Liverpool have echoed Arsenal's approach in signing a new deal that will help them surpass their existing commercial record.
Liverpool have made several changes behind the scenes already this summer, coinciding with Arne Slot's appointment as head coach, Richard Hughes' as sporting director, and Michael Edwards' return as CEO.
Three other appointments that might have gone under the radar involved the commercial team, which helped Liverpool generated PS228m in the last financial year, among other departments.
Fenway Sports Group have always wanted Liverpool to live within their means and are not as willing to bankroll losses as some other owners in the Premier League are.
And in an era when spending is anchored by turnover in terms PSR, that means the club have had to supercharge their commercial income in recent years to continue to compete at the highest level.
Liverpool become latest club to sign with Indian company As announced late last week, Liverpool have launched a global commercial deal with robotic technology company Husqvarna.
In a first-of-its-kind agreement, Husqvarna will become Liverpool's official groundskeeping partner, having supplied robotic mowers for Liverpool's AXA Training Centre for last three years.
The deal itself is likely to be worth in the low seven-figure bracket, but it will help Liverpool who are on course to break their club record of PS272m set in 2022-23.
Husqvarna are headquartered in Sweden but are financed by Indian investors.
Interestingly, the commercial deal is not the first struck by a Premier League side with an Indian-backed company in recent times.
Liverpool continue trend set by Arsenal's Sobha Reality deal Just as Liverpool's training ground is sponsored by insurance firm AXA, Arsenal secured their own naming rights deal in September last year.
The deal with real estate firm Sobha Reality is worth PS15m per year and, although it has been in place for several months, went to the next phase in recent weeks, with signage erected at the training complex.
The Premier League is immensely popular in India, with Man City, whose City Football Group owns Mumbai City, among the clubs to take advantage of the commercial appeal in recent years.
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