Top Social Media Followers of U.S. and U.K. Independent Wrestling Promotions: PWG, Evolve, Progress, Rev Pro & more

Weā€™re at the dawn of š“°š“„§the skinny bundle era for pro wrestling.

Not that many years ago the prevailing thought was, without a traditional television program, a pro wrestling company couldnā€™t get off the ground and be anything but a small indie for its local area. I still even hear from some local-levš“°elā™‹ indie promoters who talkĀ about wanting to get on public access TV. To be sure, weā€™re still in a world where nobody without TV is going to compete with WWE, but things have changed, and the roots of the niches have been nourished by the internet and have grown deeper.

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When I did , several super indies had just started their own individual video on-demand services, mimšŸŒøicking the WWE Network which launched in February 2014. The introductions of those services have been met with varying success. Two promoterź¦¦s at the time said they were disappointed in the results, as subscription rates to their paid services were low.

At the time, the most high-profile indie VOD service, Gabe Sapolsky and Sal Hamaouiā€™s World Wrestling Network (WWNLive) didnā€™t offer any kind of subscription that would grant access to all of the events within WWNā€™s umbrella of promotions. Instead WWšŸ‰N provided live iPPVs and VOD for individual events at a minimum per event price of $9.99 or $14.99, depending on whether you bought at least a day in advance. These events are believed to have sold a few hundred buys per eveš“ƒ²nt.

While some promotions that started VOD sšŸ„ƒervices have gotten a fašŸŒ ir amount of attention among wrestling fans who follow the indies, it appears none of them were able to generate much more than modest amounts of revenue on their own.

Combining multiple promotions together into a ā€œskinny bundleā€ service targeted at indie wrestling fans should be a better model, if one whose ceilź¦”ing is the base of niche fans interested in wrestling products beyond whatā€™s found on traditional TV -- an audience that itā€™s reasonable to expect will grow with time as technology develops and the internet becomes even more ubiquitous.

At the tail end of 2016 there are at least two organizations getting into the pro wrestling skinny bundlšŸ”œe business.

the launch of FloSlam and the acquisition of rights to WWNā€™s events. FloSports is a video streaming service with many years of eź¦†xperience in broadcasting niche sports online. FloSlam is continuing to pursue independent wrestling companies from around the world. Besides the WWN brands, theyā€™ll also broadcast events for Tommy Dreamerā€™s House of Hardcore, North Carolina-based Pro Wrestling Xperience and IPW:UK. Subscriptions will cost either $20 per month or $150 for year-long commitment.

is an upstart founded by Adam Lash whoā€™s worked with indie wrestling content for years, including operating the . Powerbomb.tv however, lź§’ike FloSlam, will be a paid subscription service and has already signed on numerous small independent promotions. Price points are $9.99 per month, $49.95 for six months or $99.99 for twelve months.

Which promotions should these services be thinking about signing šŸ§øon?

Social media followers are flawed indicators as to which promotions have the most value. The numbers can be enhanced with paid ads and with some borderline- or outright nefarious manipulaą¶£tions. However if they are not perfectly indicative, and while other factors should be considered when trying to make a determination about which promotions are most popular, social media follower counts are at least suggestive of which promotions have the furthest reach and the most interest.

šŸŒ„I would also caution that these numbers are sāœ…uggestive of familiarity, but not necessarily favorability. I believe itā€™s important to distinguish between familiarity and favorability when considering the value of these niche wrestling products. In other words, a fanā€™s awareness of a promotion doesnā€™t necessitate a fanā€™s willingness to pay for its products.

U.S. and Canadian Indie Promotions

Jeff Jarrettā€™s Global Force WrestlšŸŽing is comparą“œed here to other U.S. indies. In previous reports of this kind, GFW was compared to TNA, ROH and Lucha Underground, all of which now exceed GFW for total followers several times over. GFWā€™s total follower count is more comparable to other top U.S. indies.

GFW is followed by Combat Zone Wrestling, which continues to do well on all platforms, especially YouTube. Pro Wrestling Guerillaā€™s total would be higher and could excešŸ’œed CZW if PWG it had an Instagram account. Beyond Wrestling continues to see huge growth on YouTube subscribers, which had it closing in on PWG. Chikara ranks high despite slower growth than its peers. House of Hardcore, Shimmer, Lucha VaVOOM, Absolute Intense Wrestling and Evolve (counting Gabe Sapolskyā€™s Twitter and Facebook account and Evolveā€™s YouTube account) close out the top ten.

Again, this is merely suggestive to the value ošŸ’¦f each promotionā€™s content. I believe PWG and Evolve are the two most valuable properties listed above and that GFW is significantly weaker.

Whatever traction or investment GFW had in social media has waned in the lastź§ƒ six months. For most of the year, by co-promoting with a local promotion.

Beyond had the greatest increases in followers by percenšŸ™ˆtage. Most of those were on YouTube. Beyondā€™s YouTube subscribers over the last six months nearly doubled and followers over twelve months tripled.

Chikara ranks highly but used to rank higher. The promotion is still among the top companies for followers, but asāœ… its brand cooled, especially following a hiatus of about one year over 2013 and 2014 when many fans were led to believe the compašŸƒny legitimately went out of business.

The outlier among this group of promotions seems to be Lucha VaVOOM. The promotion has runĀ four shows in the last seven years, . Despite its relatively large sociź¦†al media footprint, itā€™s doubtful as many wrestling fans are as familiar with this promotion as its follower count would indicate.

Again, social media followersą±  are not at all necessarily organic. They can be enhanced with paid advertising, various bots that help you gain followers and so onź¦ŗ.

What about others outside of this top ten? As best I could find, these are the remaining 16 U.S. or Canadian promotions with at least 20,000 followers acrosź©²s the four major platforms.

AAW ranks below Big Time Wrestling, but has a more well-balanced followership across thešŸŽ platforms. Big Timeā€™s sošŸ¦‹cial media presence is almost completely on Facebook, where itā€™s easiest to buy ads to gain followers.

Likewise, WWR has a disproportionate share of YouTube subscribers with small followings on other platforms. WWR took over WSUā€™s YouTube channel as part of a business deal between Beyond and CZW. Notice WSU now has no YouTube ā™Šchannel of its own.

WrestlePro splintered off from New Jersey promotion Pro Wrestling Syndicate earlier this year. For a time WrestlePro took over the Twitter account that previous belonged to PWS. In May that account had over 8,000 followers. That account has since been sold to a wrestling action figure website. WrestlePro opened a new Twitter account in July which currently has about 1,000 followers. PWS may be done as a promotion; iš’ts website.

U.K./European Indie Promotions

Arguably even more thź©µan in the U.S., the popularity of indie wrestling in the United Kingdom iź¦s growing.

What Culture Pro Wrestlingā€™s total followers already exceed that of any U.S. or Uź§….K. indie. The promotion only ran its first show in June. The WCPW YouTube channel, and the promotion overall, has obviously benefited from What Cultureā€™s pre-existing presence in wrestling media. What Culture is a popular website thatā€™s existed since 2006, focusing on many aspects of pop culture; pro wrestling is one subject it focuses on heavily. The company has various YouTube channels, including (especially WWE) which may have 1 million subscribers by the time you read this. As noted, earlier this year the company, based in the U.K., decided to parlay its cšŸƒaptive wrestling audience online into an actual wrestling promotion.

After WCPW, Preston City Wrestling ranks second. PCW which has a large . However that large following is likely enhanź§ƒced by the even higšŸ™ˆher number of accounts it follows. Following a large number of other users on Twitter is a strategy many use to raise their own follower counts. If we eliminate everyoneā€™s Twitter followers from the above graph, PCW would rank behind ICW and Progress.

Early resšŸŒ ults from a survey I did shortly after starting rešŸŒŒsearch for this article suggests Progress and Rev Pro are under-represented here, in terms of familiarity and favorability among fans.

To further sšŸ¦¹upport that, if we look at the percentage of followers gaineź§‘d in the last twelve months, Progress and Rev Pro have made the greatest strides.

(WCPW is omitted here simply becausź¦“ešŸ­ it didnā€™t exist twelve months ago.)

By this time next year, World of Sport Wrestling may be inšŸ² this conversation as that brand may be making its return soon to ITV, one of the U.K.ā€™s most accessible TV networks.

Another way to consider the value of a brandā€™s video content is to look at YouTube views. So Iź¦ŗ collected data on each of the aforementioned promotionsā€™ YouTube video views for the lifetime of their channels and divided that total by the number of days since the channel š’ŠŽwas registered. This gives us a picture of each promotionsā€™ average YouTube video views per day.

The above is by no means a complete ranking of the most viewed YouTube channels belošŸ¼nging to indie wrestling promotions. The most popular ones however are likely here, and we get an idea of how the other promotions discussed in this articleš” compare.

Itā€™s possible to buy YouTube views, although thereā€™s little way of confirming which if any of the promotions ā™›above have participated in that. There are apparently that will help customers increase their YouTube views. YouTube tries to detect such activity and if discovered makes its users pay back ašŸŒƒny associated ad revenue sharing. According to YouTubeā€™s help page, use of third-party services to increase views could result in disciplinary action for the offending account.

WCPW is already way of everyone else here too. To be clear, ź¦the above data point for that promotion reflects the YouTube channel specifically dedicated to the and not the more popular . However on the promotionā€™s channel, the company uploaded a video šŸ„‚on ā€œ10 Most Unique Tactics Ever Used In A Royal Rumbleā€, a video more along the lines of what youā€™d find on What Cultureā€™s general wrestling channel. The video has gotten over 1 million views. Perhaps this was a strategy to help get the promotionā€™s channel more exposure and subscribers. That video alone currently accounts for about 12% of all views on the channel. Most of the other most popular videos on the channel however are related to the promotionā€™s original content.

Itā€™s interesting to see Beyond roughly triple its next two closest peers, CZW and AIW. Taken at face value, this means Beyond is more popular on YouTš“†ube than either Ring of Honor or Lucha Underground (which average about 8,000 and 11,000 views per day, respectively), despite having about half the number ofā­• YouTube subscribers. If organic, thatā€™s an impressive feat.

Beyond told us itā€™s never paid for any advertising on YouTube or for any advertising to promote its individual videos, nor has it used third-party services to boost vidź¦›eo views.

Lucha VaVOOM averages just 65 video views per day, which speaks to its misleadingly high number of followersā™› across social media.

In our next article on pro wrestling and new media, weā€™ll look at Powerbomb.tv and FloSlam in more detail. You can follow Brandon on Twitter at .

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