Casino Guests Are Talking About Your Service - Globally
For Lyle
Every Casino Can and Should Implement A Turnkey System for Success
Designing Tiered Reward Programs for Asian Markets
Understanding Table Games Yield Management
10 Ways to Make Your Rewards Program More Successful
Do You Know If Your Casino Is Fanatically Loved By Its Customers?
4 Valuable Guest Service Lessons from Outside the Casino Industry
Casinos Must Re-Engineer for A Guest Service Business Model
What is Casino Surveillance?
Developing More Effective Promotions
I am your customer
I am your customer
Reno's Grand Sierra Resort in Today's Economic Climate
Stop the Stupid Mystery Shops
Thoughts On The Young Gaming Customer
People to Watch - Andrew MacDonald
How Much Is One Hundred Singapore Dollars Worth?
Casinos Can Boost Business With Referrals
Make Guest Service Your Casino’s Defense Against Tough Times
Macau Must Embrace An Integrated Responsible Gaming Framework
Great Scott
It’s Quaint, but the Golden Rule Works
Bringing Scrutiny to Table Games Part 2: The out of control cost of doing business!
Compulsive Gambler Just Can’t Win
The Real Challenge of Casino Marketing in Indian Country
Macau gaming law: what next?
Terrorism, anti-terrorism and the law
Table Games Are Not Fun Anymore! Part 2
A different road map for Gaming suppliers
Terrorism, anti-terrorism and the law
Sailing Ships, Steamboats, Horse Carriages and Baccarat
A Psychographic Approach to Customer Segmentation
‘Behind The Flickering Screens’
RED, THE COLOR OF THE CHINESE PEOPLE

Casino Business Strategies
Foxwoods Rolls Out New Rolling Program in the United States
Junket Reps: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (Part 2)
KILL THE ILLS - A RECOLLECTION OF EVENTS IN MACAU (2008)
Table Games are not Fun any longer
How to Avoid Organizational Miscommunication
MACAU GAMING UPDATE : UPCOMING REGULATORY CHANGES
CASINO GAMING IN MACAU : COUNTING TABLES
CASINO GAMING COMPETITION IN MACAU
“I Love My Job”
Casinos Should Learn from Motor City’s Big Mistake
MACAU GAMING POLICY UPDATE
Macau’s Tree of Prosperity – A glimpse of what it is to be
Bringing Scrutiny to Table Games Part 2: The out of control cost of doing business!
THE JAMES BOND-SYNDROME
The Gaming Village Must Deliver An Exceptional Guest Experience
Presentation Skills Offer Value to Casinos and Their Guests
Signs of a Well Marketed Casino
Resolutions for 2008: Purpose, Strength, Simplicity
The Greatest Gaming Innovations Of All Time
Five Simple Solutions for the Managerially Challenged
Chinese Gaming Numerology
Experiential Casino Marketing
Employee Turnover: Workers Should Think Before They Walk
TABLE GAMES DEPARTMENT EVALUATIONS
The ROI Question: Answer It By Measuring Guest Advocates
Surviving the Macau Manager Turnstile: Counsel for Expat Managers
Gambling for Success in Macau
The Casino Of The Immediate Future
Move from Employee Turnover Problem to Advocacy Solution

GROWING PAINS
Gambling and prediction markets gamble on growth
Poker and Teen Addiction
Analyzing the Current Growth Options for Casino Companies
Embrace Change to Create the Casino of the Future
Table Game Protection Training: SELLING FEAR
Leprosy, Ebola Virus, Bubonic Plague and Problem Gaming
When To Ask For The Money Back…
Casino Managers Should Win Guests' Hearts In Big Way
Kaliningrad - Europe's first modern Gambling Destination?
New Year 2007
Casinos Face A Challenge from Lack of Confidence
The Battle of Feng Shui and Luck in Macau – May the ‘qi’ be with you!
SUSPECTED ADVANTAGE PLAYERS IN TABLE GAMES.
Singapore Casino Update November 21, 2006
Cash Back vs Cash Rewards: What are the real costs?
UK Casino Advisory Panel’s ‘Tour of Great Britain’
Macau – A lesson in scarcity, value and politics
Chinese and their Gambling Movies
Can we afford to wait for 2012?
Lake Tahoe musings - a look at the UK
"The Catwalk"
Employee Advocates Love Coming to Work
I Love Tiger Slots
Winning the Singapore Bid: A Lesson in Product Attributes and Positioning
Complaint-Handling in a Casino
The Path to Success Is Not In the Knowing, It’s in the Doing
Whatever Happened to Old-Fashioned Gambling?
An Added Perspective towards Casino Gambling in Singapore
Regional Casinos – Twist or Bust?
A Potpourri of Ideas for Providing Great Customer Service
A Description of My Last Visit to XYZ Casino
I love "baak ga lok"
How Good Is Your Hiring Process? Do You Settle for NDTs and CFMs?
The Singapore Swing: A Lesson on Balance and Opportunities
I Dont Want to Disappoint Family! The Risk Is Too Great!
THE FUTURE OF CASINOS IN EUROPE
The Role of the Casino Supervisor in Gaming
Chinese Gambling Superstitions and Taboos
Do You Know Your Casino's VCL?
Protect Your Brand: A Tale of Three Casinos
The new regulation of credit for gaming (Macau)
Top Ten List for Table Games
Alan Greenspan Offers Valuable Lessons for Casino Training
The enforcement of gaming debts in Macau
Casino Customer Service Suffers At the Hands of Poofs
A Brief Chinese History of Gambling
Focus: Winning hand - Poker Online
Tweaking Bottom Line Profitability
Las Vegas in Europe? – The gambling hotspots of the future
Lessons from the Geese
The fundamentals of executive success
Gambling on Social Responsibility
Angry Upset Players: What do you do?
A Few Kind Words About Gam(bl)ers
A Commitment to Guest Service Is Crucial At Casinos and
Taking Customer Service to the Breaking Point
THE DEALER AS ENTERTAINER
Credit Card woes? Alternative Payment Processing to the Rescue!
Implied Gaming
More Important Keys to Improving Casino Guest Service
Seven Keys to Improving Casino Guest Service
If the Recession Is Fading, Is Your Property Ready?
The phenomena of the games
Canadian Gaming Summit Speech
Just Say No to Boring Training!
Broken All Your New Year’s Resolutions?
Six Principles for Leading During Uncertain Times
Casino Customer Service Is the Key to Success

TABLE REWARDS - DESIGNING A LOYALTY PROGRAM
THE CASINO EXECUTIVE’S CLOTHES
Casino Player Rating Systems.
The Empire Strikes Back.
The Collapsible Virtual Casino Marketing Dream Team of the Future
West World
Table Games: Achieving double digit growth in a mature market?
Dealing with High Rollers
Some Tips on Maximising the Value of Consultants.
New Table Games: Do we often kill what we try to create?
Fundamentals of Blackjack
Throwing out Ties (Absolute versus Relative Probability)
The Guide to Good Gambling
Mathematical Expectation
Money Management
Baiting the Hook
Law of Averages
Improving Table Games Profits through Innovation
Hold Percentage
Sub Optimisation
Against the Gods : The Remarkable Story of Risk
 
Articles
Signs of a Well Marketed Casino
by Dennis Conrad

Signs of a Well Marketed Casino
By Dennis Conrad

I believe that I have seen some very well marketed companies and products in my lifetime. Besides the TV infomercial-based Ginsu knife or Vegematic, or Joe Karbo’s famous Lazy Man’s Way to Riches, or slick companies like Capital One’s “What’s in Your Wallet” or the ubiquitous AFLAC duck, some companies just seem to do a better job of selling themselves. Southwest Airlines sells “Freedom” and “Love” with whimsy and humor, and wraps it up with no frill, low fares and incredibly friendly employees. Ben and Jerry’s markets fun flavors and social responsibility. For a while, Saturn sold itself as a whole new concept and way of doing business. Disney doesn’t sell overpriced rides and cheap souvenirs, it sells “Magic,” in a world terribly in need of some.

There have also been some extremely well marketed gaming companies. Jack Binion’s Horseshoe Casinos were great examples of how to hit the hot buttons of real gamblers. Steve Wynn has always had an effective combination of state of the art bricks and mortar, along with incredibly motivated and focused employees. Barona Valley Ranch in San Diego has uncovered the powerful, integrated approach that combines facility, with continuous innovation, with passionate people who understand that they serve “Real Players.” And of course, Harrah’s has long understood what makes for a well marketed (large) gaming company by leveraging the principles of the Service Profit Chain against its core customer group of Avid, Experienced Players.

As a whole however, I believe that most casinos and casino companies market themselves inefficiently. Sometimes it is a question of marketing spend – either they spend too much or too little as marketing, but mostly spend marketing dollars for results too little understood. Sometimes it is a question of casinos not understanding “what business they are in” and providing a series of processes and (highly regulated) transactions, rather than an entertainment experience that enriches people’s lives. And sometimes this casino marketing inefficiency manifests itself as a focus on the wrong marketing tactics, usually on advertising to the exclusion of more impactful techniques like direct marketing to known customers of known worth.

But rather than harp on casinos’ typical marketing shortcomings, I thought that it might be instructive to provide a checklist of sorts on the Signs of a Well Marketed Casino. You know your casino is among the marketing mavens when:

- Your senior casino executives spend considerable time with your best casino customers and know your top 100 customers by name.

- You have an annual strategic marketing plan that is a real road map to success for the new year, and not just tweaked or rehashed budget numbers.

- Your casino employees are encouraged to have fun on the job.

- You regularly meet with your top casino customers to get their feedback on how they want you to operate “Their” casino.

- You have measurements in place to evaluate your return on investment for at least 75% of your marketing spend.

- Your employees all give the same answer to the question “What do you sell at your casino?”

- You have a branded, effective customer service training program.

- Your advertising spend is not excessive.

- You do not waste time “trolling for customers” in expensive outer markets where gaming customers have more convenient options or no compelling reason to make the long trek to your casino.

- You do not blow a bunch of money on bus programs, prospecting lists, junket reps or other expensive marketing initiatives where you “buy the business.”

- Effective direct mail is a cornerstone of your marketing strategy.

- You regularly survey all of your employees on their likes and dislikes, suggestions for improving business, the effectiveness of their supervisors, and what they need to do their jobs better or provide better customer service.

- Your CFO takes a turn in the dunk tank at the employee picnic.

- You have an employee picnic.

- You have real casino hosts that really sell, and understand that they have measurable goals around customer acquisition, reactivation, retention and growth.

- Your casino floor is not too smoky, too cramped, too disjointed, too drafty, too hot, too cold or too noisy.

- You are using your marketing technology to near maximum efficiency and your employees are incredibly well trained on it.

- Your employees understand that they are all marketers.

- Your marketing offices are located near the GM, the CFO, and the senior gaming operations folks.

- Your players club is located in a prominent position on your casino floor.

- Any one of your employees would have accurate information on any of your marketing promotions, events or programs.

- You don’t do coupons.

- Your general manager knows the first name of every one of your employees.

- You never hear “It’s not my job” at your casino and your employees have the resources, the ability and the willingness to solve a guest problem or deal with a guest complaint.

- Your senior executives park in the employees’ parking lot and eat in the employees’ dining room.

- You share with all of your employees all results, financial and otherwise, of all of your marketing efforts.

- First and foremost, you listen to your customers, not the GM, or the tribal council or the Board of Directors.



Date Posted: 03-Mar-2008

Dennis Conrad is the President and Chief Strategist of Raving Consulting Company, a full service marketing company specializing in assisting gaming organizations. He can be reached at 775-329-7864 or e-mail dennis@ravingconsulting.com. Visit Raving’s web site at www.ravingconsulting.com.