Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Internet Marketing Conference - Search Engine Optimisation for Goracing.ie
IRISH RACING THROUGH THE AGES

The specially commissioned "Racing Through the Ages - From Celtic Warrior to Celtic Tiger" is now available for all the view on our website http://www.goracing.ie/
Click here to view directly
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
The Eleven Commandments of PR
Here then are the Eleven Commandments of PR:
One: Thou Shalt Integrate
PR’s proper role in the marketing and communications mix is an integral one. In other words it works extremely well for clients if it’s integrated into an overall communications plan that may involve several marketing services suppliers.
It shouldn’t be a choice between advertising and PR - it should be a given that both will perform optimally if they are given equal head-space in the marketing mix.
Two: Thou Shalt Respect The Power Of The Invisible
Although effective advertising is easily recognised and oft lauded, the hallmark of really great PR is sometimes its invisibility. While advertising shouts in an above the line space, the workings of public relations sometimes occur off-stage.
Even though an exceptional result is achieved, the PR deus ex machina is often hidden and for this reason, the industry often doesn’t get the in-your-face attention that advertising does. PR doesn’t need to shout to get its message across.
Three: PR Buildeth Brands
PR is extremely effective as a brand building tool. This tends to surprise a lot of people. PR activations can make a brand come alive for the experiential audience and they can then be publicised to grow the audience footprint. Thus an unforgettable party for 100 people might be talked about and aspired to by millions of potential consumers once it’s been broadcast and written up.
PR can be very effective in major brand building but it’s one of many communications disciplines that generate heat in this kind of marketing arena. However, there are certain areas where PR alone moves the needle: crisis communication, reputation management, investor relations and these are when PR takes the lead.
Four: PR Beateth The Bottom Line
Historically, PR was seen as the poor cousin of the marketing industry but if there are any marketers left who still think and budget this way, then they are the victims of lazy thinking and have been left behind in the PR-fuelled stampede to the tills.
Clients tend to turn to PR when there is budgetary pressure to deliver exceptional sales results with less resource than the previous fiscal. We have seen many clients turn to PR in hard times to drive the message home and get the marketplace to action. If clients have budget available, I will always endorse that advertising spend be allocated.
Five: Have I Got A Proposition For You!
PR is particularly effective if a brand has a complex proposition. It’s sometimes impossible to convey the advantages of a product through advertising if they are many and various simply because it’s too costly to buy the airtime or page space necessary to extol all its virtues.
On the other hand, editorial publicity for a product’s capabilities can often be achieved and with great credibility.
Six: Get With The Programme
The role of PR has always been communication with stakeholders, however the latter is defined. So although that role hasn’t changed, the practice of PR has been transformed by social and technological developments.
These same shifts in society and the modern age must also prompt advertisers to reinvent their offering. PR has always been about reaching and communicating with an audience and the discipline now has many innovative ways to achieve this outside of formal print and electronic channels.
The explosion of interactive technologies such as MXit, YouTube, MySpace and other social networking sites has turbo boosted the channels available to publicists engaging with the youth market, for instance.
Seven: Thou Shalt Commit
PR is at its most effective when client is committed to the discipline. This entails fast-turnaround, cooperation and chemistry.
Eight: Thou Shalt Measure
For PR to earn its place in the sun, it should be answerable to the same rigours expected of other partners in the marketing supply chain. The best PR campaigns are built on a solid foundation of research, strategy, objective-setting and measurement. All too often, clients see PR agencies as inventory suppliers and only want implementation.
Nine: Failure Is An Option
When does PR fail? It can happen and usually there’s very little to finger blame about afterwards if sound strategy and planning were followed. But PR should only fail if implementation is in the hands of the inexperienced. Logically though, PR may fail if any of the following steps are not accounted for or taken for granted: strategy, setting objectives, planning, execution, measurement and evaluation.
Ten: Sticketh To The Knitting
PR is not such a dark art that it can’t be mastered by anyone with an above average IQ, a tertiary education and 20 years experience. It can be learned but do you really have the time to try and do it better than the professional consultancy you’ve just hired? I’ve been in the business for more than two decades and I’m still learning how to perfect my craft every day.
Eleven: Under-Promise And Over-Deliver.
Sometimes, the most valuable and meaningful aspects of working with a top PR firm are the parts you don’t pay for.
The Eleven Commandments of PR were written by Marcus Brewster, one of the leading lights of the PR industry in South Africa
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Go Racing Marquee at National Ploughing Championships

This is the front on the "Go Racing" Marquee at the Ploughing Championships in Tullamore this year (Sept 25th - 27th). This photo was taken on Thursday just after the front had gone up, so still plenty more to be added!
This is HRI's fourth Ploughing Championships and we'll be following a similiar tried and tested formula to that of the previous years. Hector O hEochagain will host on the Tuesday and Wednesday and we have Brendan McArdle for Thursday. We'll be following the same format of three workshop events each day at 11am, 2pm & 4pm part of which will be interviews with the country's top trainers and jockeys; confirmed so far we have Ruby Walsh, Mouse Morris, Frances Crowley, Davy Russell, Jimmy Mangan, Pat Smullen, Eddie Harty, Robert Power, Paddy Flood & Garret Cotter (-many more to confirm over the weekend).
With over 40,000 people from all over Ireland attending the Ploughing each day this is a great opportunity for the racecourses to promote their winter meetings, and most will be in attendance providing information and offers to the public. We'll also be joined by Tote Ireland, the Irish National Stud and RACE (Racing Academy & Centre of Education), who will be on hand with their race simulator giving race riding demonstrations to budding jockeys.
It's a hard few days but well worth the results - let's hope it stays dry!!!
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Engaging Consumers Through Social Networking
Social networking sites (SNS) such as MySpace and FaceBook are growing at an incredible rate, with a huge number of consumers having set up profiles on one or more of these services. But this Web 2.0-based phenomenon is yet to be fully understood or leveraged by most marketers, according to advertising trends publisher ConnectThru.
According to Forrester Research, 69% of 18-21 year olds, along with 47% of teenagers and 20% of adults, have a profile on a social networking web site. Recent research has also shown that these online community members also want to engage with brands through this channel. For example, the movie 'X-Men: The Last Stand' connected directly with more than 2 million users through MySpace.
What's most valuable? To help maximise the marketing impact of social networking campaigns, viral downloadable elements tend to achieve the best results as users often view these from their friends' profile pages. If they like what they see, t
hey will tend to re-post the same element on their own profile pages, and the viral process continues.
A recent Marketing Evolution study found that over 70% of the marketing value of SNS campaigns comes from the momentum of the viral impact that these types of campaigns inherently possess. Along similar lines, according to Microsoft, 64% of Europeans surveyed said they had visited a web site because a friend linked to it through their social networking profile.
The HRI Racing Group on Facebook
Encouraging brand engagement As ConnectThru reports, a brand must use this approach to inspire communication or action on the part of the end-consumer - which means that a brand that consumers feel passionate about will succeed more easily than one that does not invoke real emotion.
It is vital to have a clear objective and strategy when marketing through social networking sites, such as a focus on encouraging brand loyalty or customer retention. And marketers need to make sure that it is incredibly easy for consumers to join the brand's social network, which means cutting down on the number of data fields to complete initially. In cases where people are less inclined to feel passionate about the brand, incentives or awards may also have to be in place to encourage people to engage with it.
Horses for Courses
In cases where a brand has profiles on several social networking sites, ConnectThru recommends that each site should be treated differently, according to the target market of consumers being reached there. For example, Pontiac has a "Pontiac Underground" network on Yahoo!, while the brand caters to a much younger audience with its "Friends with Benefits" campaign on MySpace.This article is copyright 2007 of http://www.thewisemarketer.com/
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Second Billboard Campaign for Dundalk Racecourse -Floodlit Racing

The latest poster for Dundalk sells night-time racing with an eye-catching visual and copy line - 'No More Dark Horses'. The first two evenings on Sept 27th and 28th are ticket-only following the sell-out the opening day on Sun 26th August
This campaign includes a 6 sheet execution (left) and a 48 sheet poster (below-click to view large format )- both posters are concentrated in urban centres from Newry to North Dublin.This covers two 'cycles' running from Sept 10th to the 1st October
Press coverage of the opening day at Dundalk was overwhelmingly positive and it will be interesting to see how far the momentum will carry. The facilities are among the best in racing anywhere but the task now is to devise a longer-term marketing communications strategy to keep the demand going through the winter months.
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Billboard Campaigns for Dundalk and Listowel Racecourses
We are running two poster campaigns at present as part of our Racecourse Marketing Support for specific meetings.Dundalk and Listowel Racecourses were ideal candidates for this type of campaign with long lead-in times which would benefit from extended exposure in their catchment areas. We looked at the databases for greyhound customers at Dundalk and our own racing database for Listowel to concentrate the campaign in areas where the existing customer base lives .The posters are part of a campaign featuring PR activity, Radio advertising, Promotions and Direct Marketing activity, in varying degrees, for each racecourse.


( Picture left shows bus shelter 6 sheet execution )

Thursday, July 26, 2007
GORACING WEBSITE



The site development so far has been the result of a collaboration between IT,Marketing and the Racing Dept and as that collaboration proved so successful everyone is now invited to become involved.
We know some of the fixes that are needed and some new ideas have been floated already,such as photo archives,racing podcasts - particularly for big race previews and 'learn about racing' items.More interactivity is a must ,particularly with competitions and polls but should we go further, with a Racing Forum on-line? What else will educate,entertain and inform site visitors?
How do we get the balance right for heavyweight racing fans,lightweight racing fans , social racegoers , corporate racegoers, business customers, tourists, student researchers, job seekers,etc etc ?
Take another look at goracing.ie
Have your say about what should change for Phase Two and what new features would enhance the site. Use this blog to float your ideas and comment on the ideas of others . Just hit the comments link below and a text box will open up for you .
Friday, July 20, 2007
Marketing to Digital Natives
Digital Natives
Digital Natives are those born 1980 and after - people for whom digital technology is not new or strange. Daily web users. These are our ‘20 somethings’- the main target of our advertising. Fail to recruit them and the business will fail...eventually.
Private information is going public now: Bebo, My Space, UTube, Facebook, Blogs, Vlogs,Twitter. Even the most popular new platforms will change, mutate and be replaced. There is no customer loyalty. Functionality is everything.
50% of virtual dwellers - people with an identity in 'Second Life' for instance, value that life equally. Second life now has over 8m ‘citizens’.
Peer Trust is the most significant motivator of young people -Social Peer Groups andOn line Peer Groups
TV viewing is actually growing, but it is fragmenting. This is the move from Prime Time to ‘My Time’ – people choosing what and when they will view or listen.
Citizen Journalists are everywhere – some just for a day on a single issue. Anyone can now publish their views using any number of Peer to Peer Platforms.
A Blog is becoming a standard accessory for digital natives and evolving rapidly, with Twitter (text based) – micro blogging, the next big thing. Corporate blogs are becoming a useful tool for internal and external communication.The corporation used to have one voice, now it has many
How do we market to Digital Natives?
We need to know what digital natives are saying
- about brands
- about racing
- raceday experience
Listen, prepare internally and engage! To market digital natives we must be willing to live in the same digital spaces.
Learn about Google Grid, Google Base and the convergence of super sites like Google and Amazon. Map the social networking landscape for our target market.

BEBO has 32 million users wordwide. There are over one million users already in Ireland 92% of whom are under 35, and average stay on-site per visitor is 22 minutes plus. Seven hours a week in not unusual. This time is coming from somewhere - TV most likely.
In approaching Bebo or any Peer to Peer site remember : Functionality beats brand loyalty, irreverence helps viral spread of marketing messages, and above all don’t ‘sell’ the Bebo community. It doesn’t work. Creativity Content and Communication is all that works.
Youth asks: · Who is giving me this information? · Is it relevant?· Does my peer group endorse it? People trust each other not institutions. Social networks will increasingly move online.
How did Bebo grow? Via DJ’s and musical artist mentions on air. No advertising.
Actions
Own a space on Bebo.
Get Blogging
Skins - create a viral skin.
Can we build a ‘Young Racers’ Club using peer to peer platforms? Use Video - we have got so much unused or under-utilised content. Bring the digital natives into our space. For instance, have a competition to ask Digital Natives to create an ad for racing – upload to goracing page and the winner gets €1,000! or... careers are always interesting l - how about ' win a work placement in racing'!
Digital Capability in HRI and Irish Racing
Digital Capability Counts for Ad Agencies and PR companies but most are not up to speed. The web allows for segmentation to one and this level of segmentation (of audiences) leads to questions re the right message to the right audience via the right channels. Advertising and PR convergence is happening, particularly in digital communications.
The Future – Questions and Next Steps
What is the brief for racing’s on-line presence?
Who will write it up?
Who will own the process?
Who will implement it?
Who will measure it?
How much will it cost?
Who will pay?
How will we service racecourse needs online?
Where do we go to get up to speed with digital marketing ?
Actions
Audit marketing team and other in-house capability for digital marketing. Assign responsibilities. Identify skills groups. Train to fill gaps. Identify third party supports and get suppliers such as Ad agency, PR company and Direct Marketing suppliers to integrate digital communications into campaigns.
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
What are 20-somethings like?
WELL ..... the Bank of Ireland reports today ( Irish Times July 17th ) that their survey of 600 22-28 year olds shows that they are self-reliant savers after all - putting an average €200 pm into savings . If they have mortgages they are spending €900 pm on that although most wait till 31 to buy first time.
They still BET however - with men spending €110 pm and women just €26 - the rest goes on clothes,toiletries,hair and beauty. What does the Tote make of that I wonder ?
questions arising :
Should we target MALE 20 somethings more than, or instead of, all 20 somethings?
Should the betting experience of a day at the races be more to the fore in our advertising?
next .... Bank of Ireland advice week for 20-somethings July 23 - 27
Monday, July 16, 2007
Blogging for work
It will at least keep a record of activities which could feed into monthly reports. It should also serve as a calendar of events so that those who need to know will see where marketing people are at any given time and what the current. We will also post useful photographs of racecourses and marketing receptions and events.
There should also be scope to invite ideas,suggestions and comments re the marketing of racing and draw in others who are digitally savvy for their thoughts as to how this might develop.
It could also serve as a way to capture stories within HRI that may have publicity value by way of press release or briefing to journalists