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[Albion] Will Brighton shirts ever be on sale anywhere other than in Sussex?



Change at Barnham

Well-known member
Aug 6, 2011
4,920
Bognor Regis
I have often felt that we won’t be recognised as an established Premier League club until we see our kit for sale in a shop somewhere other than in Sussex.
I’ve never seen them at an airport or in any major city in this country or anywhere else.
I would think there must soon be a market in Japan and maybe a smaller one in South America.
Has anyone seen them available anywhere other than online?

In fairness, I haven’t seen Leicester shirts available anywhere other than Leicester and they’ve had a lot more success recently than most clubs.
It's quite a stranglehold the big clubs have on the game, and shows what an enormous battle we have to break into the second tier of supported clubs like West Ham, Villa, Leeds and Everton.
 






RM-Taylor

He's Magic.... You Know
Jan 7, 2006
15,272
When we had JD as a kit sleeve sponsor, I saw the home shirt in JD Sports in Birmingham city centre
 




B-right-on

Living the dream
Apr 23, 2015
6,181
Shoreham Beaaaach
Leicester have a shop in Bangkok airport

Equal to our Churchill Sq then.

Leicester haven't really followed their PL success by pushing for the coverted 'top of the non-6 league' or any European success.

I think it'll take a few wins in the Europa League, getting to the quarters or semi's for a few seasons, before we're taken 'seriously' by these outlets.
 




Lyndhurst 14

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2008
5,130
I'm fairly certain they used to be on sale many moons ago at the now defunct Virgin megastore in New York because of the Fatboy Slim connection
 




Super Steve Earle

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2009
8,365
North of Brighton
Must admit, if I go in to a sports shop, souvenir shop or any appropriate outlet home or abroad that sells football stuff but not Brighton merch., I often make a point of asking if they have any Brighton shirts, mugs or whatever they sell. When they say no, I can then say that's a shame and walk out without buying anything.
 




Swansman

Pro-peace
May 13, 2019
22,320
Sweden
Shirt sales are such a small part of the economy of a football club like Brighton in 2022. If they cost £55, the club will (if they have the standard Nike agreement which is likely) earn a little more than £4 per shirt. Sell 100 000 shirts, get £400 000... and I imagine the global demand for Brighton shirts is quite low, might be some in Japan but most are going to buy a Japan-kit with Mitoma rather than a Brighton one, and if they go for a Brighton kit they might buy a cheap, Chinese fake one.

I don't think Brighton could sell more than 200 000 shirts if it was available globally and the whole logistics of the thing would probably eat a lot of that £800k profit. Can't see the club pushing for it, I'm guessing it is more of a Nike decision where and when the kit is available.
 








Shropshire Seagull

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2004
8,509
Telford
Ha, reminds me when my 2 girls were young - years ago, popping into our local Sports Direct only to find they had plenty of Man U, Citeh, Chelski, Arse, Liverpool even Barca shirts, but had ALWAYS sold out of Brighton shirts. :-(
 


Joey Jo Jo Jr. Shabadoo

Waxing chumps like candles since ‘75
Oct 4, 2003
11,095
Shirt sales are such a small part of the economy of a football club like Brighton in 2022. If they cost £55, the club will (if they have the standard Nike agreement which is likely) earn a little more than £4 per shirt. Sell 100 000 shirts, get £400 000... and I imagine the global demand for Brighton shirts is quite low, might be some in Japan but most are going to buy a Japan-kit with Mitoma rather than a Brighton one, and if they go for a Brighton kit they might buy a cheap, Chinese fake one.

I don't think Brighton could sell more than 200 000 shirts if it was available globally and the whole logistics of the thing would probably eat a lot of that £800k profit. Can't see the club pushing for it, I'm guessing it is more of a Nike decision where and when the kit is available.

You are pretty much bang on. The club have said before that the margins on shirt sales are so small that selling them anywhere other than through the club shop/online store eats into the already small margins they make on shirt sales, plus the numbers they are likely to shift don't make it worth while either. I really don't think they are missing out on a massive number of sales by not having them in the likes of Sports Direct etc.

I'd rather make sure as much as the money as possible went back to the club when buying the kids their replica kit so would go direct even if there were other options.
 


Comrade Sam

Comrade Sam
Jan 31, 2013
1,587
Walthamstow
Must admit, if I go in to a sports shop, souvenir shop or any appropriate outlet home or abroad that sells football stuff but not Brighton merch., I often make a point of asking if they have any Brighton shirts, mugs or whatever they sell. When they say no, I can then say that's a shame and walk out without buying anything.

Did exactly the same at a footy shirt stall in a clothing market in Izmir last week. The bloke claimed he'd never heard of them, so he asked a passer by who said 'Brighton!' knowingly.
 




AstroSloth

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2020
1,000
Shirt sales are such a small part of the economy of a football club like Brighton in 2022. If they cost £55, the club will (if they have the standard Nike agreement which is likely) earn a little more than £4 per shirt. Sell 100 000 shirts, get £400 000... and I imagine the global demand for Brighton shirts is quite low, might be some in Japan but most are going to buy a Japan-kit with Mitoma rather than a Brighton one, and if they go for a Brighton kit they might buy a cheap, Chinese fake one.

I don't think Brighton could sell more than 200 000 shirts if it was available globally and the whole logistics of the thing would probably eat a lot of that £800k profit. Can't see the club pushing for it, I'm guessing it is more of a Nike decision where and when the kit is available.

But it's not just about the initial shirt sales.

It's also about the marketing that having people abroad wearing your shirt does. If someone in Japan sees a Brighton shirt with Mitoma on they might be interested in what that's all about etc.

So while yes the initial return is small, it can lead to increased revenue in the future.
 




Swansman

Pro-peace
May 13, 2019
22,320
Sweden
If the club is only making around £4 per shirt it does beg the question as to why we use a supplier such as Nike.

The money is in the initial sponsorship contract, not in the shirts themselves.

The deal between Nike and Brighton is probably worth somewhere between £2-3m, and it would likely be difficult to sell enough shirts with enough profit margin for it to be worth abandoning them.
 


Jackthelad

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2010
826
I like it, maybe I'm old-fashioned, but I like that you have to go to a bit more effort to buy Brighton club brand products/kits. The club is still so connected to East Sussex.

It makes as unique that only small bunch of EPL clubs do this. The people you see with Brighton kits on tend to have a stronger local connection to the team. My son was wearing his Brighton shirt today and people will smile at him. My other son who annoyingly flirts with being an Arsenal fan will get bad looks when he wears the Arsenal shirt his uncle got him.

Also if you do happen to be someone who is not local that's a Brighton that's quite rare so I always respect those people, but on the other hand I don't want our club to be a soulless Starbucks football club with their kits everywhere and their badge printed on everything like Arsenal, Chelsea.
 




Neville's Breakfast

Well-known member
May 1, 2016
13,423
Oxton, Birkenhead
But it's not just about the initial shirt sales.

It's also about the marketing that having people abroad wearing your shirt does. If someone in Japan sees a Brighton shirt with Mitoma on they might be interested in what that's all about etc.

So while yes the initial return is small, it can lead to increased revenue in the future.

Surely most people shop on the internet ? I can’t imagine the average Japanese youngster doing something so old fashioned as going to a sports shop for his/her football shirt. We do all our clothes shopping online and we are oldies. Admittedly, we don’t buy football shirts. To achieve your aim perhaps the Albion just need more direct advertising into that market.
 


BRIGHT ON Q

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
9,112
Ecuador soon I think.
 


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