TL;DR: TNS leads the Cymru Premier digital rankings at 85/100 with 30% year-on-year website traffic growth, while average social media growth across the league runs at 12% per annum. Digital presence is one of the most improvable aspects of any Welsh football club — a focused six-month strategy can realistically double a club's social following and add 30+ points to its website quality score, directly impacting sponsorship values and matchday revenue.
Why Digital Presence Matters for Welsh Football Investment
In English Premier League football, digital presence is a reflection of existing commercial power — clubs with large fanbases naturally generate large online audiences. In the Cymru Premier, the relationship runs in the opposite direction: digital presence is a driver of commercial growth, not merely a consequence of it. For clubs with budgets of £300K-£3.2M, an effective digital strategy is among the most cost-efficient revenue levers available.
The logic is straightforward. Sponsors pay for exposure. A club with 15,000 social media followers across platforms offers meaningfully more sponsor value than one with 2,000. Online merchandise sales — where margins are typically 30-50% higher than at the ground — require digital traffic to convert. And match-day attendance, increasingly influenced by social media awareness, rises when clubs maintain active, engaging online profiles.
For investors evaluating Cymru Premier clubs, digital presence is therefore both a current performance metric and a growth opportunity indicator. Clubs with poor digital presence relative to their competitive position represent improvement opportunities; clubs with strong digital foundations have already built an asset that amplifies every other commercial activity.
The 2026 Rankings
Scoring Methodology
Our rankings assess three equally weighted dimensions.
| Dimension | Weight | Metrics Assessed |
|---|---|---|
| Social Media Reach | 33% | Follower counts, engagement rates, platform breadth (X/Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok) |
| Website Performance | 33% | Traffic volume, user engagement, mobile optimisation, page speed, SEO quality |
| E-commerce Activity | 33% | Online shop presence, product range, transaction capability, digital marketing |
Each dimension is scored 0-100, and the overall score is the equally weighted average. The assessment is relative to semi-professional football benchmarks rather than absolute digital marketing standards — a score of 85/100 represents excellence within the context of lower-league football, not Fortune 500 marketing.
Overall Rankings
| Rank | Club | Overall Score | Social Media | Website | E-commerce |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The New Saints | 85/100 | 88 | 85 | 82 |
| 2 | Connah's Quay Nomads | 68/100 | 72 | 65 | 67 |
| 3 | Penybont | 62/100 | 65 | 62 | 59 |
| 4 | Barry Town United | 58/100 | 62 | 55 | 57 |
| 5 | Caernarfon Town | 55/100 | 60 | 52 | 53 |
| 6 | Haverfordwest County | 52/100 | 55 | 50 | 51 |
| 7 | Cardiff Met | 48/100 | 45 | 55 | 44 |
| 8 | Bala Town | 45/100 | 48 | 42 | 45 |
| 9 | Colwyn Bay | 40/100 | 42 | 38 | 40 |
| 10 | Flint Town United | 35/100 | 38 | 32 | 35 |
| 11 | Briton Ferry Llansawel | 30/100 | 32 | 28 | 30 |
| 12 | Llanelli Town | 28/100 | 30 | 26 | 28 |
League average: 50/100. The gap between top (TNS at 85) and bottom (Llanelli at 28) is significant — a 57-point spread that represents a concrete improvement opportunity for lower-ranked clubs.
Deep Dive: TNS — The Digital Benchmark
TNS's 85/100 score reflects a digital operation that is genuinely professional for semi-professional football. Key metrics include:
| Metric | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Website Traffic Growth | 30% YoY | Driven by European competition coverage |
| Social Media Followers (aggregate) | 25,000+ | Across X, Facebook, Instagram |
| Engagement Rate | 4-6% | Well above 2-3% industry average |
| Online Shop | Active | Full kit, merchandise, international shipping |
| Content Frequency | Daily | Match reports, player features, behind-the-scenes |
| Video Content | Regular | Match highlights, training footage |
TNS's digital advantage is built on three pillars: European competition (which generates internationally relevant content), consistent content production (daily posts across platforms), and e-commerce investment (a functioning online shop with regular product updates).
The 30% year-on-year website traffic growth is particularly notable. European qualifying rounds generate spikes of international interest — supporters of opposing clubs, football media, and betting audiences all drive traffic that can be converted into merchandise sales, newsletter subscriptions, and sponsor impressions.
Deep Dive: The Mid-Table Gap
The most investable digital opportunity sits in the 40-60 scoring range, where clubs like Caernarfon (55), Haverfordwest (52), and Bala (45) have sufficient supporter bases to justify digital investment but lack the resources or expertise to execute effectively.
Common Mid-Table Digital Weaknesses
| Issue | Prevalence | Fix Cost | Fix Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outdated website design | 8 of 12 clubs | £2-5K | 1-2 months |
| No online shop | 5 of 12 clubs | £1-3K | 1 month |
| Inconsistent social posting | 9 of 12 clubs | £0 (volunteer time) | Immediate |
| No video content | 7 of 12 clubs | £500-2K (basic setup) | 2-4 weeks |
| Poor mobile optimisation | 6 of 12 clubs | £1-3K | 1 month |
| No SEO strategy | 10 of 12 clubs | £500-1K | 2-3 months |
| No email marketing | 8 of 12 clubs | £0-500 | 2 weeks |
The total cost of addressing all these issues is approximately £5-15K — less than a single player's annual wages at most Cymru Premier clubs. The return on this investment, measured in sponsor uplift, merchandise sales, and attendance growth, is typically realised within one to two seasons.
For detailed technical recommendations, see the SEO audit and the social media strategy guide.
Social Media Analysis
Platform Breakdown
| Platform | League Average Followers | Highest | Lowest | Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,000-5,000 | TNS: 12,000+ | <1,000 | 8% YoY | |
| X/Twitter | 2,000-4,000 | TNS: 8,000+ | <500 | 10% YoY |
| 1,500-3,000 | TNS: 5,000+ | <300 | 18% YoY | |
| TikTok | 200-500 | TNS: 1,500+ | <50 | 40%+ YoY |
Instagram and TikTok are the growth platforms. While Facebook remains the largest platform for most clubs (reflecting the 35+ age demographic of core supporters), Instagram is growing at 18% per year and TikTok at 40%+. Clubs that invest in short-form video content for TikTok and Instagram Reels are seeing disproportionate follower growth.
The average social media growth rate across the league of 12% per annum is healthy but masks wide variation. Clubs with active social media management are growing at 20-30%; those with neglected accounts are stagnant or declining.
Engagement Quality
| Engagement Metric | League Average | Best Practice | TNS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engagement rate (posts) | 2-3% | 5-8% | 4-6% |
| Story/reel completion | 40-50% | 70-80% | 60-70% |
| Comment sentiment | 65% positive | 80%+ positive | 75% positive |
| Share rate | 1-2% | 3-5% | 3-4% |
TNS's 4-6% engagement rate is strong by any social media standard. Most clubs hover at 2-3%, which is adequate but not compelling enough to drive significant sponsor interest or algorithmic reach.
Website Performance
Technical Assessment
| Metric | League Average | TNS | Industry Benchmark |
|---|---|---|---|
| Google PageSpeed (mobile) | 45/100 | 72/100 | 90/100 |
| Load time (seconds) | 4-6s | 2.5s | <3s |
| Mobile responsiveness | 60% compliant | 90% compliant | 100% |
| SSL certificate | 75% of clubs | Yes | 100% |
| Structured data / SEO | 20% of clubs | Yes | 100% |
Website performance is the weakest digital dimension across the league. Most clubs operate websites built five or more years ago, with poor mobile optimisation, slow load times, and minimal SEO investment. Given that 60-70% of web traffic now comes from mobile devices, this represents a significant missed opportunity.
The technical fixes are straightforward and affordable. A modern responsive website template, basic SEO setup, and SSL certificate can be implemented for £2-5K. For clubs currently scoring below 40/100, this investment can double website traffic within six months. See the SEO audit for club-specific recommendations.
E-Commerce and Online Merchandise
Online merchandise sales across the Cymru Premier have grown 20% year-on-year, driven by the broader trend toward online shopping and the Wrexham effect bringing new interest in Welsh football merchandise.
| E-Commerce Metric | Current State | Opportunity |
|---|---|---|
| Clubs with online shops | 7 of 12 | 12 of 12 |
| Average product range | 10-20 items | 30-50 items |
| International shipping | 3 of 12 | All clubs (Wrexham/diaspora demand) |
| Average order value | £20-30 | £30-50 with bundling |
| Conversion rate | 1-2% | 3-5% with optimisation |
The international shipping gap is particularly notable. The Wrexham phenomenon has created global interest in Welsh football, and diaspora communities in the US, Australia, and across Europe are actively seeking Welsh football merchandise. Clubs without international shipping capability are leaving revenue on the table.
For sponsorship value implications of digital audience growth, see the sponsorship costs guide and the digital transformation revenue analysis.
The Sponsorship Connection
Digital audience size directly impacts what sponsors will pay. At the semi-professional level, the relationship is approximately linear: doubling a club's verified social media following typically increases headline sponsorship value by 20-40%.
| Social Following (aggregate) | Estimated Shirt Sponsorship Value | Estimated Total Sponsor Inventory |
|---|---|---|
| <2,000 | £5-10K | £15-30K |
| 2,000-5,000 | £10-20K | £30-60K |
| 5,000-15,000 | £20-40K | £60-120K |
| 15,000-30,000 | £40-80K | £120-250K |
| 30,000+ | £80-150K | £250-500K |
TNS, with 25,000+ aggregate followers, commands the highest sponsorship values in the league. Clubs at the lower end, with under 2,000 followers, are significantly undervaluing their potential sponsor inventory simply because they lack the digital audience to justify higher prices.
For full sponsorship analysis, see the sponsorship costs guide, the shirt sponsorship analysis, and the sponsorship gap analysis.
Digital Investment Playbook: A Six-Month Plan
For investors acquiring a Cymru Premier club with a digital score below 50/100, the following six-month plan can realistically achieve a 20-30 point improvement.
Month 1-2: Foundation
- Rebuild website on modern responsive platform (£2-5K)
- Set up online shop with 15-20 products (£1-3K)
- Establish consistent social media posting schedule (3-5 posts per week)
- Implement basic SEO (title tags, meta descriptions, Google Search Console)
Month 3-4: Content
- Launch match-day content series (pre-match, live updates, post-match)
- Create player profile video series (smartphone quality is fine)
- Begin email newsletter (weekly during season)
- Set up Google Analytics and social media analytics tracking
Month 5-6: Growth
- Run targeted social media campaigns for upcoming fixtures (£200-500 per month)
- Launch season ticket and merchandise promotions online
- Develop sponsor activation content (branded posts, partner features)
- Introduce TikTok/Instagram Reels with behind-the-scenes content
Estimated total cost: £5-12K over six months, plus 10-15 hours per week of staff or volunteer time for content creation and community management.
Expected outcomes: 50-100% growth in social media following, 30-50% increase in website traffic, 20-30% increase in online merchandise sales, and improved sponsor value justifying £5-15K in additional annual sponsorship revenue.
How Digital Presence Correlates with Other Metrics
| Metric | Correlation with Digital Score |
|---|---|
| Revenue | Strong positive (r = 0.78) |
| Attendance | Moderate positive (r = 0.62) |
| League position | Moderate positive (r = 0.55) |
| Squad value | Strong positive (r = 0.72) |
| UEFA licence status | Positive (all UEFA-licensed clubs score 45+) |
The strongest correlation is with revenue, which reflects the direct commercial impact of digital presence through sponsorship, merchandise, and matchday promotion. The moderate correlation with attendance suggests that digital marketing supports but does not single-handedly drive gate numbers — community identity and on-pitch performance remain the primary attendance drivers. See the attendance trends analysis.
Comparison with Other Leagues
| League | Average Digital Score | Best Club Score | Social Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cymru Premier | 50/100 | 85 (TNS) | 12% YoY |
| League of Ireland | 55/100 | 80 (Shamrock Rovers) | 15% YoY |
| Scottish Championship | 60/100 | 78 (Dundee United) | 10% YoY |
| English National League | 52/100 | 82 (Wrexham pre-EFL) | 14% YoY |
The Cymru Premier's average digital score is comparable to other small-nation and lower-league competitions. The gap to close is modest, and the rate of improvement (12% annual social growth) suggests the league is moving in the right direction. For detailed league comparisons, see the global benchmarking analysis.
Sources and Methodology
Digital presence scores are derived from Cymru Connect's proprietary assessment framework, conducted in February-March 2026. Social media data was collected directly from platform analytics (where accessible) and third-party social listening tools. Website performance was assessed using Google PageSpeed Insights, GTmetrix, and Ahrefs. E-commerce assessment was based on manual evaluation of club online shops. Sponsorship value estimates are based on industry benchmarks for semi-professional football sponsorship and adjusted for Welsh market conditions. All scores are relative assessments intended for comparative analysis within the Cymru Premier context. Data is current as of March 2026.




