Posted by schwarze on 3/3/2021 11:31:00 AM (view original):
No chance new owners would prefer 40M over 255M. There is a reason why low cap leagues take a long time to fill and high cap leagues fill quickly. Low caps may lead to more realistic results when comparing to actual stats, but who wants to draft a bunch of .255 hitters? Most new owners will want to build a team of great players. Yes - the shock of players underperforming will be a thing at the start, but like many of us, those who want to, will figure it out and adjust.
When I started I simultaneously ran a $40m and a $255m as my first full season teams. I’ve played a few more high caps here and there, but if it wasn’t for the low caps, I likely wouldn’t have stuck around. Yeah, they’re slower filling, at the $40m level, but at $65-75m leagues fill almost instantly.
In March of last year I posted up a $255m OL style with no AAA and a $40m OL style with no AAA. Filled the $40m after about 2 weeks, and scrapped the $255m after about 5 weeks and only having a couple of signups stick while a single owner entered and left repeatedly every couple days.
I think both extremes have their place, but I think it’s very wrong to assume because the $160m cap range is a popular tourney level cap (that results in a significant number of leagues and others at that cap level so owners familiarize themselves with the players at that level) that new owners would gravitate or enjoy them more.
I firmly believe entry leagues should be realistic with room to add a HoF season or a couple of stars ($70-80m range). Wide player pool is a plus to show and allow new owners the range of options in team and player styles.
Yes, high caps feature more stars and a limited player pool, but aside from the less realistic first take, it also increases the luck factor and randomness of the outcome. Having owners start towards an extreme side of the cap and outcome range limits their introduction to the site to only that limited and more extreme scope.
Starting them realistic (upper low cap or low mid cap) with an opportunity to see how those extremes can play out within that starting range allow them to decide if they prefer to explore the more limited starstruck player pools and luck driven high cap leagues (above $120m) or the limited relatively unknown player pools and sim knowledge driven low cap leagues (below $80m), or if they prefer to stay in the middle ranges ($80-120m).
Retention is the key here, and a good introduction to the sim and user experience is the ideal and best way to retain owners.
(And on the .255 hitter point, I see a bunch of new owners drafting guys like Dave Kingman and Jay Buhner. People like drafting players they enjoyed watching play)
3/3/2021 12:03 PM (edited)