Selling Sports Team Tickets at the local Fair/Exhibition/Station

    • 37 posts
    July 10, 2012 7:54 AM PDT

    We have a Major Junior A hockey team that we broadcast, that approaches 3,000 attendance/game.  They can't "paper" the rest of the 4,000 plus seats arena, as the city charges them a fee per occupied seat, even for giveaways (idea - sponsor could cover that fee for the giveaways). 

    Have an 11,600 attendance county fair/exhibition coming up in one month.  Want to use our interactive hockey skills tent (complete with artificial ice) as a tool to get more people buying more tickets for the team.  Ideas please.

    • 994 posts
    July 11, 2012 11:40 PM PDT

    Just in case you haven't already considered these, Andy...

    What about reaching out to the 3000 who attend regularly and recruiting them to bring a friend, to introduce someone who's never attended a game to the fun of watching your team play live?

    Your sponsor idea is a good one, too.  If it's too much for one entity to bite off, perhaps a group would be willing to take it on.  Your county association of Realtors, perhaps?  One of the service clubs?  Maybe all the local car dealers, or a subset (such as GM/Goodwrench service centers)?

    Never heard of anyone having an interactive hockey skills exhibit at a county fair before, but then I don't live in Canada.  Do visitors to the fair bring their own skates and sticks, or do you provide these?  Is it a kids' promotion, or does it attract people of all ages?  Just curious.  I suppose a "lottery" type promotion is out of the question.  What about tying in a local charity?  For instance, "for every ticket sold, we'll donate [$] to ___________"

    The Spokane Symphony puts on a free concert every Labor Day.  At that concert, they go after new season ticket subscribers by offering season tickets at half-price (to first-time buyers only) - provided they buy them then-and-there.  Drawing from this, perhaps the hockey team could put on some sort of exhibition to draw a crowd, and a similar offer could be made to those attending.

    • 455 posts
    July 13, 2012 6:33 AM PDT

    Look at some really good minor league baseball operators and see what they do. Typically, they are promotion genuises.