Skip to content

Posts from the ‘Ski Industry’ Category

Want to Make a Big Splash? Set a Guinness World Record

They did what?

The “kicker file” is one of the most mutually accessible ways of getting national or international media attention, even if you generally don’t deserve it. At the end of most newscasts is a lighthearted look at something funny happening around the world. These sections also exist in large circulation newspapers and magazines. Your business or cause may not be able to penetrate the front page with hard news that you can control, but you may be able to shine a friendly light if you are willing to be a bit goofy and use a commonly popular topic to your advantage.

Take the World’s Largest Snowwoman for example. Bethel, Maine had already set the world record (as deemed by Guinness) for world’s largest Snowman and simply beating their old record might not get past the editorial desk, so what to do? Capitalize on the interest in gender issues and build a snowwoman instead! Yes it’s kind of ridiculous, but still rallies the community, gets people to talk, and interests editors all over the globe. Give it lipstick, eyelashes, wider hips (I guess) and bam – you’ve got a snowwoman. Along the way the region is highlighted as a top winter destination and people from far and wide come to see it.

The majority of the resources to build it were donated. I was lucky enough to help out and also represented the local ski area at the unveiling. Got to hang out with Senator Olympia Snowe too. Yes, that’s her name. Check the video.

There are many steps involved, but setting a world record is a sure route to making a big splash. It’s not as simple as just declaring yourself the greatest on earth. You need to submit for approval from Guinness, which can take around 4 weeks to get an answer. In the end you will be subject to their opinion on whether or not you are setting a valid and quantifiable record. It’s also not free. More information is on the Guinness website.
 
Want to improve your marketing in Vermont? Let’s get lunch.
 
Contact info and testimonials.

Making the Most of Celebrity Visits

With the time restraints of new fatherhood and preparing to relocate, there has not been a lot of time for hitting the mountains this year. I did get up once thanks to some friends, but in general the focus is elsewhere.

Last season Glen Plake arrived uunannounced (which is his MO). This is often the case with any sort of celebrities. You often don’t have a lot of notice as to when they will arrive at your business. Your time is short, but make sure to snap some photos, get a signed poster endorsing your business, or if you have time, put on your media hat and interview them. Do your best to ask them questions that are not what they always hear. The best interviews are always ones that cover new ground or areas that are not already well worn. The better the interview, the larger an audience will be interested in it, and thus exposed to your business.

I was able to secure a chairlift ride with Glen Plake (rad!) while he was in Oregon last year. Kept the questions light yet on topic and allowed the Glen Plake character to lead the fun. Ended with a chance for him to promote his tour.

Sales Channels Evolving as Digital Platforms Mature (TSIL Newsbrief)

Here’s a copy of my article that was included in the December 14, 2010 edition of TSIL.

SALES CHANNELS EVOLVING AS DIGITAL PLATFORMS MATURE

Gaining access to large groups of customers by offering discounts or commissions is not new, but the mediums in which these transactions occur are evolving rapidly. Liftopia has been a leader to emerge in this space and currently services resorts across the US and Canada, allowing resorts to offer specific inventory and reach a wider audience.

What’s next? An upcoming session at the National Ski Areas Association Western Winter Conference and Tradeshow in Alta/Snowbird entitled “Channel Surfing” will dive into the topic of evolving sales and marketing channels. Some resorts are moving quickly into this new space while others are using the latest digital tools to become their own online inventory broker.

Groupon is a recent entrant into the bulk lift ticket sales market. Burke Mountain, VT recently reported sales of 600 tickets at a 50% yield in a one-day sale. Keystone Resort, CO saw similar impressive sales numbers through a Groupon offer in the fall of 2009, but craigslist and eBay resales, along with the significant commission, were noted as challenges, according to Christian Knapp, Keystone’s senior brand director. Knapp is slated to be on the NSAA “Channel Surfing” discussion panel.

Direct selling through social media channels remains generally a faux pas, but “Facebook Friday” at Sunday River is entering its second year and seems to have found an audience, thanks to simplicity. Built as an “event,” attendees simply select that they will “attend” and in doing so they get a discount on the upcoming Friday lift ticket. Friday, Dec. 10 saw 482 “attendees.” Nick Lambert, Sunday River’s VP of marketing and sales, points to several positives: the “bring a friend” likelihood, making two-day weekends into three-day weekends, and snow conditions awareness.

Mike Henderson, social media strategist at One to One Interactive, noted that some resorts are focusing on addressing third party sales in a manner that appears to be a repeat of the recent decrease in mainstream media buys. He says that by building and cultivating the audience you want via an internet strategy – inclusive of SEO, SEM, email, advertising and social – the need to pay others to communicate or sell on your behalf decreases. – A.K.

I also provide updates to the TSIL facebook page. Like it if you like it.

Paid SMS Marketing Just Got Put "On Notice"

>Do you hear that? It’s folks who sell on-site sms products saying “oh crap”.

If you wanted to communicate with your onsite guests with any sort of safety or merchansiding messages, you tried to inspire them to text you and then odds are you were paying per text sent in some fashion. Of course twitter was a nice as a way to communicate to a few who are plugged in and already able, but now twitter has taken a bite out of the paid sms market with the ability for the public to get twitter updates sent to them via txt without having any sort of a twitter account. This means that business can do the same thing they were doing before to communicate to on-site folks, but without paying for it! They’ll just need to start pumping their desired twitter handle to people over the speakers or on signs.

It’s called “fast follow” and it’s going to zoom around pretty quick. The next time you are at a concert, football game, ski resorts like Bachelor, casino, or the like, odds are you’ll have a twitter account blasted at you to “fast follow”. Check out the blog post announcing it. Right now it sounds like it’s only available in the US, so Stephen Colbert would be proud.

Tell the thousands of folks on site when they need to leave by, if there is an emergency, what’s the happy hour band, where to get t-shirts, if there is a rain delay, how much to stay an extra night, why to take a lesson, etc. Of course this info will need to stay relevant (just like all of today’s marketing) because people will be giving it their time and maybe even their “standard text rates”.

>QR Codes – Bridging the Offline/Online Media Gap

>If you are unfamiliar with QR codes, the time to start familiarizing yourself is now. They might take off and be the next big thing. That’s the challenge of course. Of ten new technologies that pop up for use in marketing, a minority of them end up being widely adopted.

So what’s the story with QR? Think supermarket bar code, except you put them on your brochure, print ads, store window, or business cards. People with smartphones can then scan them and be taken to an online location of your choice. Somewhere interesting and not automatically your website. Maybe make it easy for people to follow you on twitter or show them a video that explains what it is they were curious about in their decision to scan your QR code. Maybe load a coupon. Of course we’re still looking at a small percentage of public who are knowledgeable enough to be marketed to this way, but that is only likely to increase.

Mashable recently had an article with some basic starter tips that is worth checking out. Check out what Freeskier Magazine is doing with the technology in the snowsports realm (and get your weekly dose of Digi).

http://www.freeskier.com/site/static/flash/embed_player.swf

I would bet that this will be the year that we see resorts themselves begin to use it on their brochures and ads to achieve better call to action results. I wonder who it will be and what they’ll do with it. I would suggest back of every resort brochure and reasonably easy to find on a trail map. Also distant corner of print ads. Why not allow guests to see live lift status by scanning the trail map, and then you can merchandise that spot. :)

Contributor to Snow Industry Letter

The Snow Industry Letter (TSIL) is a Snowsports industry publication that has been around for over 30 years. It’s the latest news from around the globe concerning all things snowsports delivered right to the inbox. No amount of trolling the net for what’s new brings you the concise and timely industry information you get weekly from TSIL. Trust me – I’ve spent years following the chat rooms, blogs, tweets and posts on the industry. Your business and staff can’t all do that, nor do it efficiently. TSIL does it for you and boils the issues down to their relevant parts. Do you want to know the latest…

  • Industry Trends
  • Resort Developments
  • Environmental Impacts
  • Competition News
  • People and Awards

I have recently joined TSIL Managing Editor Mary McKhann as a TSIL Contributor. I’ll be covering certain west coast, online and youth oriented topics as they pertain to the snowsports industry. Save yourself the impossible hassle of trying to keep up to date all the time. TSIL boils it down and delivers it to you 48 times per year. You can sign up for 2 free trial issues at http://snowindustryletter.com/ or email me and I’ll hook you up with a recent example.
What businesses should consider a corporate subscription?

  • Resorts (All the latest news to have a more informed staff)
  • Lodging properties that rely on resorts (industry trends that can help your business)
  • Ski/tourism publications (get the prelim scoop on tons of potential breaking stories)
  • Mainstream media in snow centric locales (improve your snowsports coverage)
  • Airlines that fly skiers (who doesn’t)
  • Ski town retail outfits
  • Anyone involved in SIA

 

Fix Mt Bachelor Reputation Complete – Launching MediawithAK

A mountain in peril.

Yes. I’m the guy who came from Maine (interrupting an otherwise impeccable ski industry career) to take possibly the most daunting job in the ski business in 2008 – being the face, voice and fingers of Mt. Bachelor tasked with rebuilding the resort’s credibility, communications, and marketing in the face of the strongest public opinion headwind the ski industry has seen in the modern era.

Turning around a decade long trend of growing disdain (that led to a mass firing in 2008) was to be somehow accomplished alongside a new parade of unpopular business and customer service moves. I was not told those moves were planned. I also reported to the finance department rather than the decision makers. Sounds fun eh?

Guests, media, the blogosphere and even the local chamber of commerce had lined up to call out the resort. Need a refresher? This was the local media’s take. And here’s what was being circulated in the business community. These are not blogs of conspiracy theorists or anonymous comments, this is the professional community who was treading lightly, while sounding the alarm in more professional terms than the public at large. Could this environ be remedied under the same ownership after a management firing within a large community rooting for failure in order to get new owners? The answer was unclear.

Flash forward two years. Mt. Bachelor’s credibility has been reborn. The snow report is more accurate than what your buddy tells you. The mountain leveraged social media to answer questions and rumors to the point that people are skeptical. Video has told the story of operations to better inform a hungry public. The news media (and even that pesky opinion paper) is covering Mt. Bachelor as a community member, rather than a target. In bound emails have gone from 10-1 negative to 2-1 positive. Charitable efforts have expanded and created a wide network of evangelists. I was invited to speak to Central Oregon Ad Fed to show the strategies employed to accomplish this and more. Maybe you were there.

But how was this even possible? Good question. These were just some of the directives dropped onto thy desk for delivery and justification to the public, which make it seem pretty far fetched..

  • Cancelling Free Ski Day
  • Raising Daily Prices
  • Eliminating 70+ Free Skiing
  • Restricting Uphill Access
  • Shortening The Ski Day
  • Discontinuing Flex Ride Passes
  • New Sliding Scale Pricing
  • Voiding Joe’s Sports Vouchers
  • Eliminating Non-Holiday Season Passes
  • Charging For Overnight Parking
  • Newly Dormant Outback Chairlift
  • Terrain Park Re-location
  • Numerous Lift Breakdowns
  • Crippling Ice Storm
  • 2 Full Mtn Power Outages

Any level of success was possible due to the heroic efforts of Mt Bachelor staff and a healthy diet of communications efforts to address, respond, and inform the public and media across all mediums so that these significant changes were accepted over time, rather than the alternative. It was a bruising task to tackle on behalf of Powdr Corp, and I wish them well in continuing in such efforts, or adjusting their tact to lessen their output of unpopular change. That said, it’s a smart move on the corporate bottom line to handle large scale unpopular business adjustments as rapidly as possible via an underling that is willing and able to absorb the crossfire, and be refreshed when the period concludes and the playing field is leveled again.

Though it’s clearly not a satisfying or personally beneficial role to fill, if the community and ski area live a more sustainable life together going forward, then I’ll have to accept that. This deflection plan was highly successful for the company and owner in turning the public and local opinion media tide in 2 years, due to a capable and motivated middle manager absorbing and/or deflecting ongoing calls for corporate accountability in all mediums. Had I stayed out of the fray, I might still be working there, but the Resort would still be mired in the unpleasantness of 2008. I was hired to take on the mob of discontent, and in doing so Mt. Bachelor quickly evolved from a hated ski area with serious morale and credibility problems to a proud mountain within the Powdr Resorts family.

In the future, I’ll be seeking a less controversial brand within which to focus marketing skills on strategy and delivery in a collaborative and sustainable business environment. Lessons learned were many.

I am now in a position to offer my services to the professional community. My wife is pregnant, we like Bend, I no longer exist on behalf of Mt. Bachelor, I can help small business get their (less controversial) messages out, so MediawithAK for local business is the result. Check out the pages detailing my services (still in development). I will also be doing a bit of “pro bono” work at the outset to grow my portfolio. Ask and you may receive.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,020 other followers