FIPJP Global Analytics
At a glance
FIPJP Global Analytics rolls every federation's monthly data up to the world level via signed cross-tenant endpoints, giving the international body a single view of player counts, world championship participation, continental balance, year-over-year sport growth, IOC reporting exports, and the evidence base needed for Olympic recognition efforts and cross-sport benchmarking against other international federations.
How it works
Each tenant's federation rollups (from F10.04) are exposed via a public, signed cross-tenant analytics endpoint. A FIPJP-scoped aggregator polls these endpoints monthly and writes GlobalRollup documents keyed on (continent, nation, month). Because the underlying data uses idempotent upsert, a federation can correct historic numbers and the global view will re-converge on the next pull without double-counting.
Global player count by continent and nation (F10.05.01) reads the latest licensed-member count per tenant and groups by continent. World championship participation trends (F10.05.02) are sourced from competition rollups tagged with the world_championship classification and tracked across multi-year windows. Continental strength comparison (F10.05.03) blends rating-weighted match results with podium counts at world and continental events.
Sport growth metrics per country (F10.05.04) compute year-over-year delta in licensed members, active clubs, and competitions hosted. IOC reporting data (F10.05.05) packages the subset the IOC requests for Olympic recognition (gender balance, country count, youth participation, anti-doping coverage) into a fixed, downloadable schema. Benchmarking against other sports (F10.05.06) joins the curated international-federation reference table that FIPJP maintains and renders side-by-side comparisons.
Read-down to a tenant's private data is never automatic, so a country that has not yet exposed its analytics endpoint simply shows as data-not-available; FIPJP cannot peek beyond the signed public surface, which keeps the standalone-tenant model intact.
Key capabilities
- Cross-tenant pull via signed public analytics endpoints
- GlobalRollup keyed on continent + nation + month
- World championship participation tracked across multi-year windows
- Rating-weighted continental strength comparison
- Year-over-year sport growth deltas per country
- Fixed-schema IOC reporting export for Olympic recognition
- Benchmark joins against curated international-federation reference data
In practice
The FIPJP secretariat opens the global dashboard ahead of an IOC briefing. The continent map shows 87 nations with active license systems and a combined 612,000 licensed players, up 3.1% year-over-year. The world championship trend reveals that women's triplettes participation has doubled in five years, which lines up with their gender-balance narrative.
They click the IOC reporting tile, generate the standardized export, and download a clean PDF that maps directly to the criteria the IOC requested. A continental committee chair logs in next and sees the same numbers for his continent, plus a strength comparison that confirms two emerging nations have closed the gap on the historical leaders.
Features in this subsystem
6| ID | Status | Features |
|---|---|---|
| F10.05.01 | Shipped | Global player count by continent/nation ✅ PL-F1005 |
| F10.05.02 | Shipped | World championship participation trends ✅ PL-F1005 |
| F10.05.03 | Shipped | Continental strength comparison ✅ PL-F1005 |
| F10.05.04 | Shipped | Sport growth metrics per country ✅ PL-F1005 |
| F10.05.05 | Shipped | IOC reporting data (for Olympic recognition efforts) ✅ PL-F1005 |
| F10.05.06 | Shipped | Benchmarking against other sports ✅ PL-F1005 |
Stakeholders who need this subsystem
Surfaces in 3 stakeholder analyses