ADELAIDE'S two AFL clubs and the SANFL will meet in July torevisit the distribution of revenue at Adelaide Oval.

Claims of poor earnings by Adelaide and Port Adelaide athome games at the redeveloped stadium have soured record attendances since itopened with a sellout Showdown in round two.

Crows CEO Steven Trigg and his Power counterpart KeithThomas said the carve up of stadium revenue was a work in progress as bothclubs and the Stadium Management Authority gathered data as to howsuccessful Adelaide Oval was.

Trigg said the July review, which will be chaired by new AFL chief executive Gillon McLachlan, would provide all parties an opportunity to "take stock".

"We'll see how things have been operating, and it's a chance for us to take stock because probably there's been too much said publicly about it," Trigg said.

"There's a bit of a grizzle that gets aired and all of a sudden it's a major issue – it's a significant enough of an issue that we've agreed to meet … but this is a fantastic outcome for everybody – don't lose sight of that.

"Stadium yields take in costs and revenue distribution, we're on record as saying we all know [the costs] started relatively high … collaboratively, bit by bit we're working to get those down.

"We'll just let the review take its course and towards the end of that we'll be able to say more with a bit more detail."

Port CEO Thomas, Trigg and SMA CEO Andrew Daniels met on Wednesday to launch a joint initiative aimed at improving crowd behaviour at the ground.

The #everyoneiswelcome campaign is a reminder to spectators more than a response to a particular incident, with all parties stating any behaviour deemed unacceptable around young children was unacceptable at Adelaide Oval.

Thomas said the stadium's 1-in-10,000-person eviction rate was amongst the lowest in the AFL, but that any member evicted could expect further punishment from the clubs.