Social networks aren't a social network without people. Neither is an online dating site, neither is Ebay. You need a critical mass of people interacting with others to make it work.
Horse racing, as we have heard repeatedly in lobbying materials of late, is a very labor intensive industry. In Ontario alone, probably over 40,000 people have something to do with horse racing. That's one province. North America wide the number is falt-out huge.
Today on her blog, Shannon Castgnola had a couple of ideas to grow horse racing. One, was if you are an owner and are not using your box seats, give them to someone who has never been to the races. Another, pass out a $5 betting voucher to someone, and then ask them how they did.
If you multiply that by the hundreds of thousands of people in this sport, you're onto something. You have created a Groupon for horse racing.
Mobilizing the base of this sport is difficult, and to my knowledge has never even been tried. What if the Jockey Club or the USTA or Standardbred Canada devised a care and marketing package distributed to each owner, trainer, and groom when licenses are renewed. This package would have some free admissions, or programs, or what have you, and the sports participants could seek out a person to introduce racing to.
This is not direct mail, because the horseperson has face to face contact with whom he is giving it to. Instead of a 1% or less conversion rate, the conversion rate would likely be sky high. Out of a half million packages, perhaps 400,000 would be converted to an actual body. If those people spend $20 at the track, that's $8 million in revenue. If 5% come back a few times a year, well, that's a hell of a successful program.
We have hundreds of thousands of salesmen and women across North America, but they've never even been asked to serve.
Racing should find a way to mobilize this social network.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Trafficked, Last 12 Months
-
Welcome to the 8th edition of the Monday Super Spectacular Blog! It was Preakness week and frankly instead of a horse racing pool, next yea...
-
I continue to be fascinated with both the press and general football fan reaction to the Bill Belichick 4th down decision in Sunday's ga...
-
Last week's inaugural Super Spectacular Monday Blog got a lot of hits, and not just from Russian bots (although cпасибо to all Russian r...
-
On the Harness Edge this morning, I see that there is a story up about the BCSA offering their members up for driver and trainer interviews ...
-
We'll all remember Memorial Day '24 because of the Met Mile as the day Ray Cotolo dressed up like a hot dog. Hope @RayCotolo au...
-
Welcome to the Super Spectacular Blog Vol 5 . Thanks for reading and sharing this disorganized barrage of thoughts and links each week. Ti...
-
As most of you have heard, Charles Simon passed away yesterday at age 57 . Although a lot of you knew Chuck better than I, I still felt a s...
-
Last night's Uncle Bill twitter spaces, where TVG's Fanduel's Mike Joyce joined some raucous horseplayers was, well, kind of in...
Similar
Carryovers Provide Big Reach and an Immediate Return
Sinking marketing money directly into the horseplayer by seeding pools is effective, in both theory and practice In Ontario and elsewher...
3 comments:
Certainly can't fault the idea,but this sounds much like word of mouth.
If tracks tried really hard to give the customer (bettor) a decent gamble,fair prices on decent food and drink etc.... spreading the word would be more widespread.
If I am going to hand a newbie a $5 voucher,what will the track do?
After admission, parking and program, the newbie is down 11.25 (Santa Anita, $16 at Del Mar).
The tracks have ridden the back of "word of mouth" for a long time.
Thanks for your thought provoking blog posts this week.
so let the people who are allready paying the freight do a little more. jeeezz
so let the people who are allready paying the freight do a little more. jeeezz
Post a Comment