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#1
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Glider clubs and commercial operators can contact their local TV
stations and newspapers and give them the following link. Suggest they are invited to visit your operation where you will give them a free flight. The media is hungry for human interest stories, so it is very easy to get outstanding publicity. In our case, we suggested they make it a first flying lesson. Send them a copy of Glider Basics From First Flight To Solo (of course) and tell them to be prepared to take the first written test (Controls and their functions from The Glider Flight Instructor's Manual.) http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Weekend/en...ory?id=9145409 Tom Knauff |
#2
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Great Public Relations and well done! Have a Coke...
Why Coke? Because they are masters at the pull type of marketing strategy that should be employed to promote our lovely sport. The national organization should be the one doing this top level marketing essentially using the media to pull people into the club and soaring FBO system. A solid pull strategy, implemented by a paid marketing communications professional, in concert with the hard working volunteers, with a real but achievable budget, implemented over a five year program would go along way towards progress in our numbers. A pull strategy puts the SSA in charge of actually marketing the sport on a national basis. In Tom's wonderful scenario the SSA MarCom person would be pursuing the GMA sports segment with media kits and opportunities just like the rest of the world does right now. The link between building national interest and actually going for that first local flight is key. People can be enticed to try the sport nationally but they stay in the sport on the local club and FBO level. An example? What if the SSA had a linked promotion and flight locator tie in with the GMA segment so it would be easy to translate interest into action. The World Gliding Championships are coming to the USA in a few years. Now there is a news worthy item to promote the sport around. Been to the movies lately? You know those incessant ads at the beginning of the movie? How about a 15-20 second dramatic soaring trailer ending in a special offer to try soaring? This achievable and targeted media buy would pull people into the world of soaring at the local Club and FBO level. In a pull strategy the SSA as the national organization is working to get em in the door while our FBO and clubs would be working to keep em in the cockpit locally. The path we are on is not working, the problem is not insolvable, the resources are not beyond reach. Encourage your SSA Director to start down the path of a paid Marketing Communications professional who can help craft a viable pull strategy using the people, resources and assets we already have. We already have a very beautiful and interesting product. John Seaborn |
#3
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On Nov 22, 3:32*pm, John Seaborn wrote:
Great Public Relations and well done! Have a Coke... Why Coke? Because they are masters at the pull type of marketing strategy that should be employed to promote our lovely sport. The national organization should be the one doing this top level marketing essentially using the media to pull people into the club and soaring FBO system. A solid pull strategy, implemented by a paid *marketing communications professional, in concert with the hard working volunteers, with a real but achievable budget, implemented over a five year program would go along way towards progress in our numbers. A pull strategy puts the SSA in charge of actually marketing the sport on a national basis. In Tom's wonderful scenario the SSA MarCom person would be pursuing the GMA sports segment with media kits and opportunities just like the rest of the world does right now. The link between building national interest and actually going for that first local flight is key. People can be enticed to try the sport nationally but they stay in the sport on the local club and FBO level. An example? What if the SSA had a linked promotion and flight locator tie in with the GMA segment so it would be easy to translate interest into action. The World Gliding Championships are coming to the USA in a few years. Now there is a news worthy item to promote the sport around. Been to the movies lately? You know those incessant ads at the beginning of the movie? How about a 15-20 second dramatic soaring trailer ending in a special offer to try soaring? This achievable and targeted media buy would pull people into the world of soaring at the local Club and FBO level. In a pull strategy the SSA as the national organization is working to get em in the door while our FBO and clubs would be working to keep em in the cockpit locally. The path we are on is not working, the problem is not insolvable, the resources are not beyond reach. Encourage your SSA Director to start down the path of a paid Marketing Communications professional who can help craft a viable pull strategy using the people, resources and assets we already have. We already have a very beautiful and interesting product. John Seaborn We have a very beautiful and interesting product indeed! This last weekend the Tucson Soaring Club held its first ever open house. We offered half price guest rides, had a very nice program of events, and ended up fully booked with 40 scheduled rides a day on the Friday before the event. We had news coverage, including front page of the local newspaper! On Sunday we were able to accommodate 67 guest rides operating non-stop from 9am to 5pm. Estimates are over 300 attended to watch or take a ride. Plus our good friends from San Diego brought over the Roman Winch and Super Blanik and gave rides to the walk up guests. We aimed this as an education of the public on soaring and also a membership drive. So far, so good - we had 4 new members join up this weekend! Our goal is to go from our current 110 to 150+ by the end of 2010. And so far this is with volunteers - no one is paid, although lately I'm feeling like it's a full time job.... Tony |
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On Nov 22, 9:01*pm, TS1 wrote:
On Nov 22, 3:32*pm, John Seaborn wrote: Great Public Relations and well done! Have a Coke... Why Coke? Because they are masters at the pull type of marketing strategy that should be employed to promote our lovely sport. The national organization should be the one doing this top level marketing essentially using the media to pull people into the club and soaring FBO system. A solid pull strategy, implemented by a paid *marketing communications professional, in concert with the hard working volunteers, with a real but achievable budget, implemented over a five year program would go along way towards progress in our numbers. A pull strategy puts the SSA in charge of actually marketing the sport on a national basis. In Tom's wonderful scenario the SSA MarCom person would be pursuing the GMA sports segment with media kits and opportunities just like the rest of the world does right now. The link between building national interest and actually going for that first local flight is key. People can be enticed to try the sport nationally but they stay in the sport on the local club and FBO level. An example? What if the SSA had a linked promotion and flight locator tie in with the GMA segment so it would be easy to translate interest into action. The World Gliding Championships are coming to the USA in a few years. Now there is a news worthy item to promote the sport around. Been to the movies lately? You know those incessant ads at the beginning of the movie? How about a 15-20 second dramatic soaring trailer ending in a special offer to try soaring? This achievable and targeted media buy would pull people into the world of soaring at the local Club and FBO level. In a pull strategy the SSA as the national organization is working to get em in the door while our FBO and clubs would be working to keep em in the cockpit locally. The path we are on is not working, the problem is not insolvable, the resources are not beyond reach. Encourage your SSA Director to start down the path of a paid Marketing Communications professional who can help craft a viable pull strategy using the people, resources and assets we already have. We already have a very beautiful and interesting product. John Seaborn We have a very beautiful and interesting product indeed! This last weekend the Tucson Soaring Club held its first ever open house. We offered half price guest rides, had a very nice program of events, and ended up fully booked with 40 scheduled rides a day on the Friday before the event. We had news coverage, including front page of the local newspaper! On Sunday we were able to accommodate 67 guest rides operating non-stop from 9am to 5pm. Estimates are over 300 attended to watch or take a ride. Plus our good friends from San Diego brought over the Roman Winch and Super Blanik and gave rides to the walk up guests. We aimed this as an education of the public on soaring and also a membership drive. So far, so good - we had 4 new members join up this weekend! Our goal is to go from our current 110 to 150+ by the end of 2010. And so far this is with volunteers - no one is paid, although lately I'm feeling like it's a full time job.... Tony Randy share the Intro member program info with you? Frank Whiteley |
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On Nov 22, 2:32*pm, John Seaborn wrote:
Great Public Relations and well done! Have a Coke... Why Coke? Because they are masters at the pull type of marketing strategy that should be employed to promote our lovely sport. The path we are on is not working, the problem is not insolvable, the resources are not beyond reach. Encourage your SSA Director to start down the path of a paid Marketing Communications professional who can help craft a viable pull strategy using the people, resources and assets we already have. We already have a very beautiful and interesting product. John Seaborn John- I note that Tom encourages clubs and FBOs to attempt this sort of marketing. His example does not recommend anything from the SSA. While I am in favor of the SSA spending more resources on marketing, I would caution against your "pull strategy" via another cost center in Hobbs. The Coke "pull strategy" involves mass marketing with millions of dollars employed vs ours is an underfunded niche sport in competion with every other niche sport. While a national "clearing house" and more defined "marketing strategy" would be beneficial, the effort will have to be on leveraging local resources...the GMA spot shows what a small determined group (with some self-interest) can do to promote the uniqueness of our sport for all. One needs to avoid building up an expectation that the Hobbs cavalry will someday arrive in the nick of time to fix the marketing of soaring...that is the stategy that has not worked. The concept of building a "tool box" for local promoters to access is a strategy more along the lines of what our marketplace positioning and resources can handle...the tool box is almost complete, it only needs more awareness. Tom's sharing of the story via RAS is part of that "tool box". If one could make one "national" recommendation at this time, the cost of a marketing person should rather be used to fund advertising of a "third gen" FAST program...that is the missing "next step" in your pull strategy...and one that would support local efforts across the entire USA. This limited goal could be accomplished by a volunteer effort with minor Hobbs staff support. A second recommendation is we should formally recognize those who successfully market soaring with a much higher priority and positioning within our soaring culture than we do today...that could help activate the talent that we have already...a recognition process that the COBM committee should take on. Third, if we are so gung ho on hiring another body, would be to contract (not hire) an outside sports marketing consultant to write a formal national marketing plan after surveying past efforts/plans, successful clubs and FBOs, and our competitor niche sports...the results of that effort would then define who we need to hire/next steps. Just 2 cents, LT |
#6
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Pull is good, but conversion is harder. The sad fact is that we fail
miserably at converting first rides into long-time pilots. For each ride, how many get a license? For each license, how many are still flying 3 years later? Typical numbers I've heard are about one in a thousand. If that were even one in a hundred, we'd have 10 times more glider pilots! John Cochrane |
#7
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Yeah, conversion is difficult from my experience. At least for short
term conversion, here's a couple of reasons why and how to address them. - Misconceptions about safety. I do my best to point out that a glider is way safer than an airplane and why. I like saying the most dangerous part of soaring is the drive to the gliderport. - Misconceptions about price. Everybody who doesn't know anything about soaring assumes this it's a rich man's sport. I point out that tow costs are cheap, and with good conditions and well trained pilot amounts to a whole afternoon's worth of fun. I also point out that my Libelle is my most prized possession and only cost me around $15,000 and that a 1-26 is considerably cheaper. Oh and that maintenance costs next to nothing. Soaring if done right, can be cheaper than other hobbies such as golf or travel. - Give rides for the customer, not for yourself. Find out about what your passengers expectations are. Find out if your passenger wants a smooth ride and if so avoid the thermals, point out local landmarks, etc... If you passenger is an adrenaline junkie, pull a few loops. Offer to let the passenger at the controls, and teach them the basics. Also find out if your passenger has any flight knowledge or experience (flight simulators count) and adjust accordingly. Thermalling sharply with a newbie is a sure way to make them sick and ensure they wont come back. - Personality counts. Project your passion for the sport, its contagious. Be friendly and humorous. Be professional enough to instill confidence in your piloting skills, but not too stiff to suck the fun out of the experience. Do your best to comfort those who are a little nervous. Show interest in your passengers. Happy Soaring, Omri Kalinsky aka SL |
#8
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Here is a practical suggestion:
SSA should provide a section on the site for the media. A press kit, if you will. This would contain: * Beautiful high resolution photographs of the sport, with permission to publish (video as well?) * Short FAQs geared towards the general public, including "myth busters" like what happens when the wind dies? * A section of short quotes that can be dropped into a piece, or "sound bytes" * Web tools and "Snippets" that can be imbedded in online articles or web sites, like html logo with link to SSA "where to fly" or an applet that lets you type in your zip code to find the closest place to fly. * explanatory material and artwork for FastPass program * contact information for media support * links to recently published articles or events * what else??? SSA has a "Publicity" section now, but it is targeted at it's members, not the media. News outlets today are overwhelmed, understaffed, and underfunded. We need to make it as easy as possible for the media to produce compelling and accurate stories about our sport. It's actually a very interesting topic! Every competent corporation does this. We should too. Matt |
#9
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On Nov 23, 9:29*am, HoUdino wrote:
On Nov 22, 2:32*pm, John Seaborn wrote: Great Public Relations and well done! Have a Coke... Why Coke? Because they are masters at the pull type of marketing strategy that should be employed to promote our lovely sport. The path we are on is not working, the problem is not insolvable, the resources are not beyond reach. Encourage your SSA Director to start down the path of a paid Marketing Communications professional who can help craft a viable pull strategy using the people, resources and assets we already have. We already have a very beautiful and interesting product. John Seaborn John- I note that Tom encourages clubs and FBOs to attempt this sort of marketing. *His example does not recommend anything from the SSA. While I am in favor of the SSA spending more resources on marketing, I would caution against your "pull strategy" via another cost center in Hobbs. * The Coke "pull strategy" involves mass marketing with millions of dollars employed vs ours is an underfunded niche sport in competion with every other niche sport. *While a national "clearing house" and more defined "marketing strategy" would be beneficial, the effort will have to be on leveraging local resources...the GMA spot shows what a small determined group (with some self-interest) can do to promote the uniqueness of our sport for all. One needs to avoid building up an expectation that the Hobbs cavalry will someday arrive in the nick of time to fix the marketing of soaring...that is the stategy that has not worked. *The concept of building a "tool box" for local promoters to access is a strategy more along the lines of what our marketplace positioning and resources can handle...the tool box is almost complete, it only needs more awareness. Tom's sharing of the story via RAS is part of that "tool box". If one could make one "national" recommendation at this time, the cost of a marketing person should rather be used to fund advertising of a "third gen" FAST program...that is the missing "next step" in your pull strategy...and one that would support local efforts across the entire USA. This limited goal could be accomplished by a volunteer effort with minor Hobbs staff support. A second recommendation is we should formally recognize those who successfully market soaring with a much higher priority and positioning within our soaring culture than we do today...that could help activate the talent that we have already...a recognition process that the COBM committee should take on. Third, if we are so gung ho on hiring another body, would be to contract (not hire) an outside sports marketing consultant to write a formal national marketing plan after surveying past efforts/plans, successful clubs and FBOs, and our competitor niche sports...the results of that effort would then define who we need to hire/next steps. Just 2 cents, LT BTW, 'LT' is one of the best local promoters of soaring in the country as the Orange County Soaring Association will attest. I've been studying growth options for a year now. There are many good ideas but few actions. I think step one is to get a good handle on just what we can and want to accomplish. Here are a few results of surveys. Without changes, we have the capacity of training about 1300 new glider pilots a year. By operating weekdays and bringing instructors out of retirement, we might push that to 2000. There are less than 200 tow planes in the US and only about 400 training gliders - most of them old 2-33's and L-13's. There are about 600 glider instructors who consider themselves somewhat "active" but of those, 15 -20% do 80% of the actual instruction. Many clubs only operate 55 days a year. It takes a while to develop good instructors and new training gliders come from Europe with big price tags and long waits. I know many will say "bring it on - we'll find a way". However, there is no obvious, short term way to increase our 'new-start' training capacity beyond 2000/year. If we 'got lucky' with something like the Disney TV shows of the 1960's and .01% of the 300 million US population sought flight instruction in gliders, 30,000 people would descend on our training operations. I expect 29,000 of them would be very unhappy with us. Before we start "pushing" a mass market response into our 'pipeline', we'd better clean the pipes. Meanwhile, from just observing, I'd guess we collectively chase 1300 potential new soaring pilots away every year by just not talking to them when they visit our soaring sites. The quickest, easiest and cheapest way to get 1300 new student starts per year is for each of the roughly 15,000 US glider pilots to just talk to a few people about soaring. Make sure there is an easy way for them to learn about soaring and an attractive route for them to become glider pilots. "Easy and attractive" means easy access to information about soaring, better ride conversion rates as well as a better, more hospitable training environment. What could the SSA (meaning SSA volunteers like you and me) do? I'd also like to see a much stronger presence on 'social media'. See: (http://nonprofit.about.com/od/online...erstwitter.htm) I'd like to see more bloggers writing about soaring. See: http://blog.aopa.org/letsgoflying/ I'd like to see more interactive on-line training, and on-line FAA written tests on the SSA web site. I'd like to see every soaring operation have a formal program to greet visitors and make sure all their questions are answered. It's a small thing but there will shortly be inexpensive sheets of SSA business cards available for members to buy. You'll have to print your own contact information on them with a ink jet or laser printer and cut them from the sheet. They'll have the SSA logo and web site URL plus room for us to add our personal and club contact information. Just hand these to people you talk to about soaring - it should lead them to find out more about us. Bill Daniels Chairman, SSA Growth and Development Committee |
#10
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snip...
If we 'got lucky' with something like the Disney TV shows of the 1960's and .01% of the 300 million US population sought flight instruction in gliders, 30,000 people would descend on our training operations. *I expect 29,000 of them would be very unhappy with us. Before we start "pushing" a mass market response into our 'pipeline', we'd better clean the pipes. The quickest, easiest and cheapest way to get 1300 new student starts per year is for each of the roughly 15,000 US glider pilots to just talk to a few people about soaring. Bill Daniels Chairman, SSA Growth and Development Committee I agree with most of what you are saying Bill, but I don't understand why we need to increase our training capacity beyond 2000 pilots/ year. That would be an increase in total soaring pilots of over 13% per year! (less attrition, of course) I would call that an astounding success. As rusty as the pipeline may be, I would contend that lack of capacity is not our biggest problem. Matt |
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