Posts Tagged ‘event marketing’

The Alaska Bash – launching the new “old” Ryan Air

By admin, March 30, 2010

Everyone wants to come to your party, unless of course, you’re having a party to simply announce a new logo and tagline….

Events are an excellent opportunity to showcase your company and your brand in a fun way that stakeholders remember.  But that doesn’t mean your event should be all about you. In fact, put your customers and stakeholders first and you are well on your way to throwing a party that will live on in guests’ memories long after the wine has been drunk and the balloons have lost their air!

Arctic Transportation Services is one of Alaska’s largest and oldest continuously operating Bush air carriers in Alaska. For the past 10 years, the company has operated as Arctic Transportation Services, but for more than four decades it ran the business under its family name Ryan Air. The company decided to honor its heritage by renaming itself Ryan Air.

Wil Ryan - President , Ryan Air, greets guests

Wil Ryan - President of Ryan Air, greets guests

The challenge: No one is going to come to a party that simply announces a company name change. How do we create an event so compelling, so exciting, that people will fly in from the Bush to attend?

By assembling a team of strategic, creative and public relation experts, we developed a concept for the event: The Alaska Bash: Celebrating the Toughest People on Earth.

This Alaska Bash concept echoed Ryan Air’s mission to improve the quality of life in Bush Alaska by celebrating the people of Bush Alaska—the bold, the brave, the trailblazers of the Last Frontier—those who set out to make a difference when everyone else said it couldn’t be done.

Hardy Foster - honored among "The Toughest People on Earth."

Hardy Foster - honored among "The Toughest People on Earth."

The launch served as a platform for Ryan Air to take a step back and pay tribute to their customers as well as the event honorees. And culminated in the announcement of ATS’ new name, Ryan Air.

Some of the elements that made the Alaska Bash a success include:

  • A well-integrated public relations plan, including working with honoree families in the build up to the event and comprehensive media reach and engagement.
  • An invitation to the Alaska Bash designed with a strong Alaskan heritage feel
  • A smart venue that reflected strength and determination with large-scale vintage photographs and stories of the honorees around the room. Wooden air cargo crates filled with greenery (representing toughness) and three red roses (the tribute element) served as centerpieces.
  • An entertaining program.
  • An all-Alaskan fish and meat buffet and prizes that reflected the theme, including tough Ryan Air-branded outdoor apparel and an Alaska Airlines voucher to help put some luxury into tough living.

The event combined elements of a great party in a way that wasn’t self-serving to Ryan Air, it was all about the attendees. It provided a clever way for the company to reveal its new, “old” name, and a night to remember for the more than 200 guests who attended.

Can social media help sell tickets?

By Elizabeth Hansen, January 27, 2010

Social media can accomplish a lot. Solve customer service issues. Provide insights. Forge connections. Identify opportunities. And, we now know for certain, help sell tickets and definitely increase awareness.

In partnership with UND Fighting Sioux Athletics, SimmonsFlint and Flint Interactive developed and implemented a social media campaign to promote “Meltdown at The Ralph,” one night of UND basketball in key games at the majestic Ralph Engelstad Arena, usually reserved for UND hockey.

Meltdown at the Ralph

We created an online landing page, where we aimed all other platforms, including:

  • YouTube videos featuring players and coaches from the UND hoops teams, playing a little basketball on the hockey rink and checking out the arena (UND men’s hockey players were good sports in making cameo appearances)
  • Twitter updates
  • Facebook status updates and advertisements
  • Emails to UND alumni, students and other sports’ ticketholders
  • In-Arena Video Promos shown on the big screen during UND home hockey and basketball games
  • Traditional media, including print, radio and TV commercials, promos in game broadcasts, billboards and public relations

Winning numbers

Even though the UND teams didn’t win, the games attracted 4,354 fans, the largest crowd the two teams have ever played for in Grand Forks.

Other game stats:

  • 960 students attended the game, also a new record and far above the average 144 students/game for basketball this season
  • Game revenue more than doubled the highest single game revenue this season

To discuss how social media fits your game plan, contact us.

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