My name is Shannon Stilson and I have nearly two decades of sports business experience in both professional golf and professional polo. My core focus has been helping global brands to activate and bring awareness to their brand through activities at major sporting events and across syndicated television networks, like CBS and ESPN.
Over the past eight years at U.S. Polo Assn., I’ve helped build a professional sports marketing department, a production department, and a newly created made-for-television story-driven series called Breakaway that is a complement to our major polo tournaments that we televise on ESPN, beIN Sports and Times of India.
When I was hired in 2015, U.S. Polo Assn. had been broadcasting one of the major polo tournaments, the U.S. Open Polo Championship®. My experience was driven by sports marketing and media so I naturally was a creative force in building shows that took the viewer inside the stories of the athletes and horses.
I’ve hired a team that takes the vision of the company, conducts the interviews, and then I direct and produce the content once captured. I give input on interview sets, frames, audio, questions, etc. to ensure the content is delivered in the manner we need to bring the story to life.
A successful videographer should have the ability to understand the story that is being captured and the ability to make the athlete/subject feel comfortable and loosen up to get deeper behind the persona they have while competing.
In my role as an executive producer, I would lead by hiring the team, driving the vision for the stories, selecting the athletes we’ll interview, and building the story that weaves into our global mission of connecting U.S. Polo Assn. back to the sport of polo through our in-house production department, Global Polo Productions.
We launched Global Polo Productions in 2019 as we were launching a first-ever, over-the-top television network. We wanted one place for all polo content for both our polo audience and new non-polo fans. The decision to launch the production department was out of a necessity to tell our story the way we knew it should be told. We are not only a sport, and we are not only a lifestyle, so we seek to find a balance for the fans and the polo community.
Starting from scratch meant we had to purchase all the equipment, hire editors, videographers, on-air talent, and develop processes to accomplish our goals of building creative and interesting content that consumers would engage with over the course of time.
I think a great videographer is someone who definitely understands the basics and can build upon it. Someone who understands lighting, audio, sound balancing, interview framing, set up, etc.
This person must be equipped with the basics so they can really enhance the story they are capturing to make it compelling for the audience.
We strive to remain as authentic as possible, so our style is to use the elements of polo that make it special. This includes the outdoor environment, polo horses, stables, athlete tours, and athletes riding when applicable to the story.
An outside videographer is a more challenging role because of those elements, so we battle that often given the noises of outside products, planes, trackers, people, etc.
In 2022, I set up a weekly meeting with my Production Coordinator, Anna Doolittle, who is also our lead talent for our ESPN shows, to start building out each one of the four-show series that we’re planning to shoot. I leveraged industry shows to take inspiration from and enhance the story of polo.
One of the stories I found fascinating was on a legal show where the actor said, “Winning a court case happens before you even get to the courtroom. You have to be strategic with who you pick to be your jury, you have to know your audience, etc.” I took that theme and built it into our first Polo in Palm Beach series of Breakaway because polo is the same.
It starts way before you get to the field, sometimes years in advance. So, I work with the Production Coordinator to have themes we want to achieve and then look at the athletes who have something special to offer the audience, something they’ve overcome. Like the story of Hope Arellano, the Breakaway: Women In Polo show wasn’t going to be all about her, but after our amazing interview with Dawn Jones and Hope becoming a 10-Goal female handicap, I knew we had the story that was inspiring and glass shattering.
I then put it all into motion with my Coordinator and she works to write the scripts, write the interview questions, collaborates with the rest of the team to capture all the content, and then she takes the first pass at building the show, setting the pacing and setting the music.
We are so proud and thankful for the 2023 LIT Awards for giving us the opportunity to submit our show Breakaway: Women In Polo!
This award is significant to us because we’ve just changed the process this year, so it shows the impact we are making in a short amount of time and gives us momentum for continuing to share the sport and the stories through a different lens.
- Content is king, so the videography industry allows us to leverage the beauty of our sport and share it with millions of people.
- With the growth of technology and cell phones, videography has become supported by better, faster, and less expensive equipment.
- The ability to leverage a moment in time with a camera to capture someone’s story and to share that in a way that they may have not even thought of is such an amazing feeling.
With almost two decades in sports business spanning professional golf and polo, Shannon Stilson has focused on activating global brands and raising awareness through major sporting events and syndicated television networks like CBS and ESPN.
Read more about this interview with Jean-Luc Slagle from the United States, the Platinum Winner of the 2022 LIT Awards.