A Conversation That Started This Article
I was on the phone recently with an operator — a sharp, successful woman who runs a waterway OOH company in one of the 2026 World Cup host cities. She was excited. Her inventory is sold out. Brands and agencies are calling her. She is looking at the biggest revenue quarter in her company's history.
Then she said something that stopped me cold.
"Sandy, I am going to do more business in the next four months than I did all of last year. And I have no idea how I am going to make payroll in August."
That is the World Cup cash flow trap. And she is not alone.
The Opportunity Is Real — and It Is Enormous
The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs June 11 to July 19, 2026, across 11 US host cities: New York/New Jersey, Los Angeles, Dallas, Miami, Atlanta, Seattle, San Francisco, Boston, Kansas City, Philadelphia, and Houston. WARC forecasts a $10.5 billion surge in global ad spend during the tournament quarter. FIFA has already invested more than $5 million in OOH advertising alone to promote the event — a year before the first whistle.
For OOH operators in those markets, this is a once-in-a-generation moment. Inventory that normally sits at 70% occupancy is selling at 100%. Rates are up. Brands that have never bought a billboard are calling. The phones are ringing.
| US Host City | Stadium | Matches |
|---|---|---|
| New York / New Jersey | MetLife Stadium | 8 (incl. Final) |
| Los Angeles | SoFi Stadium | 8 |
| Dallas | AT&T Stadium | 8 |
| San Francisco Bay Area | Levi's Stadium | 7 |
| Miami | Hard Rock Stadium | 7 |
| Seattle | Lumen Field | 6 |
| Atlanta | Mercedes-Benz Stadium | 6 |
| Boston | Gillette Stadium | 6 |
| Kansas City | Arrowhead Stadium | 6 |
| Philadelphia | Lincoln Financial Field | 6 |
| Houston | NRG Stadium | 6 |
Source: FIFA.com, 2026 FIFA World Cup official match schedule
Here Is the Problem Nobody Is Talking About
When a global brand runs a World Cup campaign, it does not call the billboard company directly. It calls its agency. The agency calls the OOH buying desk. The buying desk calls the rep. The rep calls the operator. The operator posts the creative, runs the campaign, and sends the invoice.
And then the operator waits.
National agencies pay on 60 to 90 day terms. Holding company agencies — WPP, Publicis, IPG, Omnicom — routinely pay on 120 to 160 day terms. Some stretch to 180 days. The campaign runs in June and July. The operator might not see the money until November or December.
Meanwhile, land leases are due in August. Payroll runs every two weeks. The next opportunity — maybe a political campaign, maybe a holiday retail push — requires capital to service. The operator has done all the work. The revenue is real. But the cash is not there.
| Agency Type | Average Payment | Worst Case |
|---|---|---|
| Local / direct advertiser | 15–30 days | 45 days |
| Regional agency | 45–60 days | 90 days |
| National agency | 60–90 days | 120 days |
| Holding company (WPP, Publicis, IPG, Omnicom) | 120–160 days | 180+ days |
The Operators Who Are Getting This Right
The smartest operators I am talking to right now are not waiting for the campaigns to land. They are setting up their factoring line before the World Cup business comes in. Here is why that matters.
When you know you have a factoring line in place, you can price your World Cup inventory with confidence. You are not dependent on when the agency settles. That flexibility changes how you negotiate. An operator who knows they will have cash in 72 hours can bid more aggressively, accept larger deals, and say yes to opportunities that a cash-constrained competitor has to pass on.
Factoring is not a last resort. It is a competitive advantage — and the operators who treat it that way are the ones who will come out of the World Cup in the strongest position.
How It Works — In Plain Terms
Invoice factoring is simple. You run the campaign. You submit the contract, invoice, and proof of performance to MediaMark Factoring. We advance you 85 to 90 percent of the invoice value within 72 hours. We collect from the agency. When they pay, you receive the reserve balance minus our one-time fee of 2 to 4 percent.
It is not a loan. There is no debt on your balance sheet. There is no collateral. Approval is based on your client's credit, not yours. And it scales automatically with your revenue — the bigger the World Cup campaign, the bigger the advance.
vs. waiting 120–160 days for the full $100,000 from a holding company agency
The Window Is Now
The World Cup starts June 11. Campaigns are being booked right now. If you are an OOH operator in a host city — or anywhere in the country servicing national brands running World Cup media — the time to set up your factoring line is before the contracts are signed, not after.
The operator I spoke with at the beginning of this article? She is set up. She knows exactly what she will receive and when. She is going into the biggest quarter of her career with a plan — not a prayer.
You can be in the same position. It takes six documents and 72 hours.
Talk to Sandy Seago directly. No forms, no waiting — a real conversation about your specific situation.
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