"MLB `07: The Show" Franchise Management FAQ
By MR. K.D.Rodieck
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Version history
Introduction
Changes in MLB 07
Explanation of cost structures
Viewing your financial health
The Save-Test-Load method
PRESEASON MANAGEMENT
Franchise goals
Editing Players
Releasing players
Setting rosters
Free Agents
Hiring a staff
Training and rehabilitation budgets
TV contracts and primary advertisers
Billboard advertising
Loans and banking
Transportation
IN-SEASON MANAGEMENT
Player fatigue
Player morale
Player advertising
Team advertising
Promotions
Ticket prices
Concession prices
Overhead
Adding vendors
Parking prices
Adding seats
Loose Ends
YOU WILL HAVE A FIT IF YOU DO NOT DO THIS
OFF SEASON MANAGEMENT
Shared revenue tax
Resigning players
Trading players
Amateur Draft
Signing Free Agents
Last Words
OTHER STUFF
Appendix 1: Elasticity
Appendix 2: Accounting for the shared revenue tax
Possible glitches
Contact information
Credits and thanks
Legal stuff
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Version History
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v.1.00 - 03/01/07
-First version complete.
v.1.01 - 03/02/07
-Removed game-play tips section
v.1.02 - 03/14/07
-Added the "Infinite Money Glitch", the "Glitch Trades", and "The Amazing
Disappearing Coaches" to the POSSIBLE GLITCHES section.
-Made notes in other relevant sections in light of possible glitches.
-Updated "Transportation" section in reference to NL teams.
-Removed "general reader questions" section.
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AUTHOR'S NOTE
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I must make it clear that I do not own a copy of MLB `07: The Show for
the PS2. The reason is because I am waiting for the PS3 version to come
out, and that is the version that I would prefer to play. I rented the
PS2 version at my local video store just so I could determine what
differences there are between MLB `06: TS and MLB `07: TS for the PS2.
After extensive testing and note taking, I determined that the games
are essentially the same, but there are minor changes in the `07
version. Therefore, I copied and pasted my last FAQ for MLB `06: The
Show and updated this FAQ point by point, so this guide is current.
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INTRODUCTION
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Welcome back baseball fans for another year of MLB video games. I have
been a fan of this particular series for about four years now for one
reason, and that is franchise mode. Most sports games have a franchise
mode in one form or another, but the reason why I love the MLB series
is because the financial side of this series is very deep. If you are
new to this series from 989 studios and SCEA, then you will be shocked
by how much you are able to micromanage almost every aspect of your
business. You will be setting prices for tickets, food, and parking as
well as adding vendors, seats, promotions and more. But that is only a
fraction of all the different ways in which you will have to tend to
your business as CEO of your own baseball team. This may be
overwhelming for new players, and that is why this guide exists.
Over the years of playing games from the MLB series, I have formulated
a collection of rules and methods based on observation that allows a
player to maximize profits for any given team. The amount of things
that you need to do can seem staggering, but if you read about the
strategies that I have laid out in this guide and take each item one by
one, then you will do just fine and running the business side of your
franchise will soon become second nature. If this is the first time you
have played a game from this particular baseball series then just
remember to be patient as you progress through your franchise and have
fun. "$"
If you are already familiar with my strategies from my last two FAQs,
then there really is not much here that will be new to you. Therefore,
for your benefit, I condensed all of the changes in financial strategy
and franchise management into the section below, so you don't have to
pour over this guide going over info that you already know. Just check
out the section below and you will get most of the info that you need.
Thank you all for checking out my guide, and I hope you will find it
helpful.
Play ball!
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CHANGES IN MLB `07 FROM MLB `06
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For all of you who are already very familiar with this game and how
franchise management works, here is a quick list of significant changes
from last year's game. Some sections have been re-written, but they are
the same in concept.
MY STRATEGIES
1.) Changed my conclusion about how much money to devote to training.
2.) Changed my strategy regarding the hiring of scouts.
3.) Changed my strategy for taking out a loan which is directly based
on changing my conclusion about training.
IN GAME CHANGES
1.) Now, you can hire a 1B coach, a 3B coach and a farm director. See
HIRING A STAFF
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EXPLANATION OF COST STRUCTURE
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Understanding this section is very important to having a good
understanding of how costs are paid.
First, almost all costs and revenues are tracked on a daily basis. In
other words, you will have to pay out money for salaries, training,
rehabilitation, and other things for every day of the season including
the playoffs if you are skilled enough to make it to the post season.
For example, if you have a player who has a yearly salary of
$10,000,000, then you will have to pay $55,555 per day to that player.
This same rule applies for all players as well as coaches and scouts.
Training and rehabilitation follow the same rule. If you decide, at the
start of the season to, devote $30,000,000 to training, then that will
cost you $166,667 per day.
The above principal is very important to making decisions about hiring
new personnel (which is discussed later). Here is how to view costs
with a simple example. Suppose that you have a hitting coach who is
being paid $1,500,000 per year. You decide that you want to hire a new
hitting coach who wants $2,000,000 per year. What is the cost of the
new coach? The answer is $500,000 because that is how much more money
you have to spend in order to upgrade your coach. But we want to view
this upgrade in terms of daily costs. Since the cost of the upgrade is
$500,000, that added amount spread out over the period of
(approximately) 180 days is just $2,778 extra per day.
Costs like those mentioned above have to be paid every single day of
the season, no matter what. You will notice that your balance sheet
will be in decline when you have a day off or if you are playing games
on the road. That's because you are paying the cost of salaries and
such during this time.
When you are playing home games, you will be able to collect revenue
from concessions, tickets and parking. This is when you earn your
profits. You are still paying out the costs mentioned before, but you
will also be earning revenue from which costs will be deducted. The
difference between revenue and cost is your daily profit. Just remember
that you can only earn profits when you are playing at home.
The cost of things like new vendors, additional seats, training and
rehab facilities are one-time costs, and you do not pay for these over
a time period(aside from maintaining the facilities of course).
Transportation is a cost that is paid in full at the start of every
year. This will be discussed more later on.
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VIEWING FINANCIAL HEALTH
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There are two ways to check the financial health of your franchise. The
first way is by checking your balance sheet and the second way is to
check your funds. Let me talk about the balance sheet first. You can
access this information by pressing the circle button when you are in
the franchise menu screen.
Your balance sheet (Actually, what you are looking at is not a balance
sheet, it is an INCOME STATEMENT, and it annoys me to no end that it is
referred to as a balance sheet, because you don't want this to balance!
If it balanced, your net income would be zero. That's enough of my
little accountant rant) has two major categories which are INCOME and
EXPENSES. Your NET INCOME is income minus expenses. The balance sheet
is just a year to date snapshot of your profits (or losses) for the
year. The only real reason to be concerned with the balance sheet is
that it can be used as a tool to determine how much money in profits
you are earning per home game. Let me show you how.
Suppose midway through the season you notice that you balance sheet
shows a net income of $20,000,000
TOTAL REVENUE 45,000,000
TOTAL EXPENSES 25,000,000
NET INCOME 20,000,000
You play your next home game and you notice that your balance sheet
shows the following.
TOTAL REVENUE 48,000,000
TOTAL EXPENSES 26,000,000
NET INCOME 22,000,000
By comparing net income figures over a two day period, you can
determine that for every home game you play in the short run, you are
earning $2,000,000 in profits. This is the most useful way in which you
can use the information on the balance sheet.
Ultimately, every dollar of revenue that you take in and every dollar
of expense that goes out is logged somewhere on the balance sheet.
Let's take a look at it the balance sheet and see where your business
activities will be logged.
INCOME
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FACILITIES: money earned by selling concessions, tickets and parking.
LICENSING/AD SALES: Money earned from TV, billboard and primary
advertising contracts.
SHARED REVENUE: This is the rebate that you get at the start of the
year from the shared revenue tax.
LOANS: If you took out a loan, then the amount of that loan is logged
here.
EXPENSES
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STAFF SALARIES: this is where the salaries of your coaches and scouts
are logged.
TRAINING/REHAB: the amount of money that you spend on training and
rehabilitation is logged here.
FACILITIES: When you spend money on new vendors, new seats, and
training facilities, rehab facilities, the cost will be logged here.
The cost of transportation is also logged here at the start of every
year. Overhead costs are also logged here.
MARKETING: Money spent on player advertising, team advertising and
promotions.
BANKING: Money spent on repaying any loans that you have taken out.
SHARED REVENUE: At the start of every year (except the very first
year), the amount of shared revenue tax paid is logged here. The shared
revenue expense, for you, will almost always be higher than the shared
rebate resulting in a large negative balance sheet at the start of the
year.
PLAYER SALARIES: Money spent on player salaries.
Whenever you play a home game, you will notice that your net income is
rising. That's the income that you earned for a home game minus the
expenses paid. When you add a new facility, like a vendor or additional
seats, your net income will fall because you added an immediate expense
without adding any immediate income. (Accountant Rant part II: Vendors
and seats are not expenses, they are assets. In real life, buying more
seats means that one asset (cash) goes down and another asset (seats)
goes up. In reality, this transaction just changes the composition of
held assets. *sigh* I've going to drive myself nuts if I keep doing
this!)
This information by pressing the O button while in the franchise menu
screen.
In my opinion, your funds (i.e. retained earnings) are the best way to
judge your financial health. This tells you how much money you have to
add vendors and seats and such as well as your ability to absorb the
hit from the shared revenue tax and transportation costs. The balance
sheet simply tells you how much money was added to the amount of funds
that you started the season with. Therefore, if I started the year with
$30,000,000 worth of funds and then my balance sheet shows a net income
of $40,000,000 at the All-Star break, then my funds will be equal to
$70,000,000.
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THE SAVE-TEST-LOAD (STL) METHOD
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The Save-Test-Load method is something that I came up with in order to
make sure that it is worth it to make a certain business decisions.
Basically, this works by saving your game at a strategic time, and then
simulating the next game as a control test. Once that is done, you load
your game back to where you started. Now that you have two data figures
(your starting data, and your control test data), you can test the
effects of changing certain variables in your franchise such as ticket
prices and concessions.
For example, suppose I want to see what will happen to attendance if
I raise the price of left field bleacher seats by $1. The first thing I
do is write down the current price and the total attendance to-date for
the left field bleacher section. Then I simulate the next home game and
I check how attendance normally would react if I did not change the
price at all. By doing that, I can discover that attendance increased
by 2,165 in a section with a capacity of 3,500. Now, I load my game so
that I am back at my starting point. Before I simulate the next game, I
raise the price of those seats by $1. Now I simulate the next game and
I discover that attendance increased by 2,134. Now I load my game
again. By doing that test, I concluded that there was no significant
drop-off in attendance when I raised the price. In fact, that small
drop-off could just be attributed to the unpredictable nature of day to
day attendance. Therefore, it is clear that I can raise the price by
$1, and since there is no significant drop-off in attendance, the total
revenue gained from that section will go up and attendance stays level.
I will not stop there however. From there, I will do another test to
see if raising the price by one additional dollar will have any effect.
If not, then I know that I can safely raise the price of those tickets
by a total of $2 now. I will keep doing this until I notice that
raising the price one additional dollar beyond my last test shows a
significant fall in attendance. If the fall in attendance is
significant enough, then it will be made clear that the fall is almost
entirely due to rising prices.
Ultimately, this is how the STL method works, by providing you a safe
method to play around with different variables to see how they affect
your bottom line and your business goals.
There are five distinct times where you will use the STL method to run
some tests, and they are these:
Ticket prices - Your goal is to see how high you can raise the price of
certain tickets without having any significant effect on attendance.
Concession prices - Your goal is to find a price that maximizes revenue
for each individual concession.
Adding vendors - Your goal is to find out whether adding a new vendor
produces a positive net present value.
Parking prices - Your goal is to maximize revenue. (This is the
toughest one)
Adding seats - Your goal is to see how many additional seats can be
immediately filled by the addition of new seats.
Some of these terms like "net present value" might seem a bit strange,
but each one of these sections is described in more detail later, so
don't worry about it for now. Also, these tests should be done
precisely in the order listed above. I will get more into that later,
but there is a reason why I listed these tests in this particular
order.
Also, just to clear up any confusion, testing for concession prices or
ticket prices should be done in bulk. In other words, test the prices
of concessions by increasing all concession prices at the same time and
checking the effect on each concession. If you did a test for one
concession at a time, it would take you forever. The same is true for
ticket prices.
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PRESEASON MANAGEMENT
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Before you even play your first game of the regular season, you will
need to create a solid foundation for your franchise to grow and
prosper. You can treat this section as a checklist of things to do
before you begin.
FRANCHISE GOALS
The very first thing that you have to do when you start a new franchise
is to sign on to a list of goals that you must accomplish within a span
of 4-6 seasons. Same with last year's game, the difficulty of these
goals is directly linked to how well your team did (in real life)
during the 2006 season. This means that if you are a Mariners fan like
me, then your franchise goals will not be too difficult to fulfill.
Cardinal and Tiger fans, on the other hand, will have to deal with a
tougher list of goals that need to be accomplished. Most of these goals
will be will be related to on-field performance such as winning a post
season award, leading the league in a certain statistical category or
making the playoffs. Other goals deal with non-performance requirements
like maintaining a certain level of fan loyalty, earning profits, and
such. The only requirement that I don't like having is the requirement
that your stadium host an All-Star game. I don't know how cities are
awarded this honor, and I don't like it since I don't have much control
over that. You also don't need to worry about the possible goal "Draft
an All-Star potential player". This one is actually pretty reasonable,
and you can read more about this in the AMATUER DRAFT section of this
FAQ.
You may ask "OK, so what happens when I finally complete all of my
goals after 4-6 seasons?" As far as I know, you don't get anything
other than the honor of being able to keep playing. I'll try to test
this in the future as well as to see what happens if you don't fulfill
all of your goals in the stated time frame.
EDITING PLAYERS
Each organization will have a bunch of real life minor league prospects
on its organization roster. Chances are that hot prospect for your
favorite team may end up on the team's AAA roster, or possibly a few on
the AA roster. The rest of the players are all fictional. So it might
be a bit of a bummer for many fans to find that the one prospect that
they had hoped would be in the game is not there. If that is the case,
then you can always edit a fictional player into that missing prospect.
You can either edit rosters from the game's main option screen or,
while you are in franchise mode, go to view rosters. From there,
highlight the player that you want to edit and press the X button.
First of all, when it comes to editing real life players, your option
are limited. You cannot edit that player's name, age, height, weight or
throw and bat hand. Everything else is fair game. When it comes to
editing fictional players, you can edit anything you want. Therefore it
is very possible to establish an entire AAA or AA roster of real
players.
Finally, this method of editing is far superior to using the create-a-
player option because in order to make room on your roster, you will
have to release current players under contract (see section below), and
if your prospect his high playing attributes, it can be inordinately
expensive to sign him from the free agent screen, which is where
created players end up.
Please note that Red Sox pitcher, Daisuke Matsuzaka IS in the game on
the BoSox roster under the name Tate Baik, and his name CAN be edited.
Barry Bonds is also in the game under the name Reggie Stocker, but his
name CANNOT be edited. Go figure.
RELEASING PLAYERS
You are not really releasing a player. You are in fact buying out a
portion of his contract. This means that you cannot cut costs by simply
cutting players from your roster. Before you release a player into the
free agent pool, the game will confirm your decision before you release
him. If you do release a player, one thing that you will notice is that
your funds do not decrease right away. Rather, the portion of the
contract that is being bought out is paid out over the course of the
year. This ultimately means that the per-day cost is rather low for
releasing lousy minor league players. There is nothing wrong with
releasing players to make roster room, but cost cutting is not a
justification because you will not only have to keep paying for your
released player but also the new player that you hire.
Besides, you will need full MLB, AAA and AA rosters to have valid line
ups. The only reason to release a player would be if you have too many
players at a single position (see the section below) and you need to
add some free agents to create valid minor league rosters and line ups.
In order to release players, go to the free agent signing screen,
highlight the player on your roster that you want to release, and then
release him. Look at the bottom of the screen to determine which button
to use.
SETTING ROSTERS
Before you play a game, each level of your franchise must have a set of
valid lineups; otherwise you will not be allowed to proceed. This is
not too difficult to deal with. Your MLB, AAA and AA teams will each
need 25 players, so here is a basic set up that you might want to
consider.
Position For each club Total
C 2 6
1B 2 6
2B 2 6
3B 2 6
SS 2 6
OF 4 12
SP 5 15
RP 5 15
CL 1 3
TOTAL 25 75
There is another thing to keep in mind when you are setting up your
rosters, and that is that your players will get fatigued playing every
day, so you will need some solid bench players to give your every day
players a day off once in a while. In this sense, AL teams have an
advantage because players who are filling the DH spot will not fatigue
as fast as position players. This means that you can have two sluggers
for one position and have one player DH for a while and one play in the
field. From there, if one player gets tired, have him DH and put your
regular DH in the field.
Another strategy is to have a utility out fielder play each out field
position over three days. For example, if my regular out field consists
of Raul Ibanez, Ichiro Suzuki and Jose Guillen, then I might try to get
a guy like Corey Patterson to be my fourth out fielder. I let my
regular out field play for three days in a row, and then I have
Patterson fill in for Ibanez one day. The next day, Ibanez goes back to
left field, and Patterson fills in for Suzuki, and then for Guillen the
next day. Wait another three days, and repeat. This should keep your
out fielder's energy levels rather high throughout the season.
There are all sorts of different thing that you could try, so play
around with your rosters a bit and see what works.
FREE AGENTS
The free agent screen can be accessed through your main franchise menu.
This is where you get to release players (buy out their contracts), and
pick up new free agents. This section is pretty self explanatory, but
the one interesting feature here is that when you create a player, this
is where he ends up. So, for example, if I wanted to make myself into a
player, I could do that on the create-a-player screen and, once I am
finished, that player can be found in the free agent screen of my
franchise. Of course, the better the created player is, the more it
will cost to sign him. Be careful with this though, and the reason for
this is because your team has a salary budget(you can turn this off in
the options screen before you set up your franchise which makes this
part moot, but budgets make the game more realistic). When you attempt
to sign players, the amount of money that you have available for
salaries begins to decrease. You can see this in the signing screen.
The difference between your salary budget and your payroll is the
amount of money you have left for signing players. You should also keep
an eye on your salary budget because it may hinder you from making
trades. If for example, you have an available salary budget of
$5,000,000, you will be unable to trade for a player that has a salary
of $6,000,000 because his salary will exceed your available salary
budget.
HIRING A STAFF
There are two types of personnel (other than players) that you can hire
as part of your franchise, and these are coaches and scouts.
First and foremost, the team's manager as well as the first base coach
and third base coach are important to your franchise to the degree that
their strategy affects the way your team performs when you simulate
games. They does not matter all that much if you plan on playing all or
most of season yourself. With regard to the manager, he has four
categories by which he is measured: Aggressiveness, leadership, offense
and defense. I am not quite sure what the leadership and aggressiveness
stats affect, but offense and defense are pretty self explanatory. The
higher the offense stat, the more your coach will focus his players on
scoring runs. The higher the defense stat, the more he will focus his
players on keeping opposing runs off the board.
The pitching, batting and farm director coaches are by far the most
important personnel that you can hire. They are even more important if
you plan on spending a lot of money on training because these coaches
will give you the biggest bang for your training dollar. Each of these
coaches has four distinct ways in which they benefit the growth of your
players.
*Pitching Coach*
1.) Control - Makes sure that the pitch ends up where you want it.
2.) Velocity - Allows your pitcher to throw a lot harder.
3.) Mechanics - A reader of my FAQ from last year pointed out that
mechanics helps reduce injury as well as increase velocity and control.
4.) Pick-off - Makes it easier to pick off opposing base runners.
*Batting Coach*
1.) Power - Increases home run hitting power.
2.) Contact - Cuts down on strike outs and increases the chance of a
base hit.
3.) Base Running - Allows base runners to steal bases more easily,
round bases faster and generally become smarter base runners
4.) Discipline - This really only comes into play when simulating games
and it affects your team's ability to lay off bad pitches and wait for
a pitch to drive.
*1B Coach and 3B Coach*
1.) Leadership - ? Unsure. (If anyone has an idea, please let me know)
2.) Aggressiveness - Coach will not be afraid to have the runner take
an extra base if he sees the opportunity.
3.) Awareness - Will look for opportunities to exploit in order to take
an extra base.
4.) Knowledge - He is aware of how quick the pitcher is to the plate or
how strong of an arm the out fielder has, etc.
*Farm Director*
1.) Fielding - Increases player's defensive abilities.
2.) Pitching - Increases pitcher's general pitching ability
3.) Batting - Increases hitter's general hitting ability
4.) Base running - Same as above.
The rule here is simple: Get the best coaches that you possibly can.
This is especially true for the farm director if you want your minor
league prospects to grow.
In my last FAQ for MLB `06: The Show, I wrote that scouts were utterly
worthless and that you should just get the cheapest and lamest scouts
that you can just to save money. I have changed my mind about this and
my observations led me to a new strategy here. To the best of my
knowledge, when you release a scout in favor of a new scout, you do not
have to buy out the old scout's contract in the same way that you have
to do when you release a player. This allows you to change scouts
without long term financial cost. When you begin a new franchise and
begin scouting players, there are tons of players to scout, and you
have almost no information about them. In my own opinion, the best
strategy is to begin your franchise by hiring the best scouts that you
possibly can and assign them to appropriate parts of the world. This
means that if your scout specializes in starters and infielders then
assign him to a region where there is an abundance of promising
starters and infielders as opposed to relievers and outfielders. Once
you have scouted all the players that you want in that region, then
fire your scout and hire a lame, cheap scout. Why? Because good scouts
can scout more players at one time and those players get scouted
faster. Once you have a bunch of players already scouted, then your
lame scout can begin scouting lower rated players whom you probably
won't end up drafting anyways. Of those players that you have scouted,
some of them will be drafted, and new players will pop up. It won't be
a whole lot, and your lame scout can easily scout them in a reasonable
amount of time. In summary, hire the best scouts to scout as many
players as possible and then fire them to save money.
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***GLITCH WARINING***
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Hiring coaches should be the LAST thing you do in pre-season business.
Refer to the POSSIBLE GLITCHES section for more information.
TRAINING AND REHABILITATION BUDGETS
Training and rehabilitation are ways to spend money to make sure that
your players keep their skills sharp and their bodies free of injury.
The big drawback here is that both of these can be pretty darn
expensive. For instance, if you totally maximize your training budget,
then this will cost you $80,000,000 by then end of the year! That is a
lot of money. First, let's take a look at training. The following is a
list of all of the different training categories.
*Pitching*
1.) Stamina - Pitcher can pitch deeper into the game.
2.) Movement - Breaking pitches will break harder and fastballs will
have more movement
3.) Pitch Development - Increases the overall quality of each one of a
player's pitches.
4.) Control - Increases the chances that a pitch will end up right
where you want it.
*Defense*
1.) Speed - Allows you to get to the ball quicker. This is crucial for
outfielders.
2.) Glove - Decreases the chance that a line drive will bounce off of
your player's glove and increases the chance of snagging the ball.
3.) Accuracy - Increases your throwing accuracy. This is crucial for
your youngest AA players who tend to be horrible at simply making a
throw to first base.
4.) Arm strength - Makes sure that your throw gets to the target
quicker.
*Offense*
All of the categories here (power, contact, base running and plate
vision) are identical to the categories of the hitting coach.
*Conditioning*
1.) Strength - Improves general abilities like hitting power, the MPH
on your pitches, arm strength, etc.
2.) Stamina - Your players will tire less quickly.
3.) Agility - Increases your "first step speed" that allows you to
track down fly balls, get a good jump on a stolen base or get to that
ground ball into the hole of the infield.
4.) Flexibility - Increases your player's ability to do things like hit
inside pitches squarely or jump against the wall to take a home run
away from an opposing hitter.
Now you certainly can maximize your total training budget, but is it
worth it? In my previous FAQ for MLB `06: The Show, I advocated a
maximized training budget which was expensive, and it seemed to be
paying off. However, I wanted to see what the long term affects of
training were over a period of several years. To my disappointment, I
observed that although a 100% training budget created better results
than a 51% budget; the difference in how much better the players ended
up was not great enough to justify an extra $60,000,000. There seems to
be a matter of diminishing returns with regard to training. In other
words, the first $10,000,000 that you invest in training will have a
tremendous benefit above spending nothing on training. An additional
$10,000,000 will increase the overall effectiveness of your training,
but not by as much as the first $10,000,000. Do you see what's
happening here? For each additional $10,000,000 added to total
training, the overall benefit of training increases, but the marginal
effectiveness goes down. Economically speaking, a maximized training
budget cannot be justified. Also, the cost of training your players
gets PROGRESSIVELY MOSRE EXPENSIVE.
This of course begs the question: How much should be spent. Unless
there is an interested econometrics student out there who would like to
use the data to figure out where the marginal benefit of training is
equal to marginal cost, then I just have to use the general rule that
the total training budget should be set at just under $20,000,000, or
about a quarter of the maximum amount. This should keep your players
happy, their skills will continue to grow, and you will have saved
$60,000,000 over a maximized budget. Nice! Now, how much should be
spent for each training area? I would dump about $1,134,904 into each
category. I am using this number because you may notice that when you
put that amount into the budget for any particular category, you will
notice that the message from the trainer in the lower right corner
changes indicating that he (and presumably the players) have an above
average level of happiness with your training budget. Of course, this
is not an iron clad rule regarding your training budget. If you want to
spend more to make your players faster or better home run hitters,
there is nothing wrong with that. I'm just advocating this budget
because it seems to be the most economical. Just remember that the cost
of training grows exponentially which does create diminishing marginal
returns per dollar spent.
A final word about training budgets here. If you become a massively
profitable franchise, then why not add more to the training budget?
There are some other things that you can spend money on, but keep
additional training in mind. When you begin your franchise, a maximized
training budget is not worth it. But, a few years later? It's your
call.
Rehabilitation should be treated a little bit differently. This comes
into effect when a player is injured and it is your rehab budget that
will, in part, determine how quickly that player can return to the
field. If you are planning on simulating every game, then having a
maximized rehabilitation budget is crucial because you will run into
injuries. If you are planning on playing most of the games yourself,
then rehab is not such a big deal because it is very rare to suffer
injuries in a game that you are actually playing. Therefore, if you are
planning on simulating every game, then you should maximize your
rehabilitation budget. If you are going to be playing most of the games
yourself, then I would set the rehabilitation budget at just a bit more
than one third of the maximized rehab budget. There are four categories
of rehabilitation that you can fund, and you can spend up to $2,000,000
on each category for a grand total of $8,000,000 worth of
rehabilitation. I would set each category at a little over $500,000 for
a grand total of about $2,000,000. If you remember from the EXPLANATION
OF COST STRUCTURES section, we can spread this cost out over the period
approximately 180 days which means that you will end up spending just
over $11,000 per day on rehab. What this does is keep the players happy
and if a player gets a minor injury, he will be back in no time.
TV CONTRACTS AND PRIMARY ADVERTISER
Here you will have the opportunity to sign a television contract as
well as rent space in your stadium to advertisers in order to earn some
money. The catch is that you will not be earning the bulk of your
contract until the end of the season. When you sign a contract, it will
be for a period of 2-6 years for a fixed cash flow. When choosing a
contract, the golden rule is that you should choose the shortest
contract, not the biggest in terms of dollar value. There is a good
reason for this which is that as you become a winning franchise, bigger
and better deals will come along in the future. You don't want to be
locked into a deal for 6 years at $2,000,000 per year when you have a 3
year deal worth $5,000,000 per year waiting for you next year. A short
deal will insure that when a better deal comes along, you have a better
chance of nabbing it when your deal expires. The shortest deal that you
can sign is for two years, and that is optimal.
When it comes to primary advertisers, you will have several options as
to which advertiser to choose. When you begin your new franchise, your
choice of TV contracts, however, is limited. When I say limited, I mean
that your only choice will be your home town local channel with a
meager yearly cash flow of, usually, less than $1,000,000. This is when
it is most critical to choose a short contract. If the contract
demanded is longer than 3 years, then it is probably worth it to not
sign a contract at all! This may sound crazy, but if you sign a four
year contract at about $750,000 per year, and then you are presented
with an opportunity for a 2 year contract for $4,000,000 per year in
the following year, then you will have sacrificed several million
dollars by hanging on to your old contract. In that case, you would
have been better off not signing a contract in the first year and then
picking up the better contract in the second year.
Also, just be aware that when you sign a contract with a TV station or
a primary advertiser, there are stipulations that go along with that
contract that you must fulfill in order to receive full payment. This
means that your contract may require you to have a team batting average
above a certain level, an ERA below a certain level, make the playoffs
or have a certain level of attendance. You will be able to see what
this requirement is before you sign the contract, but make sure that
you keep it in mind before you sign. Once the year is finished, and you
have completed the requirement of the advertiser or TV station, you
will be paid the full amount of the contract on January 1 of the next
year, not the current year.
BILLBOARD ADVERTISERS
This one is pretty obvious. When you sell billboard advertising, a
certain company will pay you to advertise in your stadium. What the
game allows you to do is sign short term advertising deals in your
stadium for a fixed amount of time for a fixed number of dollars.
Again, short deals are better because better deals may come along in
the future. In general, the rate at which advertisers will pay you is
directly a function of attendance. This means that it is a good idea to
sign deals that expire in midseason. As attendance keeps rising,
advertisers are willing to pay you more. Therefore, I think that the
optimal length for a new franchise is to choose a deal that expires in
the middle of 2007 or 2008. By that point (if you have been winning),
your stadium should be almost sold out each game and advertisers will
be paying out a lot to advertise in your stadium. Once rates are high,
then you can start locking in long term deals. Of course, keep in mind
that when you sign a deal that expires in the middle of 2007, the
amount of cash that you get will be HALF of the annual amount.
LOANS AND BANKING
This is one of the most crucial aspects of starting off your franchise
on the right foot. There are several purchases that you can make at the
start of the season. When choosing a loan, you want to do two things.
First, choose a loan amount that fully covers the cost of all of the
investments that you want to make. Secondly, now that you have figured
out the appropriate amount for your loan, you need to choose a bank, an
amount and a time frame for payment. There are two strategies here as
to where to go.
First, you can go with the lowest monthly payment strategy. The benefit
of this strategy is that by keeping the monthly payments as low as
possible, you will keep your cash flow high throughout the season which
means that at any given time, you will have greater flexibility to add
more vendors which is ultimately how you get goods into the hands of
your fans who, in turn, put more money in your pocket. Also, this means
that as your franchise becomes more successful year after year, the
yearly amount of loan payments that you make will begin to greatly
decrease as a percentage of your total expenses. Keep in mind though
that you will have to make these payments over the off-season as well.
Over the months of January through the first of April, total loan
payments can add up to an amount between one and two million dollars.
Within a few years, that may not seem like much considering how much
money you will eventually be making, but that loan expense can
effectively nullify the income earned from a primary advertiser of TV
station. So keep that in mind.
Second, you can go with the one-year, high monthly payment method. This
means that you are looking for the bank that will loan you your desired
amount, but the bank will want the entire loan paid back within one
year. The advantages and disadvantages of this strategy are exactly the
opposite of the low monthly payment strategy. With this strategy, you
are paying high monthly payments which reduce your flexibility to add
more vendors. On the other hand if you pay off the entire loan by the
end of the year, you will not have to make loan payments ever again,
and you can fully realize all future rewards.
If you are a beginner, then I would strongly suggest the first
strategy. However, if you are a veteran of the MLB series and you know
what to expect, then you might want to consider the second strategy.
VENDORS AND FACILITIES
Now that you know the rules about taking out a loan, you have to use
that loan to purchase some assets. You can purchase whatever you like,
but here are my suggestions for what to get.
Batting cage 2,000,000
Face painting 100,000
Playground 2,000,000
Hot tub 5,000,000
Ice cream guy x20 200,000
Soda man x20 200,000
Peanut guy x20 200,000
Aerobic room 10,000,000
Auto pitcher 5,000,000
Spa room 6,000,000
Massage room 4,000,000
---------------------------------
TOTAL 35,000,000
This should give you one unit of each asset, except for ice cream guy,
soda man and peanut guy for which you should have a grand total of 30
units each.
When you receive your loan, you will want to do two things. First you
will want to buy those vendors that will create cash flow, like the hot
tub and the playground, and such. Second, focus on those facilities
that will help your players such as the auto pitcher and the aerobic
room.
If you decide to go with the low-monthly-payment-method (recommended
for beginners) then the optimal $35,000,000 loan comes from Roll Bank
for a period of 15 years which obligates you to a monthly payment of
$332,461.
If you decide to go with the one-year, high-monthly-payment plan, then
go with a $35,000,000 loan from Piggy Bank at $2,980,247 per month.
I should also mention that not all of you will begin your new franchise
with a home game. About half of you will play your first home game a
week or more after opening day. If this is the case, then wait until
you begin your first home game to take out a loan. There is no reason,
whatsoever, to take out a loan to gain a certain amount of funds, and
then see those funds dwindle by using them to pay for player salaries,
staff salaries, training, rehab, etc. For those of you who will start
your franchise on the road, wait until you are about to play your first
home game to take this loan. This is important because when you buy a
new vendor (like the hot tub, for example) you want that vendor to
start producing cash flow right away, so you might as well wait until
you can get some cash flow before you buy those vendors. Therefore,
just wait until your first home stand to take that loan.
TRANSPORTATION
Read my lips! Do not EVER upgrade your transportation...unless you play
as an NL team. This is the biggest waste of money in the game. You may
be tempted to upgrade when you see your players whining and complaining
that they have to ride on a cheap bus, but don't worry about it. Sure,
riding on a bus is a negative for player morale, but you can more than
make up for that by being a winning team. The rule here is that there is
no substitute for victory. Your players will put up with having to ride
on a bus just as long as your team is having a great year. There is another
temptation that you should avoid. As the season progresses, you will notice
that the cost of an upgrade keeps falling day by day. Don't be fooled. The
reason why the cost of a transportation upgrade keeps falling is
because transportation costs are automatically paid in full at the
start of each year, and that billing pays for the entire year.
Therefore, when you upgrade your transportation near the end of the
season, you think that you are getting a great deal, but the cost is
low because you are only leasing that mode of transportation for a few
weeks, not a full season. The cut off date for transportation upgrades
is about three weeks before the end of the regular season. By that
point, you will be tempted by the very low cost of the upgrade.
However, if you do it, then you will not be able to reverse it until
the start of next season. When the off season ends and the regular
season begins, you will be charged for that one year lease right off
the bat. If you upgraded to a team jet just before the season ends, you
will be hit with a bill of $200,000,000! You can get a refund by
downgrading, but why bother? If your franchise has been wildly
profitable, then you will certainly be hit with a massive shared
revenue tax and you WILL start next season with a large negative
balance sheet. I will get more into this later, but the tax has to be
paid from your funds. The same rule applies to transportation costs.
The amount of the transportation lease will be paid out of your funds.
If your funds are not sufficient to cover your higher mode of
transportation, then you will automatically be downgraded to a bus.
Ultimately, the only real benefit of upgrading your transportation is
that your players energy will not decline as fast and you will be able
to play your starters more during the year with less days off for rest.
The problem with is that you have to pay a pretty high cost for keeping
your players refreshed with more luxurious transportation. I would make an
exception to this if you play as a team from the NL. If you play as an AL
team, then you have the luxury of the DH, and players at the DH position
will have their energy decline more slowly than position players. NL teams
have no such luxury, so it is not so unreasonable to upgrade to a coach
flight. A team bus is pushing it, but anything beyond that is a total waste
of money. Your team can make a ton of money during the season, but going from
$10,000,000 per year to $50,000,000 per year is absolutely out of the
question.
Here is the list of transportation methods which you can purchase as
well as the one year lease cost for each.
TRANSPORT ONE YEAR LEASE COST
Bus 1,000,000
Coach Flight 5,000,000
Team Bus 10,000,000
First Class Flight 50,000,000
Charter Flight 100,000,000
Team Jet 200,000,000
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In-Season Business Management
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This section is the most vitally important part of maximizing your
revenues throughout the season. Selling soda, beer, popcorn, caps,
tickets, parking and such are going to be your main focus of making
money. Here, I will discuss aspects of the day to day nature of running
a franchise and give you the tools to maximize revenues.
PLAYER FATIGUE
As you move along through your franchise season, you may notice that
your players suddenly don't have as much pop in their bat, they are
slower, and may even commit more errors. One explanation for this is
that your players might simply be fatigued. When you play a game, you
begin by picking your starting pitcher, and then adjusting your lineup.
When adjusting your lineup, look just off to the side of the player's
names, and you will notice green bars of different lengths. Those green
bars represent your player's energy. When certain players play day
after day, they get tired. Giving them a day off once in a while will
keep their energy levels high as well as their performance. This is why
it is so important to make sure that you have skilled bench players who
can sub for you starters every once in a while. Generally, it is a good
idea to let any given player to play for five days straight, and then
rest him.
PLAYER MORALE
Player morale is a general level of the happiness of your players. The
truth is that player morale and the maintenance of morale is not a very
big deal at all. If you have a player that is unhappy, but signed to a
long term contract, then he has no choice but to play the game at your
command. There are several variables that affect player morale, but the
one factor that overrides all others is winning. If you are a winning
franchise, then players will forgive just about anything, including
having to travel across America in a bus. Winning a lot will eventually
maximize your player's happiness, and you can forget about most other
aspects of morale building. There is only one reason why I would be
concerned about the morale of certain players. If a star player is
unhappy, then his team preference level will be low(you can view these
stats by finding your player on the roster menu, pressing the circle
button to bring up the player's card, and then toggling through the
player's info). If his team preference level is low, he might demand
extra compensation when you try and resign him. Other then that, you
can always keep player morale high by winning, having reasonable
training budgets, quality training and rehab facilities, and giving
bench players sufficient playing time.
PLAYER ADVERTISING
One way to get more fans to come to your stadium is to advertise your
players to your fans in order to tickle their baseball bone. The
benefit of advertising is that it slowly, but steadily increases the
support and loyalty of your fans. This in turn has a positive effect on
attendance. Of course, when it comes to increasing attendance, there is
no substitute for victory. Winning is the best way to increase
attendance, but advertising will give your franchise a little extra
push. When it comes to advertising players, you cannot directly choose
whom you will advertise. Instead, you will choose a marketing strategy
based on marketing your team's All-Stars, sluggers, rotation, fielders
or rookies. From there, the game will assign a player who fits that
description. You should start by setting the budget for advertising.
This is a yearly budget, so I like to set the total budget to its
maximum level, which comes to a grand total of $13,200,000 per year. I
think that it is worth it. Keep in mind as well that once you begin the
season, you can always change this amount, as well as the marketing
strategy. If you have committed to a maximized advertising budget, then
you should probably stick with it, but you should never stick with the
same marketing strategy. This can be changed independently of the
budget, so you should be mixing this up as the season moves along with
different strategies and different players.
TEAM ADVERTISING
Team advertising is identical to that of player advertising except for
one aspect that keeps team advertising more dynamic. With team
advertising, you can adjust the message of your advertisements to be
more in sync with your team's situation. For example, you can begin the
season with the "Start of the Season" message, and then change it a
week or so into the season. If you have a winning streak going, then
you can switch your advertising message to "Keep the Streak." Some
types of advertising have more of an impact than others which means
that TV advertising is both the most expensive and the most effective.
Keep this open for adjustment based on your team's situation. Newspaper
and magazine advertising are good for generic messages, but use TV and
radio to adjust your message to your situation.
Finally, let me make an important note here about both player and team
advertising. Does it make any sense to use advertising to draw fans to
your stadium if you are selling out every game? Of course not, but I
certainly would not recommend cutting your adverting budgets to zero.
Advertising is something that keeps your fans interested and coming to
the ball park. However, once you are selling out your stadium on a
consistent basis, there should not be much problem by cutting your
advertising budget by about one-fourth. You still need some
advertising, just not as much. Depending on your team, play around with
this and find out what works.
PROMOTIONS
The first thing that I want to say about promotions is this: don't go
nuts with numerous, big, expensive promotions as a means of raising
attendance. That's simply not the way to do it. It is more useful to
think of promotions as an extension of team advertising. What I mean by
that is that promotions can be used most cost effectively as a means of
slowly building fan support over a long period as opposed to increasing
support in small, but temporary bursts. With team advertising, you can
adjust you message to send word to the public about your promotions
with the "Upcoming Events" choice. This provides a bit of synergy to
the effectiveness of your promotions. Although player morale and
support is something that you should not worry about too much, fan
support is crucial. One way of keeping fans happy is to constantly have
them looking forward to your next promotion. There is also one more
reason why doing a lot of big, expensive promotions is a bad idea. When
it comes to total fan support, there are so many variables that
determine fan support that the weight that promotions have in
determining this support does not justify large costs. Some of these
variables are things like wins, concession prices, ticket prices, your
position in the standings, the time gap between promotions, and
advertising spending among other things. With all of these taken into
account, promotions alone cannot justify a ton of spending on
promotions. Instead, you want to slowly, but steadily, raise fan
support over the long run with a bunch of small, cheap promotions. The
way to do this is to drop a small promotion in the middle of every home
stand, and I must stress that it should be done IN THE MIDDLE OF THE
HOME STAND. If you do it on the first day of the home stand, then you
will mess up your tests for things like optimal ticket and concession
prices when doing the STL method.
The two cheapest promotions that you can do are the "Program Night" at
$2 per unit and "Ball Night" at $3 per unit. I like to do a promotion
of about 3,000 units for each home stand. The cost is small and your
fans will always be looking forward to the next promotion.
I have to make one very important note about free ticket promotions.
The game lists the cost of this promotion as zero. Do not be fooled!
The cost of this promotion is very real and, as ticket prices begin to
rise, this could end up being one of the most expensive promotions that
you can do. Although the game says that the cost is zero, you are in
fact paying a cost for this promotion since you are forfeiting the
revenue that you otherwise might have gained. Let me illustrate with a
simple example. Suppose that you have a lemonade stand. Each cup that
you sell costs you $0.25 worth of lemons, sugar, and ice, not to
mention the paper cup. You are also charging $1.00 per cup of lemonade.
Therefore, your expected profit per cup is $0.75. Your best friend
stops by and you offer him/her a free cup. Did your give away cost you
nothing? No, since you obviously had to pay for the ingredients that
went into making that cup of lemonade. Then you might say "So the cost
of my give away was $0.25." Wrong again. The true cost of giving away
that cup was in fact $0.75. Since each cup earns you a profit of $0.75,
you just forfeited $0.75 worth of profits! That is what you truly lost
by giving away a cup of lemonade. The same principal applies to a free
ticket give away. The cost of giving away tickets is the money that you
COULD have earned by selling them. Now the question is how are the free
tickets given away? Are they given away randomly or is there some
structure? Well, it's a combination of both. The tickets that are given
away are distributed among all of your seating sections. The more
tickets that you decide to give away, the more expensive this promotion
will be. Here is a hypothetical, totally made up chart to illustrate
what I mean:
SEAT # OF SEATS PRICE
Bleacher 1,000 5
LF View 1,500 6
RF View 1,500 7
LF General 10,000 8
RF General 10,000 8
IF Box 4,000 10
Home Plate 3,000 12
Let's assume two things here. First, assume that the give away is a
total of 4,000 tickets. Second, let's ignore some general variability
and just assume that the free tickets are equally distributed among all
seating sections. Now, if those 4,000 tickets are equally distributed
among the seating sections, then the costs would work out as follows:
SEAT # OF SEATS PRICE GIVEN AWAY OPP.COST
Bleacher 1,000 5 571 2,855
LF View 1,500 6 571 3,426
RF View 1,500 7 571 3,997
LF General 10,000 8 571 4,568
RF General 10,000 8 571 4,568
IF Box 4,000 10 571 5,710
Home Plate 3,000 12 571 6,852
TOTAL $31,976
That comes to about $8 per ticket in my example, but it will be more in
your game. Now there is an off setting factor here, so let me address
that. One might think that by bringing in more fans with a free ticket
giveaway, then more fans will come to the park and they will buy more
hot dogs, beer, jerseys, and batting cage tickets among other things.
That is certainly true, but the mistake is to think that by offering
4,000 tickets for free, then there will be an extra 4,000 people in
your stadium. It does not work that way. Again, let me use a simple
example to illustrate:
Adam and Bob both live in Seattle and are both Mariner fans. Adam goes
to lots of games every year while Bob prefers to watch the game at
home, presumably because the beer is cheaper. On July 10, Felix
Hernandez is going to face Johan Santana, and both Adam and Bob are
very excited. Adam would have gone to the game anyways and paid money
for the ticket. Bob, on the other hand would have watched the game at
home, but since the Mariners announced that there was a ticket give
away, Bob decides to actually go to the game. Do you see what happened
here? Adam is the opportunity cost. He would have paid anyways, but the
Mariners forfeited that revenue by giving the ticket away. Adam would
have also bought a beer as well, but he would have bought it anyways
regardless if he had paid for a ticket or not. As for Bob, he got into
Safeco Field for free and bought a beer that otherwise would not have
been bought. So, in this example, Bob is a financial gain to the
Mariners because he bought a beer that would not have been sold had Bob
not been there. Adam on the other hand is the opportunity cost. The
Mariners suffered a loss because he would have bought a ticket but he
got it for free instead. The beer that Adam bought should not figure
into this because he would have been there anyways and bought that
beer. Overall, it is a net loss for the Mariners when you compare the
gain of the extra beer sold to the cost of the ticket given away. It's
even more drastic because, as it turns out, for every Bob there are
three Adams. Here is how I came to that conclusion.
This is from my last FAQ for MLB `06: The Show. It's slightly outdated,
but the principal still holds true in this game. I simply started a new
franchise with the Mariners, and I simulated the first game. The
relevant numbers that I got were as follows:
NET INCOME: -$217,817
AVERAGE ATTENDANCE 23,422
TICKET REVENUE: $619,786
These results are about normal, and doing multiple tests would reveal
similar figures. Also, keep in mind that this was just for one game, so
average attendance is equal to total attendance. Then, I decided to do
a free ticket promotion of 20,000 total tickets. The following figures
that I got surprised me in magnitude, but not in result.
NET INCOME: -$292,705
AVERAGE INCOME: 29,018
TICKET REVENUE: $460,129
As you can see, ticket revenue dropped sharply. Opportunity cost is
obviously a factor here. However, the most interesting thing here is
that average attendance increased by only 5,600 instead of 20,000.
This means that of the 20,000 tickets, 72% of them went to fans that
were going to go to the game anyways, but they got in for free as
opposed to paying for them. This means that the promotion attracted
only an extra 5,600 fans that otherwise might not have gone. Did they
buy more concessions than a smaller crowd would have? Yes, they did,
but that does not come close to off-setting the cost. As you can see,
ticket revenue fell by about $160,000, but net income fell by about
$75,000. This means that those extra 5,600 fans translated into total
profits of $85,000 worth of concession sales. In other words, 14,400
fans got in for free as opposed to paying for tickets, and that caused
a direct opportunity cost of $160,000. They bought their beer, soda,
popcorn and other things as they would have done anyways, so they did
not add additional concession revenue than normal. But since net income
fell by $75,000 and not $160,000, that means that the difference was
made up by the sale of additional goods and food. Changing the number
of free tickets would change these figures in magnitude, but not in
general result.
A reader of my last FAQ made a very interesting observation. With
regard to giving away baseballs, or programs and such, there is no
opportunity cost at all. Under normal circumstances, you would think
that of all the fans going to the game that day that were planning to
buy a program that the total number of programs sold for that day would
go down. (To figure out the total number sold, take the average sold
per game and multiply that by the total number of home games that you
have played.) If the principal of opportunity cost applied to other
goods, then the number of programs sold for that day would go down. But
if you check the sale figures, there is no drop is sales for some
reason. Therefore, there is no opportunity cost to giving away goods
like baseballs or programs which makes the cost of such a promotion of
just a pure cash cost. The only reason to add an opportunity cost into
your decision here would be if the quantity sold differed significantly
from the average amount sold per game. If the average amount of sales
per game is 500 units, but a promotion causes sales to drop by 200
units below the average for that day, then you can take that into
account because it will increase your total cost. If, for some other
reason, the amount sold for that day increases by 200 units above the
average, then you will be collecting extra revenue, and you can deduct
that from the cost of the promotion. Either way, opportunity cost will
only come into play when the total amount sold for that day differs
significantly from the long run average sold per game.
Ultimate conclusion, free ticket promotions are a rip off, so just give
away 2000-3000 baseballs or programs as a promotion.
TICKET PRICES
This should be done in two stages. First, use the STL method to test
for the revenue maximizing price when you begin a brand new franchise.
Second, after a few weeks and every test afterward, you will want to
see how high you can raise the price before you see a significant drop
in attendance. If you want to do an effective test, make sure that you
followed my advice in the previous sections with regard to promotions,
advertising, and such. Also, this should be DONE ON THE FIRST DAY OF A
NEW HOME STAND. The reason is because if you are raising prices, you
will also be increasing revenue. To maximize the total profits that you
can take in, doing the test on the first day of a new home stand will
make sure that extra revenue is collected for each game of your home
stand. So, let's give this a shot.
When you begin a brand new franchise, the first stage of the test is to
test for the ticket price that will yield the highest revenue to begin
your franchise with. Now, simulate your first home game and check out
how much each section yielded in terms of revenue. Now, load the game
and try again, except this time, raise each ticket price by $1.
Simulate the game and see if there is any significant change in the
income generated. Load the game and keep repeating until you find the
revenue maximizing price for each section. This will get you off on the
right foot by maximizing your early cash flow which is low at this
point, but it will rise from here on out.
After a few weeks, your advertising, winning and promotions should be
having some effect on the happiness of your fans, and more of them will
start to come to the ball park which will make daily attendance levels
rise. At this point, and from now on, we want to see how high we can
raise the price of each ticket without affecting attendance. Don't
worry about finding the revenue maximizing price anymore since more
fans in the stadium will mean that they will buy more soda, peanuts,
jerseys and beer. Anyways, at some point during the season, you will
want to STL for ticket price effects on attendance. To do this, take
note of season section attendance which can be found on the seating
screen mentioned above. Now simulate the next game and check out the
change in attendance. Keep this new level in mind, because that is the
result of our control test. Now load the game and raise each ticket
price by $1. Simulate the next game and check your attendance figures
again. If there was no drop in attendance for a specific section beyond
normal variance (which might be + or - 50 people), then you know that
you can raise that section price by $1 with out consequence. Keep doing
this until you find out how high you can raise each section price
without dropping attendance too much. If attendance drops significantly
more than previous tests by raising price by one more dollar, then the
price is too high and you should revert back to the last price that you
tested for.
It is VERY IMPORTANT that you test ticket prices before you test
concession prices. The reason why is because when doing these STL
tests, we want to test the result of changing one variable, and ONLY
one variable. Since revenue gained from concession sales is both a
function of price and attendance, we want to hold one of those variable
constant, i.e. attendance. We can hold attendance relatively constant
by testing ticket prices first by testing for only one variable (ticket
price). Once attendance is held relatively constant, we can now test
for concession prices while having only one variable to test.
Finally, I should mention that in previous games, I was unable to
maximize both ticket price and attendance. If I set the ticket price
for any particular section to its maximum level, then I found it almost
impossible to sell out that section. Therefore, I think that it is OK
to create a price ceiling of $1 or $2 below the maximum allowable
price. You should not be sacrificing too much, and you can be assured
that happy fans will gladly sell out the stadium at 100% capacity after
your first full year. From there, you can easily check your attendance
figures and be confident in being able to sell out any additional seats
that you add.
CONCESSION PRICES
If you successfully tested for the revenue maximizing ticket price,
then you should be getting the hang of how STL is working for you. Now,
we want to adjust concession prices to see what price for each
concession will yield the highest revenue for that concession. First,
just make sure that you do a control test to see what happens under
normal circumstances. Now load the game and increase the price of each
concession by $1-2 and see what happens to your season income figure
(season income is the figure that you want to look at. Ignore the Avg
Profit figure). I must note that when it comes to expensive items like
jerseys, gloves, signed bats and others, these goods are heavily
inelastic (see Appendix 1) which means that you can raise the price
much more than normal goods. For these types of goods, try raising
prices by $5-10 at a time. Here is where you get introduced to those
funny little arrows that indicate customer's feelings about that price.
Blue arrows pointing down means those customers think the price is a
real bargain. A green arrow that points right means that the good is in
a reasonable price range for the customer. A red arrow pointing up
means those customers think that the good is very expensive. My advice
is to ignore these arrows. Who cares if customers think that the price
of a jersey is too high when you have chosen the price that earns you
the most amount of money? Yes, this will cause fans to get a bit angry,
but that's OK. They will forgive you if you keep winning. Also, the
fans will get used to the prices, and their attitudes will change for
the better. A good that previously had a red arrow for its price may
turn into a green arrow price in a month or two.
It is very important for me to note that testing for the highest
allowable ticket process and revenue maximizing concession prices is
where the whopping majority of your profits will come from. I cannot
stress how important these tests are because this is where your money
is coming from. This may seem tedious, and it is. However, but be
assured that you shouldn't have to do these tests for very long. By the
All-Star game, 90% of your concessions will be selling at the maximum
possible price, which means that you will be testing for only a handful
of goods for the rest of the season, so this process gets less tedious
very quickly and you will be spending only a fraction of the time doing
tests as you did before. I also strongly recommend keeping an archive
of when you do these tests so that if you want to start a franchise
with the same team all over again, you won't have to spend all that
time testing for prices again.
OVERHEAD
So what is this thing that you seen in the pricing screen called
overhead? Basically, overhead is how much money you have to pay in
order to sell a single unit of a particular item. This means that when
you sell a hot dog for $4, you have to pay an overhead charge of $1.
This means that, in net terms, you will receive $3 worth of profit. I
generally use the term "maximizing revenue" as opposed to "maximizing
profit" because the overhead rate in the previous section is fixed and
it does not change with the number of vendors. Therefore, as you
maximize revenue, you are automatically maximizing profit, so the two
phrases can be used interchangeably in this case. By using the data
from the pricing screen, you can compute all sorts of things.
(Price - Overhead Rate) x (# Sold per Game) = Average Profit(less
exact)
(Total Profits) / (Total Sold) = Average Profit (more exact)
(Season Overhead) / (Overhead per Game) = # of home games played
(# of Home Games Played) x (# Sold Per Game) = Total Sold
(Season Income) - (Season Overhead) = Total Profits
(Overhead per Game) / (# Sold Per Game) = Overhead Rate
So, when you pay $1 to sell a $4 hot dog, where does that $1 get
counted on the balance sheet? It gets counted under FACILITIES in the
EXPENSE portion of the balance sheet. That is ultimately how overhead
leads into the NET INCOME figure. The $4 gets counted under facilities
in the income portion, and the $1 gets counted under facilities in the
expense portion which increases net income by $3.
Since some items have overhead rates of less than $1, like soda, you
might wonder how the game accounts for fractions of a dollar when the
balance sheet presents everything in terms of whole numbers. The game
simply rounds off cents to(I believe), the nearest dollar. Also, the
number that you sell of most concessions is pretty high, so that large
number will translate into whole-dollar costs.
Finally, you can see why I stress being diligent with testing your
concession prices. The higher the price, the larger the gap you create
between overhead and price. Since overhead stays constant, you will be
directly increasing net income when you increase prices.
ADDING VENDORS
Vendors are the ones who ultimately put all of the concessions that you
sell into the hands of your fans. As you begin to win more and make
your fans happier and happier, they will begin to fill more and more
seats. And what to fans do when they come to your stadium? They walk
around and buy stuff. However, if you do not have enough vendors to
sell your concessions, your fans will have to wait in line longer and
longer which means that the demand for your goods is higher than the
quantity that you are currently supplying. If you want to have nice
income growth, then you will need to cater to the demand of your
customers by increasing your supply capabilities. The less time your
fans will spend waiting in line, the more time they will spend buying
stuff.
The first thing that I should mention about adding one of these new
vendors is that each vendor has a built-in normal rate of return of 1%
per home game. So what do I mean by this? If you go to the vendors
screen, you will notice that the first vendor on the screen is the
Super Food Stand at a cost of $5,000,000 per additional vendor. A 1%
home game rate of return means that for each home game that you play,
the addition of this vendor will provide you with an extra $50,000
($5,000,000 x 0.01 = $50,000. And consequently %5,000,000 = $50,000 /
0.01) worth of income per home game.
Before doing this of course, you should have already tested for ticket
prices and concession prices. So, you should have a saved game right
before the first game of a new home stand and you should be ready to
test. Do a control test first, of course, to see what happens under
normal circumstances. What you are looking for is that particular
vendor's SEASON INCOME which is listed on the vendors screen. Now that
you know how much income that vendor will have generated after that
game, load your game and add an additional vendor that you want to
test. Simulate the game and see how much income has now been generated.
If the generated income is the same as before you added the vendor,
then supply is already meeting demand (the market has been almost
perfectly cleared), and the addition of an extra vendor means that you
are not increasing sales any more. Therefore, don't buy it and move on
to a different vendor. Do the same thing with another vendor and see
what happens. Let's use a Super Food Stand as an example. If you test
for a new Super Food Stand, and you notice that the increase in income
is $25,000, then DO NOT buy an extra vendor. The reason is because you
will be overpaying for that additional cash flow. Since the game's
normal rate of return is 1% per home game, then you need to find a
vendor that will provide you with at least that. In this case, that
would be like spending $5,000,000 for an investment that is only worth
$2,500,000 ($2,500,000 = $25,000 / 0.01). Therefore, it is not worth it
to add an extra vendor at that point. Demand will increase in the
future, however, and you should try again the next time you are ready.
Suppose, however, that instead of yielding an extra $25,000, adding
that extra Super Food Stand yielded an extra $50,000. If that had
happened instead, then your return would be equal to the present value
of the investment. In that case, you should consider making that
investment in a new vendor. However, there is one buy rule that trumps
all others and should signal an automatic buying response. If that
investment in a new Super Food Stand yields an amount greater than
$50,000, such as $60,000, then you should absolutely buy it. The reason
is, of course, that you would be spending $5,000,000 on an investment
that is worth $6,000,000 = $60,000 / 0.01. In this case, an extra Super
Food Stand would have a net present value of $1,000,000 (Net Present
Value = [Present Value of the Investment] - [Purchase Price]). It is a
real bargain in this case and you should buy. Of course, that $60,000
per home game will probably return to the normal level of $50,000 in a
month or two, but in the mean time you get to take in the benefits of
that extra revenue.
Investing in new vendors should not stop at adding just one extra. If
you can afford it, and if you are willing to do so, then buy two or
three. Just make sure that if you want to make that investment, that
the increase in income is equal to or greater than the 1% rate of
return. For example, if I notice that adding one extra Super Food Stand
adds $60,000 to the season income of Super Food, then I will buy it. If
adding one more on top of that adds another $50,000 to my total
($60,000 + $50,000 = $110,000), then I will that one as well. However,
if the third vendor that I add yields only $40,000, then I will not buy
that one because that marginal investment has a lower rate of return
than the standard 1% return.
Now, here comes the interesting part which is choosing a basket of
vendors based on the returns that you can get. As stated earlier, you
should be taking note of how much extra revenue each additional vendor
can potentially give you. Once you have made a crude spread sheet for
yourself, you can determine extra revenue and the total cost of getting
that revenue. Allow me to use the example that I used in my last FAQ
for MLB `06: The Show.
-total $ figures
-all $ figures in thousands
-A = year to date revenue before any test
-B = year to date revenue after control test
-1,2,3... = revenue collected after adding additional vendors
-x = no extra revenue
VENDOR A B 1 2 3 4
Super Food 8939 9251 9315 9363 x x
Food Flat 4194 4335 4367 4388 4410 4422
Snack Food 6241 6463 6495 6506 x x
Drink Stand 4817 4997 5004 x x x
Jersey 26262 27014 27133 x x x
Based on the above return figures, I can break down the numbers into
just increases in revenue due to an additional vendor.
VENDOR A B 1 2 3 4 COST OF
VENDOR
Super Food - - 64 48 - - 5,000
Food Flat - - 32 21 22 12 2,000
Snack Food - - 32 11 - - 1,500
Drink Stand - - 7 - - - 1,000
Jersey - - 119 - - - 10,000
As you can see, I can get a positive net present value from 1 super
food, 3 Food Flat, 1 Snack Food, and 1 Jerseys 'n Junk. Of course, it
would be absurdly expensive to buy all of these at once, so you have to
pick and choose which ones to get. At this point, I really did not want
to spend more than $10,000,000 on additional vendors, so I compared my
options and came up with three baskets of vendors to choose from.
OPTION 1: Jersey 'n Junk (1)
$10,000,000 investment for a return of $119,000 per day.
119,000 / 10,000,000 = 1.19%
OPTION 2: Super Food(1), Food Flat(1), Snack Food(1)
$8,500,000 investment for a return of $128,000 per day
128,000 / 8,500,000 = 1.51%
OPTION 3: Food Flat(3), Snack Food(1)
$7,500,000 investment for a return of $107,000 per day
107,000 / 7,500,000 = 1.43%
As you can see, OPTION 2 gives me the best return when I take into
account all of the investments that have a net present value.
I would like to add just a few more things about adding new vendors now
that you know the rules about adding them. First, if you see fans
complaining that the lines are too long, then don't simply take this as
an indication that a new vendor has to be added. If your testing
reveals that you are not getting a good rate of return on your
investment, don't buy the vendor. Your goal is to maximize profits, and
that is what you should be concerned with. Second, as I mentioned
before, the rate of return per home game is 1% of the vendors total
cost. This means that the yearly rate of return is actually 82%! Since
you will be playing a minimum of 82 games at home, you collect that
cash flow for each game. So be careful when adding big and expensive
vendors like a Jerseys & Junk which costs $10,000,000. If you add this
vendor at the very end of the season, then you will not be able to
realize much cash flow for the season. The best time to add the most
expensive vendors is at the very start of the season so that you can
capitalize on as much of that cash flow as possible. In the case of
Jerseys & Junk, adding a vendor at that very start of the season should
yield about $8,200,000 for the entire season ($10,000,000 =
$100,000 / 0.01....$100,000 x 82 = $8,200,000.)
Finally, you may notice that even though your tests reveal that you
have added income to the SEASON INCOME figure in the vendor screen,
that money may not show up right away on your balance sheet in terms of
changes in NET INCOME. I don't know why this is, but in my experience,
that extra revenue will show up really soon, so don't worry about that.
PARKING PRICES
This is a tough thing to price. The reason it is so tough is because I
have found that testing for a profit maximizing price yields revenue
figures that can fluctuate wildly. This makes it very hard to pin down
an optimal price, so my suggestion is to use the highest "green price".
This means that you should increase the price of parking to point just
before that green arrow turns into a red arrow. I wish that I could be
more detailed about this, but there is too much variability to nail
down the right price.
ADDING SEATS
After about two seasons, you will notice from your ticket price tests
that attendance is getting up there and certain sections of your
stadium are, or are close to, being sold out every single game. When
that happens, it is time to let some more fans into your stadium by
adding extra seats. To add new seats, go to the seating screen where
you checked your ticket price tests. Press the X button and you will be
able add additional seats. You will notice two things right off the
bat. First, you can add seats in intervals of 10. Second, you will
notice that each section of seating has different costs associated with
it. Some are, of course, more expensive than others to add.
Before you add seats, doing a simple control test is not enough. You
should do about three or four control tests to make sure that when you
play a game, the cumulative attendance for that section increases by
the exact amount of the seating capacity. In other words, make sure
that if a particular section has a total capacity of 2,500 seats, then
you have to make sure that each and every seat is sold out. Check this
a few times to be sure that this is the case. Once you have confirmed
that a section is consistently selling out then you can add some new
seats.
What you will be testing for is how many people will actually sit in
your new seats. Therefore try adding 50 seats at a time when you test
for increases in attendance. If those 50 seats are also sold out, try
adding another 50. You should have the idea down by now.
Of course with day to day attendance figures, there will be some
variability that makes it hard to predict an exact number of seats that
you should add. If for instance, adding 100 seats brings an additional
76 fans to that section, then sticking with an addition of 100 seats is
a good idea since the rest of the seats will fill out in time. That is
why I think that increases of 50 seats at a time is a good,
conservative benchmark for this particular test and it allows for some
variability.
As a supplement to this section, I would highly recommend that you read
the appendix section below on the subject of elasticity. The reason is
because there is the possibility that you may be in the highly elastic
range when you are adding seats. This basically means that if you drop
the price by a small percentage, attendance could increase by a much
larger percentage. If this is the case, then it would be worth it to
start LOWERING the price of tickets to pack more fans in. Here is an
example based on the model from the appendix.
Suppose that you have a section that has a seating capacity of 3,000
seats, and that section is selling out every game at a price of $70.
You add 500 seats, and those extra seats are filled with an additional
150 fans. Now suppose that I dropped the price by $2 and I notice that
the lower price attracts an extra 250 fans to the game. The percentage
change in quantity ([3,400 - 3,150] / 3,150 = 7.9% )is divided by the
percentage change in price ( [68 - 70] / 70 = -2.9% ), which yields an
elasticity of -2.72 = (7.9% / -2.9%). Since the relationship between
attendance and price is elastic, lowering the price of tickets will
increase both attendance and revenue from that section.
LOOSE ENDS
Before you head into the off season, there will be a few things that
you might want to take care of. First, if you have plenty of funds in
the bank, you may want to consider paying off the balance of your loan
before you finish your season. The reason for this is because you will
have to make loan payments over the months of the off season. By the
end of your second season, you should have plenty of available funds,
and you should pay off that loan. Also, by the end of the season, the
condition of your field, training and rehabilitation facilities will
have deteriorated a little bit. You can fix this at the end of the
season in the Stadium Update screen, and the cost is rather minor. In
fact, I like to do this twice. I like to do this at both the end of the
season and at the beginning of the season. You may want to do this at
the start of the season because these facilities will deteriorate
during the off season.
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YOU WILL HAVE A FIT IF YOU DO NOT DO THIS
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I got a lot of great feed back from readers last year, but a number of
them were asking me about odd glitches that happened during the off
season. For example, people told me that they traded for a certain
player and got someone completely different. MLB 2006 was notorious for
freezing in the middle of the season which would not allow you to
continue your franchise. Thankfully, MLB `06: The Show was pretty bug
free, but almost all of the bugs and glitches that people reported to
me happened during the off season management session. Therefore, I say
this unto you...
When you finish your last game of the season, CREATE A BACK UP FILE AND
SAVE IT THERE! You should be keeping a back up file anyways incase
something happens. In many games, such as Elder Scrolls IV, there are
bugs and glitches that can cause you problems, but loading a back up
file and doing a task over again can usually fix the problem.
-----------------------------------------------------
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OFF SEASON MANAGEMENT
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I hope that you all had a very profitable and winning season, and now
you should get ready to manage your team in the off season. Also, let
me add that a few people e-mailed me about last year's game and
mentioned that the off season did not start for them. This problem
puzzled me, but I think I know why this may have happened. The off
season does not start once the last game of the World Series is over.
It starts on a specific day. Therefore, just simulate several days
until you get there. It's a minor oversight, but it's worth mentioning.
MAKE A BACK UP FILE BEFORE YOU DO IT.
SHARED REVENUE TAX
Ah, the good old shared revenue tax. This certainly adds more realism
to the business side to the game, but it can freak out a lot of players
when they end the off season because they will start their next season
and notice that their balance sheet shows a net income of $-60,000,000!
When I saw that number after playing MLB 2005, I almost had a nervous
breakdown! This can freak out players, but I am here to assure you that
seeing such a large negative number on your balance sheet is really not
a big deal. In fact, Appendix 2 is all about giving you a proof as to
why it is no big deal, and I highly encourage you to check it out.
First, let's break down what the shared revenue tax is all about.
When your season officially comes to an end, you will completely cease
all of your business operations. From your balance sheet, you will see
that you have earned a large amount of revenue. In order to "level the
playing field", the game (kind of like in real life) will levy a tax on
the revenue that you have earned for your season. In fact, the game
will do this to every team. All of the tax revenue from each team goes
into a giant pool. From there, the total taxes collected are divided
equally among every team in the form of an equal rebate check. This
means that the tax minus your rebate is the net tax that you have paid.
Some teams that have earned very low revenue will actually come out
ahead because their rebate checks will be higher than their tax
expense. You on the other hand will probably be paying a very large net
tax because you managed your business so well.
Ultimately, the reason why your balance sheet will look so scary is
because of a matter of timing. Suppose that you just finished the 2007
season, and you are about to jump over to the year 2008. Once the new
season begins, you will be hit with the tax on January 1. So you just
incurred an expense, but have you earned any revenue? Only a little
because this is when your primary advertiser and television contract
will keep their promise and pay you. You also are charged with two more
expenses during the off season. First, you will have to make loan
payments over the off season, and those payments will be taken out of
your funds every month. Also, you will have to pay for the full cost of
your transportation lease. With all of those combined expenses and just
a little bit of revenue, your balance sheet will show a large negative
number. There are two main reasons to not worry about this. First, the
funds that you begin your next season with would be the same regardless
of when the shared revenue tax is paid (see Appendix 2). Second, your
profits per game will be high enough that you will be able to climb out
of the red and into the black by around the All Star break.
RESIGNING PLAYERS
This is not only a great opportunity to lower your daily expenses, but
you can also free up some additional payroll room in the RESIGN PLAYERS
section. Instead of releasing players into the free agent pool and then
attempting to sign them, you can simply renegotiate the contract of any
player on your roster that is or is not under contract. Also, you will
have already noticed that when your season ended you were granted an
increase of x% in your maximum salary budget. This increase is directly
linked to the success of the season that you have just finished.
Winning the World Series will certainly grant you the biggest increase,
but if you fail to make the playoffs, then you can expect a very small
salary budget increase. I do not know if winning off season awards like
the MVP award or the Cy Young affects your budget increase, but it
can't hurt.
Right now, your first priority should be to free up some salary budget
room. To do this, take note of all of your players who you would like
to keep for several seasons and are in the middle of their contract.
Now, try to resign them to a contract that is heavily reconstructed in
your favor. To do this, you should start by setting your offer at one
year and the lowest salary possible. Now, adjust the length of your
offered contract to whatever number of years the player finds
acceptable. You can safely try out several contract lengths because no
one in his right (except a pitiful AA player) mind will accept such a
contract. Once you have found the optimal contract length, now you can
raise the salary offered to find the absolute minimum salary that the
player will accept. If you do this with the right players, you will
notice that the amount of money that you have available for player
salaries is increasing. The reason for this is because when you
restructure a player's contract, that player will accept a lower salary
now in exchange for a higher salary later. Since the immediate effect
is to lower the salary that you will be paying that player next year,
the amount of money that you are allowed to spend on players will
increase. This should illustrate the reason why you should do this
first, and it is because you want to have as much money available for
resigning your best players who have expired contracts as well as money
available for signing free agents.
Your second priority should be your best players who have expired
contracts. These are the guys who you definitely do not want to risk to
free agency. Now, you should do exactly what you did when resigning
players in the middle of a contract. Set the contract length and salary
to a minimum; find the optimal length and then the minimum salary that
is acceptable to the player.
At this point, you should have freed up some salary budget room as well
as resigned your best players to long term contracts that have been
reworked in your favor.
As for all those garbage AA and AAA players with expired contracts,
just let them become free agents. Don't even think about resigning
them. Why? Because you will need sufficient room on your roster to
allow for any potential free agents that you want to sign as well as
your draft picks.
TRADING PLAYERS
Trading for players is a way to get new players on your team that is
financially superior to signing free agents. Why? Because it is
essentially a salary swap. The other team will accept paying your
player's salary and you agree to accept their player's salary. Remember
from the EXPLANATION OF COST STRUCTURES section about what happens when
you upgrade from one coach to another? The same principal applies here.
Also, once the trade is complete, you can restructure the contract of
your new player immediately and sign him to a long term contract. I am
certainly not suggesting that free agency is a rip off or that it is
bad business. Not one bit. However, if there is a player that you
really want, and he is not a free agent, this is the time to get him
and sign him. Try a whole bunch of player combinations to see what
works.
AMATUER DRAFT
This is really the only part in the game where your previous attempts
at scouting will come into play. When the draft begins, all teams will
select amateur players in an order based on their performance during
the season. The worst teams will, of course, pick first and the best
teams will pick last. When it is time for you to pick, you truly can
pick any player that you want, but almost all of the players will have
their ratings kept a secret from you if you did not scout them. If you
want to check a player's ratings, then you must have scouted that
player previously. Ultimately, the entire draft goes for 5 rounds, and
your position in each round is the same, and it is based on your
performance during the season.
When you began your franchise, you may have been given the goal that
you need to draft an All Star potential player. This is actually not a
very unreasonable goal. You can either leave it to chance and pick the
player with the highest overall rating(the bar meter) which is not a
very good idea, or you can check that player's potential rating. To
check his potential rating, highlight that player and press the O
button and then the X button. From there, use R1 to toggle to the
player's rating screen. On the rating screen, you will see six
different ratings along with a letter rating from A to F with A being
the best. Both pitchers and hitters have OVERALL, FIELDING, and
POTENTIAL ratings in common. In order to fulfill your goal, you want to
find the player with the highest POTENTIAL rating. An A will almost
certainly guarantee that the player will have All Star potential.
Drafting a player that has a rating of B will give you a solid chance
that he will be a potential All Star. A player with a rating of C has a
slim to none chance of having All Star potential. You don't necessarily
need to have an early draft pick to nab such a player. In fact, you
could possibly have the last pick in the first round and still draft an
All-Star potential player.
General attribute levels like power, fielding, and the quality of
pitchers individual pitches can be seen without scouting that player.
Therefore, if you do not have to pick an All-Star potential player as a
franchise goal, then picking on the basis of the player's actual
attributes is perfectly acceptable.
SIGNING FREE AGENTS
Hopefully, you have freed up some of your salary budget in preparation
for signing a top free agent. After the amateur draft is over and you
have signed your five draft picks (or as many as you cared to sign),
you will be ready to sign free agents. When you examine the players who
have filed for free agency, you may notice that you will be put on a
timer. At the lower right corner of the screen, you will notice that
there is a blue bar that is indicating how much time you have left for
that day. Each day takes between 1 and 2 minutes to complete, and there
are a grand total of 60 days in which you can sign free agents. This
means that if there is a free agent player that you really want, then
you had better act fast or else other teams may step in sign him in the
first few days of the free agent signing period.
When you spot a free agent that you want to sign, highlight that player
and make him an offer. That player will not accept or reject at this
point. Instead, he will consider your offer and will take a few days to
mull it over. You can make offers to other players as well at the same
time. There are a few indications as to how likely it is that your
target free agent will sign with you. The first way you can tell is by
checking the player's interest meter. This can be seen when you select
the high lighted player that you are making an offer to. The second way
is to check to see if you are truly making the best offer. You can see
this on the main free agent screen by looking at the icon in the best
offer column. If your team is offering that player the best offer, then
your team logo will appear in that column. If another team is making a
better offer, then that team's logo will appear there. Either way, the
terms of that deal will appear in the right hand column. If another
team is making the best offer, then looking at the terms of the deal
will give you an idea of what you need to do in order to top that deal.
Once you have picked your free agent targets, just sit back and see if
your best offer is taken within a few days.
LAST WORDS
That pretty much does it for the major aspects of how to run a
franchise in MLB '07: The Show. As I mentioned before, being very
profitable in this game mostly has to do with diligently testing your
prices to see whether they are at the profit maximizing level and
making sure that you add vendors at strategic times. What this will do
is keep your revenues rising in a slow and steady manner for several
seasons. Most of your expenses like player and staff salaries, training
budgets, advertising budgets and such will be held relatively constant
over the same time period. This means that by being diligent, you can
have some very good profits for several years to come. After several
years, things like the bite from the shared revenue tax will be
lessened (because other teams will become more profitable as well,
granting you a larger rebate), revenue from TV and primary advertisers
will increase because you will be able to lock in better deals, and
your fan base will be loyal. You should now be very familiar with all
of the options that this game has to offer in franchise mode, as well
as strategies for being able to fully utilize those options.
I hope that you all have enjoyed this game and that you found my guide
to be helpful to you.
-----------------------------------------------------
Appendix 1: Elasticity
-----------------------------------------------------
This first appendix section is not necessary for you to know if you
want to be successful at this game. It will, however give you a
deeper understanding as to how I came up with the STL method and why
this is the most effective tool for understanding how the price of
concessions will affect total revenue.
First, let's start out with the basic economic model of a demand
curve. From my crude (but brilliant) graph below, you have a visual
illustration of how demand works. It's pretty simple actually. On
the vertical axis, P represents the price of a good. On the
horizontal axis, Q represents the quantity of goods demanded. It is
an economic law, but also common sense that says that the lower the
price of a good, the higher the quantity demanded. Therefore, if you
were to graph this relationship, you would get a graph similar to
the one below.
P
| *
| *
| *
| *
| *
| *
| *
| *
| *
|_____________________________Q
However, maximized price does not mean maximized revenue. Because of
the dynamic relationship between price and quantity demanded, total
revenue changes in a dynamic fashion as well. This is where the
concept of ELASTICITY comes in. The price elasticity of demand can
be defined as the change in quantity demanded due to a 1% change in
price. In other words, we know that when the price goes up, the
quantity demanded will go down, but the question is "by how much?"
Technically, elasticity is calculated by taking the percentage
change in the quantity demanded and dividing that by the percentage
change in the price. In the hypothetical demand schedule below, when
the price falls from $11 to $10, that is equal to a price drop of
approximately 9%. By dropping the price, the quantity demanded
increases from 1 unit to 2 units, a 100% increase. 100% / -9% =
-11.1. In other words, if the price increases by 1%, the quantity
demanded will fall by 11.1% and visa versa.
P Q TR %changeP %changeQ E
11 1 11 x x x
10 2 20 -9 100 -11.1
9 3 27 -10 50 -5
8 4 32 -11 33 -3
7 5 35 -12.5 25 -2
6 6 36 -14 20 -1.42
5 7 35 -16.6 16.6 -1
4 8 32 -20 14 -0.7
3 9 27 -25 12.5 -0.5
2 10 20 -33 11 -0.3
1 11 11 -50 10 -0.2
(note: some numbers may be a bit off due to rounding)
Now, note where total revenue (TR) is maximized. It is maximized
around the point where E = -1. What this means is that if price goes
up by 1%, then quantity demanded falls by 1%. Those forces then
perfectly offset each other because increasing or decreasing the
price any further will force TR to fall.
TR
|______________
TR* | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
| * | *
|*____________|____________*___Q
Q*
elastic range inelastic range
|E| > 1 |E| < 1
The above graph further illustrates this. In the inelastic range, a
1% increase in price causes a less than 1% decrease in quantity.
Price is increasing faster than the drop in quantity, therefore revenue
increases.
In the context of the game, you will notice that when you are doing the
STL method to do price tests for concessions, you are ultimately trying
to find the point where the elasticity of each concession is as close
to -1 as you can get. You should be able to maximize virtually all of
your concession prices within your first franchise season. From there,
the only way to increase concession revenue is to increase attendance
or vendors, since price increases will no longer be a factor in
increasing revenue.
When it comes to tickets, your goal is to maximize attendance, not
revenue, so you can alter the equation a little bit. Instead of saying
"price elasticity of demand", we can rename this type of elasticity as
the "price elasticity of attendance". The principal is exactly the
same. If the price of tickets goes up, by how much will attendance
fall? That is, in part, why I recommended that the STL method should be
used in two stages. For the very first home game of your very first
season, it is appropriate to choose the revenue maximizing price. After
that, you should be increasing the ticket price to the point where
there is no significant drop off in attendance.
-----------------------------------------------------
Appendix 2: Accounting for the Shared Revenue Tax
-----------------------------------------------------
As I mentioned before, you will be shocked by seeing your balance sheet
so deep in the red due to having to pay the expense of the shared
revenue tax. I also mentioned that this really is not as big a deal as
it seems. It is more an issue of WHEN the tax is paid that makes the
tax so shocking. In this appendix section, I would like to do a little
accounting experiment to illustrate exactly what I am talking about.
What I did was simulate an entire season with the Mariners and I let
the CPU handle all business decisions. The M's lost to the Yankees in
four games during the ALCS, and my business operations ceased there.
Here is what I ended up with at the end of the year:
Beginning funds: 20,000,000
BALANCE SHEET
INCOME 275,849,077
Facilities 225,849,077
Licensing/Ad Sales 0
Shared revenue 0
Loans 50,000,000
EXPENSES 233,437,396
Staff Salaries 18,406,323
Training/Rehab 21,269,143
Facilities 84,309,540
Marketing 14,718,640
Banking 50,329,166
Shared Revenue 0
Player Salaries 44,404.584
NET INCOME 42,411,681
Ending Funds 62,411,681
From there, I just simulated the entire off-season and let the CPU
handle everything. When I officially started season two of my
franchise, my balance sheet looked like this:
Funds: 30,394,225
INCOME 31,539,444
Facilities 0
Licensing/Ad Sales 550,000
Shared Revenue 30,989,444
Loans 0
EXPENSES 63,556,900
Staff Salaries 0
Training/Rehab 0
Facilities 10,000,000
Marketing 0
Banking 0
Shared Revenue 53,556,900
Player Salaries 0
NET INCOME -32,017,456
This is a rather typical situation. Net income is a large negative
number, and in addition to the shared revenue tax, the cost of the
transportation lease was paid in full (the CPU upgraded, not me).
Also, some income was earned in the form of TV revenue and
advertisement revenue, as well as the shared revenue rebate. Also,
notice that the CPU paid off the balance of my loan, so I did not have
to make any loan payments over the off season. Anyways, as you can see,
since the game is using cash based accounting, the expense of the
shared revenue tax will be recognized on January 1 of the new year.
Since you have incurred a very large expense and have gained very
little income, then of course your balance sheet (Geez, I hate
referring to the above table as a balance sheet) will show a negative
net income.
Now, let's try that little experiment. Here, we will see what happens
if the shared revenue tax is recognized and paid when the World Series
is officially over and all teams have ceased their business activity in
2007 as opposed to 2008:
Beginning funds: 20,000,000
BALANCE SHEET
INCOME 306,838,521
Facilities 225,849,077
Licensing/Ad Sales 0
Shared revenue 30,989,444
Loans 50,000,000
EXPENSES 286,994,296
Staff Salaries 18,406,323
Training/Rehab 21,269,143
Facilities 84,309,540
Marketing 14,718,640
Banking 50,329,166
Shared Revenue 53,556,900
Player Salaries 44,404,584
NET INCOME 19,844,255
Ending Funds 39,844,225
As you can see here, I added the expense of the shared revenue tax to
the EXPENSES part of the balance sheet, and I added the rebate from the
shared revenue tax to the INCOME portion. Everything else has remained
constant. What this would have done was create a total net income of
$19,844,255 which when added to my starting funds comes to a total of
$39,844,225 that I would have ended the year with.
Now, let's skip ahead to the start of the 2008 season based on these
revised numbers.
Funds: 30,394,225
INCOME 550,000
Facilities 0
Licensing/Ad Sales 550,000
Shared Revenue 0
Loans 0
EXPENSES 10,000,000
Staff Salaries 0
Training/Rehab 0
Facilities 10,000,000
Marketing 0
Banking 0
Shared Revenue 0
Player Salaries 0
NET INCOME -$9,450,000
WOW! Isn't that just amazing! I would have just as much funds in the
bank no matter when the shared revenue tax is paid. As you can see, we
ended the 2007 season with $39,844,225 worth of funds in the bank.
Since net income tells you how much money has been added to your funds
to-date, last season's balance less the negative net income is:
30,394,225 = 39,844,225 - 9,450,000
In this game, would you rather climb out of a $32,017,456 hole or a
$9,450,000 hole? Based on this example, I don't see why anyone should
care.
That, ladies and gentlemen, is why you should not worry about seeing a
large negative net income on your balance sheet when you begin your
next franchise season.
-----------------------------------------------------
POSSIBLE GLITCHES
-----------------------------------------------------
If anyone comes across a glitch that can affect franchise mode, just
let me know and I will try to make that knowledge more public here.
Keep in mind that these are possible glitches and it is difficult to
test to see if they are true or not.
1.) THE INFINITE MONEY GLITCH
Here is a great one that came from kdutch98 on the gamefaqs.com message
board. I tested it out, and it does work. Here is what he wrote:
"when you click on a game to play it, select your pitcher, then when you
get to the lineup screen, exit out all the way back to the calender.
Check your finances. You will earn ticket revenues, and I believe
concession money for the game that you havent played yet. You can do this
as many times as you want to. Its an easy way to bring up your average
attendance, and earn a boatload of money, to get you out of debt."
2.) GLITCH TRADES
One e-mailer informed me that a glitch from last year's game is back. During
the off-season, there is a possibility that a player of yours may end up
getting traded even though you did not make such a trade. This seems to
happen when the off season ends and you begin a new season. If this happens
then either load your backup file (you did make a back up save just before
the off-season began didn't you?) or try and reverse the trade with another
trade.
3.) THE AMAZING DISAPPEARING COACHES
I have heard some a few people who have e-mailed me about a glitch where
the stats of your coaching staff will be wiped out for some reason. This
seems similar to a problem that I noticed in MLB 2006. In that game, if you
were told that one of your teams does not have valid line ups, you had the
option of "Auto-Fixing" the problem, and it was the auto-fix that seemed
to cause the problem. If this is the same glitch, then you can probably avoid
it by manually setting valid line ups and rotations for each one of your teams
before you even play your first game. Also, when doing all of your pre-season
stuff, try making the hiring of new coaches your very last order of business.
Hopefully, this should help you avoid the problem.
-----------------------------------------------------
CONTACT INFORMATION
-----------------------------------------------------
If you have a new strategy for profit building, or if you find
glitches, errors, suggestions, or anything else, just e-mail me at:
[email protected]
Let me just add a few notes here. (Besides the rule that the name of
the game should always be added to the subject line so that I do not
mark it as spam.)
1.) Let me say again, I do not own this game. This FAQ is based on my
last article for MLB `06: The Show. I rented this game so that I could
compare `07 to `06. I tried to be as thorough as possible to make sure
that this guide is as accurate as possible. If there is anything that I
missed, please let me know. This also means that I will not remember
all of the details about profiles, unlocking cheats and other minor
details.
2.) I really do enjoy getting e-mail from people who read my FAQ. I do
check my mail regularly, so if you do not receive a reply, it's
probably because there was an error in sending my reply, or your mail
was never received, or it was accidentally identified as junk mail, or
my server is down, or some weird reason. I do reply to all e-mails as
long as you are not rude. If you are, then I just send your e-mail to
circular file. Therefore, if you don't get a reply in one or two days,
just try again.
-----------------------------------------------------
CREDITS AND THANKS
-----------------------------------------------------
Thanks to SCEA and 989 studios for yet another.
Thanks to gamefaqs.com for originally hosting this FAQ as well as all
other sites who post this FAQ.
Thanks to kdutch98 for discovering the infinite money glitch.
-----------------------------------------------------
LEGAL STUFF
-----------------------------------------------------
This FAQ was originally submitted to gamefaqs.com. The following sites
have posted my previous FAQs, and they are also granted advanced
written permission to post this FAQ without any other written
permission:
1up.com
neoseeker.com
gamesradar.com
cheatplanet.com
supercheats.com
Any updates to this FAQ will be posted at gamefaqs.com. It is the
responsibility of any site that hosts this FAQ to make sure that the
FAQ that you have is the most recent one.
If another site other than those mentioned above want to post this FAQ,
then just ask. The rules below apply.
This may be not be reproduced under any circumstances except for
personal, private use. It may not be placed on any web site or
otherwise distributed publicly without advance written permission.
Use of this guide on any other web site or as a part of any public
display is strictly prohibited, and a violation of copyright.
Copyright 2007 MR. Kim Dalton Rodieck.