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
Developing More Effective Promotions
by Andrew Klebanow

Developing More Effective Promotions

The recent rise in fuel prices coupled with a decline in this nation's economic growth has had a significant impact
on casinos throughout the United States. Once thought
immune to economic downturns, casino operators have
come to realize that their industry is as vulnerable as others.

To maintain revenue streams and gain market share in this
tough economic climate, casino operators have increased the
level of promotional activities that they use to attract new gamers to their properties and maintain visitation levels among loyal customers. Often these activities include an increasing number of direct mail campaigns, special events that target premium players and traditional large-scale drawing drum promotions. It is the latter marketing program that this article addresses: the design, implementation and measurement of traditional drawings in which a large marketing net is cast across the gaming population by offering a drawing for a new car (more often these days, a hybrid vehicle), a series of large cash drawings or some combination of the two.

Often referred to on financial statements as “prizes and
awards,” these promotions represent a significant expense to the casino operator and one whose effects often defy
measurement. Casinos deploy large amounts of resources,
both human and economic, in implementing such promotions
yet they are often done with little regard to identifying
particular customer segments, defining achievable goals
or developing sound measurement tools. They are often
done to increase volume in the form of bodies in the casino
with little regard to understanding who those bodies are.

Define Your Target Market
Before embarking on a promotion, it is critical to first
understand what kinds of people the casino hopes to attract.

Ostensibly, most promotional design worksheets begin by
stating that the purpose of the promotion is to attract new
gamers to the property, move customers from competitors'
properties, gain share of wallet, foster loyalty and/or create excitement on the gaming floor. All of these are reasonable goals but they neglect to understand the kinds of gamers that exist in every market and the risks associated with attracting the wrong segments.

Gamers fall into five distinct psychographic segments:
reward seekers, escapists, socializers, value seekers and
advantage players. By understanding what motivates each of
these segments, casino operators can design more effective
promotions that deliver the right people to the property.
Recognition seekers enjoy the acknowledgement and
respect that they receive when they visit their favorite casino.

Being greeted by name by the valet, approached by a
familiar host and being recognized by the restaurant'sMaitre d' invigorates these players. They like being recognized.

While they require high degrees of personalized service, they are an intensely loyal group of players and are consistently the casino's most profitable customers.
Escapists visit a casino to escape from their everyday
lives. They come to a casino to forget about work, forget
about their troubles, and to be left alone so they can focus on gaming. They do not want interaction with others; they have no need for hosts and would prefer to avoid contact with personnel at the rewards center. They want to play, be left alone and escape.

While they may share their loyalty among a small group of casinos, they require little or no maintenance
and thus are a very cost-effective player segment. They are
not the kinds of people who will wait for a slot floor person to give them a drawing ticket or stand in line at the rewards center and ask for their drawing tickets. They want minimal interaction and, for them, electronic redemption of comps and kiosk promotions define great customer service.

Socializers come to casinos to socialize. The casino is
their recreation center. They may come to play bingo, lowdenomination slots or low stake table games but they visit the casino primarily to socialize with others.While their daily spending levels are low, they visit often, sometimes five to seven days a week. They know the names of dealers, hosts and slot personnel as well as other frequent players. As such, they are intensely loyal and usually make one casino their home. They also do not like it when outsiders intrude upon their property when a drawing is about to take place.

Value seekers play at the casino that offers themthe best deal. They comb through each casino's mailers, clip coupons and seek out those casinos that have the best promotion.These may be 10x point days, half price meal coupons, free merchandise or other offers. Further, once the promotion is over, they take their gaming play to the next casino. They are one of the least profitable gaming segments yet the ones that aremost attracted to traditional drawing drum promotions.

Advantage players are professional gamblers. They visit
a casino with the sole purpose of making money. Sometimes
referred to as wise guys or chiselers, advantage players seek out casinos with the most favorable odds. These may include full-pay video poker games or single deck blackjack. They usually break even or make a little money on the game and make additional money on the cash back component.

Then, when a casino offers a promotion that gives them a
mathematical advantage, they pounce on that property.
Professional video poker players in particular look for
20 Indian Gaming June 2008 point-multiplier days where they can increase their cashback accrual rate or drawings that award drawing tickets predicated on coin handle. Often they will team up with other advantage players. Their goal is to tilt the odds in their favor by having a very large percentage of the total number of drawing tickets in the drum. They tend to win, take the cash, and divide the spoils. Worse, since their gaming
activity generates such high coin handle, casino hosts often think they are profitable customers deserving of generous comps when in reality they are not.

Define Achievable Goals
With an understanding of what motivates players to visit
casinos, casino operators can design promotions that target
the most profitable segments (recognition seekers, escapists
and socializers) while reducing their attractiveness to unprofitable segments (value seekers and advantage players). This, however, takes effort. It requires that casino operators design promotions that do not reward players who solely generate large coin handle volume. It requires the use of technologies in the form of kiosks and systems that award drawing tickets predicated on theoretical or actual win. It requires methodologies such as electronic drawing drums that mitigate the crowds that so often appear on drawing days and negatively impact loyal customers. In other words, it takes some work.

Once a casino operator defines which player segments it
wishes to attract with its promotions, the task of developing achievable goals becomes much clearer. Rather than just focus on volume, often measured as gross coin handle or number of visitors per day, the casino can focus on the kinds of players it hopes to attract, whether they be new members or inactive players.While it would be impossible to achieve a goal of “increasing the number of socializers by 50%,”
increasing the daily win per player by 15% from people
who visit four or more times a week is an achievable and
measurable goal.

Clearly Define All Costs
Most casino operators require that their marketing teams
prepare a list of expenses that are associated with the implementation of a promotion. Often included in these lists are the costs of the premiums (the cash, vehicles and merchandise that are to be given away), the cost of internal signage (slot toppers, machine warblers, ceiling danglers, rules posters, employee t-shirts and lapel buttons), and the postcards and other communications sent to the casino's database announcing the promotions.
However, other real and significant costs are often left out.

The most significant are the costs associated with advertising the promotion to the general public. Oftentimes, the costs associated with renting a billboard are excluded from the ProForma. The logic is that, since the casino had already entered into a long-term contract for the billboard, the cost of the monthly rental is a sunk cost. The same logic is used when excluding print advertising costs from a promotion's ProForma. A promotion's advocates would say that since the
casino entered into a long-term contract to buy advertising
space, the money would be spent regardless of whether the
promotion took place or not. However, this logic precludes
the fact that the casino entered into the billboard and print advertising contracts specifically to advertise promotions.
Consequently, all advertising costs must be included when
analyzing the expenses associated with a promotion.
Few casinos in the United States have not felt the
sting of rising fuel prices and a stagnant U.S. economy.
Promotions are often a logical response to stimulating
business demand. However the challenge for every casino
operator is to design promotions that attract the right
players, develop realistic and measurable goals, delineate
all relevant costs and measure the results. Anyone can devise a way to give away a sack of cash or a new car. The hard part is figuring out how to make more money for the casino. 

Andrew Klebanow is Principal of Gaming Market Advisors.
He can be reached by calling (702) 547-2225 or email
andrew@gamingmarketadvisors.com
MARKETING

Date Posted: 07-Feb-2010

Andrew Klebanow is Principal of Gaming Market Advisors.
He can be reached by calling (702) 547-2225 or email
andrew@gamingmarketadvisors.com
MARKETING