the stadium was renamed the Red Bull Arena, Red Bull also tried to change the name to Red Bull Leipzig but was blocked by the football authorities. So they went for Rasenballsport, which literally means Grass Ball Sport Leipzig instead. These changes were controversial. Leipzig locals even formed their own protest team to preserve the old vision of the club. Red Bull took things a step further when RB Leipzig joined the Bundesliga just seven years later. The 50 plus 1 rule requires members of Bundesliga clubs to hold 50% plus one more vote of the club's voting rights. It's important to understand that this is deeply rooted in German society. When you want to do any kind of sports in Germany, you become a member of a sports club. Whether you want to do it just for fun or on a professional level, sports are organized in clubs. Also in the Bundesliga. That means that the members of the clubs have a say and can vote on the most important decisions. But Red Bull wanted to retain full control over the club. So Red Bull priced membership at 1000 euros per year, compared to 60 euros at Bayern Munich. Red Bull also retained the right to block any potential member. So they started with only seven members, all of them being employees or lawyers associated with Red Bull. This number has grown to 23 today, but that's still nothing compared to the more than 300,000 members that Bayern officials need to report to. So this is one thing that Red Bull is doing differently than Bayern. But they still have a special relationship, even after both Mateschitz and Beckenbauer passed away. And the time of the Bavarian sausage outlet is over. More and more often, the clubs meet as equals. Bayern is no longer sending their aged players to Salzburg, but buying the best talents from Leipzig. Upamecano, Sabitzer, Leimer, even Julian Nagelsmann as coach, and later Max Eberl as sporting director. Bayern has created its own strongest competitor. Leipzig has become one of Germany's best teams, playing in the Champions League almost every season and winning the Cup twice. And yet, many fans in Germany hate the club because of its strong ties to Red Bull. When Leipzig plays Eintracht Frankfurt, Eintracht refuses to show Leipzig's logo anywhere in its stadium. When Leipzig first travelled to Union Berlin, the page in Berlin's programme, usually dedicated to the visiting club, was replaced with information about bull breeding. Many fans would probably be even more upset if they knew that the club they hate the most only exists because of the club they hate the second most. Oh my- No! God! But besides the fierce competition, behind the scenes, there are close ties. Like Beckenbauer, Uli Hoeneß had a close relationship with Mateschitz as well. His nephew Sebastian Hoeneß, the current coach of Stuttgart, worked in Leipzig's youth academy. Outside of football, the competitors are even cooperating. Red Bull is currently building a multi-functional arena in Munich's Olympiapark, which will not only be home to its own ice hockey club Red Bull Munich, but also to Bayern Munich's basketball team. The first plans for this were made around 10 years ago, but they only became concrete after Hoeneß served his sentence for tax evasion in prison. When he came back from prison, one of the first letters he received was from Mateschitz, welcoming him back and offering to work together anytime. Hoenis was deeply moved by the gesture and knew that this was the right partner. It is likely that in the future, Red Bull will more often be the enemy than a partner. Because they have one thing that Bion doesn't have. And again, Beckenbauer was involved. Because besides Salzburg and Leipzig, Beckenbauer told Mateschitz to buy another club when Mateschitz wanted to go west. And for Beckenbauer, it was clear that if you have the chance to buy a team in the United States, there's only one destination. New York. He had played there himself and still knew what was going on in the city. So he decided to help Mateschitz out again. Mateschitz bought the MLS franchise for $100 million. The price included buying half of the stadium in New Jersey and its naming rights, Red Bull Arena. Even Henri played there for a while. Now let's take a step back and look at this with perspective. Mateschitz and his friend Beckenbauer put Red Bull on the football map, having teams in Austria, Germany, and the United States. But Red Bull didn't stop there and also expanded to Brazil and Ghana. Today, RB Leipzig is at the center of a web of Red Bull-owned clubs. Red Bull uses this network to develop talent. A player can start in Brazil, move to Salzburg to develop his talent, and then play in the Champions League with Leipzig. When retirement is close, he can head off to New York. While Red Bull is not the first to develop this strategy, it was the first to see results. Red Bull's secret ingredient was the close synergy between these clubs. The HR, finance and marketing for every club is run by one central board. They have all adopted the same playing style. They share the same coaches and methods. The clubs even have the same colors and all play in the Red Bull Arena. The idea is that a player or coach can be dropped in any club within the network and instantly feel at home. This cuts down development time. The quicker and stronger a player develops, the faster they are able to strengthen the RB Leipzig squad. Or get sold on for a profit. Dominik Schabersley moved through the Red Bull system and helped RB Leipzig to two cup victories. He was then sold to Liverpool for 70 million euros. The multi-club ownership model is so successful, more and more teams are trying to copy it. 180 clubs are now involved in multi-club networks. Five times more than 10 years ago. This includes 6,500 players who are employed by multi-club teams. Hundreds are traded within these networks every transfer window. But not everyone loves it. Owning more than one team can create conflicts of interest. In the Red Bull Group, Leipzig is the top of the pyramid. It will get the best players, the biggest investment and the greater attention. While at a national level Salzburg and Bragantino are top sides, within the Red Bull group they will always support Leipzig. The transfer of players is also controversial. Clubs can artificially inflate or deflate the value of players to boost the finances of a particular club. That's why UEFA and FIFA have been asked to regulate multi-club models. But in reality, do they really want to discourage this new form of investment into football? Only recently, UEFA made it easier for clubs within the same network to play each other. So like it or not, multi-club ownership is here to stay. The Red Bull football model is controversial. Some fans in Germany refer to Leipzig supporters as customers. It's supposed to be an insult, but Red Bull probably doesn't mind too much. Because this is exactly why Red Bull purchased a football club. The strategy is simple. Win on Sunday, sell on Monday. Red Bull already knows this works from Formula One. Whenever Max Verstappen wins a race, Red Bull sells more cans the next day. Now imagine the same in the biggest sport in the world. That's why it makes sense for Red Bull to use some of the money they make with their drink to cross-finance their football clubs. Even if those don't make a profit on their own soon. With the rise of RB Leipzig, Red Bull will probably sell even more cans in the future. And even without selling more cans, it's likely to pay off. Because what started as a marketing machine has turned into a business of its own. Red Bull Racing was started with an initial 400 million dollar investment. Today the team is self-sustaining, profitable and worth 2.6 billion dollars. RB Leipzig earns around 3 million euros per match through ticket sales and more than 70 million euros per year through broadcasting. Leipzig has also earned millions on the transfer market through buying low and selling high. And you remember the 100 million they paid for the New York Red Bulls? The club is now worth more than half a billion. Few brands have mastered the combination of sports and content marketing the way that Red Bull has. Red Bull has invented a new category of drink. It then invented several new sports to market the product. The multi-club model is the next evolution. Creating a machine that can take the Red Bull name to the top of the biggest sport on the planet. And that is why Red Bull owns a football club.