Sportsnetwork.com has announced its ongoing expansion plans due to its amazing growth in 2007. Their corporate office is located in Hatboro, Pa and they now have affiliate offices located in Los Angeles, London, Stockholm, New Delhi, Sydney and Rio de Janeiro with others to be announced as they head into the first quarter of the new year. “As our client base has increased domestically and internationally,” stated Ken Zajac, Sales Director for TSN, “it has, for obvious reasons, become incumbent upon us to magnify and enhance our efforts on a global basis regarding everything from content to technology.
“Further,” he continued, “our depth of coverage is not only going to be escalated but it will be augmented by technology that allows for facile conversion and transition from use of any other existing service seamlessly over a short period of time.”
“The technology employed in this effort,” added Bruce Michaels, Director of Technology for The Sports Network, “is a combination of the efforts of our own staff and that of XML Team, our long time exclusive partner and, easily, the most advanced organization in the nation when it comes to XML and SportsML.”
The Sports Network is the nation’s foremost international real-time sports wire service furnishing a plethora of content on a 24/7 basis using state-of- the-art technology. TSN’s website, www.sportsnetwork.com, contains voluminous proprietary sports news data that is available to its clients as well and includes, but is not limited to, scores, trends, analysis, news, features, statistics, pre and post-game reports, box scores, historical data, and very much more.
Some of The Sports Network clients include:
Google, United Press (UPI), CBS/Viacom, IBS/NBC, EarthLink/PeoplePC, WorldNow, Score Cable Network, Cox Interactive, Tribune Media, McClatchey, Lexis*Nexis, Comtex, Yellow Brix, Sports Network Canada, Westwood One, CanWest Interactive (Canada), Toronto Star, Metro Source, Dallas Morning News, New York Times, Learfield Communications, Denver Post, Clear Channel, CableVision (Optimum Online), Armed Forces Radio and TV Network, Canadian Broadcasting Corp. (CBC)
As sports become more popular on the internet, demand for content delivery services will constantly expand. Sports websites that can figure out how to create original content around their delivered content will succeed the most. Original content will always be king on the internet.







