The Fan Who Came Four Times: Turning Casual Buyers into Season Seats
Your next 50 season ticket holders are already in your building. Most teams just never ask them properly. Here's the renewal and conversion playbook.
Ask any owner where season ticket growth comes from and you’ll usually hear about billboards, radio spots, or a March renewal letter. But the real answer is sitting in your ticket data: the fan who came four times last season is your next season ticket holder. They’ve already proven they love coming. Nobody has ever made them the right offer.
The two lists every team should have (and almost none do)
List one: current holders, ranked by renewal risk. Which seats actually got used this year? A holder whose seats sat empty half the season is a walking non-renewal — and you should know that in January, not when the renewal deadline passes in June. A quiet check-in, a seat upgrade offer, or a “bring a friend on us” gesture in midseason saves seats that a form letter never will.
List two: your “almost” fans. Everyone who bought three or more single games, any flex pack buyer, every group organizer. These people chose you repeatedly with zero commitment. They don’t need to be sold on the team — they need the gap between “I come sometimes” and “I have my seats” made small and obvious.
Why the March letter fails
The standard renewal motion is one letter, one deadline, maybe one phone call if staff has time. It fails for the same reason most marketing fails: it treats everyone the same and it only asks once.
The fan who came four times doesn’t want a brochure about 30-game commitment. They want: “You came to four games last year and sat in section C every time. Here’s what those exact seats cost for a season — it works out to about what you already spent, plus 26 more games. Payment plan available. Want them?”
That message converts because it’s true and personal. And it’s only possible if someone — or something — is tracking who came, how often, and where they sat.
The motion that works
- Start in-season, not after it. The best time to plant the season-seat idea is right after a great game they attended, not three months later.
- Segment by behavior. Four-game fans get the conversion pitch. At-risk holders get the save pitch. New fans get nurtured toward game five.
- Ask more than once, in more than one place. Email, then text, then a phone follow-up for the warmest names. Most yeses come on the second or third touch.
- Make the money easy. Monthly payment plans convert families that a lump sum scares off. The teams that added simple payment plans to their renewal flow have seen conversion lift by double digits.
- Treat the first 30 days as the renewal. A new holder who has a great first month renews next year. One who feels ignored after the credit card clears doesn’t.
What this is worth
Run the numbers for your own building: 50 new season seats at even a modest minor-league price point is real, recurring, predictable revenue — the kind that makes budgeting possible and makes sponsors take you more seriously. And the marginal cost of getting them, if the follow-up runs automatically, is close to zero.
This is one of the eight revenue streams the Sports Hive AI system runs on autopilot — tracking who’s warming up, making the right ask at the right moment, and flagging the at-risk holders before they lapse. Tell us about your team and we’ll show you how many “almost” season ticket holders are probably sitting in your data right now.