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Return to Virginia Business - January 2005

Tourism


Get out the breeches and bonnets
History gets a hard sell as marketers gear up for Jamestown’s 400th anniversary

by Lisa Antonelli Bacon
Virginia Business

January 2005

Colorado has the Rockies, but Virginia has Richmond. Louisiana may have New Orleans, but we’ve got the New World. And long before Florida had Mickey, we had Martha, as in Washington. If “oldest” equates to “most significant” (as most Virginians contend when speaking of anything), Virginia has more history to market than any of the other 49 states.

READER RESOURCES
Related story: Hotel/conference center expansions in Virginia
Web Pointers: For more information
Virginia Tourism Corp.
History and Tourism Center
Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation
Stories of a Nation: Surviving Jamestown

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That’s not a stretch. As home to the first permanent English settlement in the New World, Virginia is chapter one in America’s history books. Virginians created the first democratic legislature in the Western hemisphere. The seeds of the American Revolution sprouted here. And more Civil War battles were fought on Virginia soil than any other. If there’s any doubt that Virginia holds the greatest cache of American history, remember, four of the country’s first five presidents were Virginians.

The hospitality industry has been flogging Virginia history for years. (Just try to count the number of waiters and waitresses across the state sentenced to work in breeches or bonnets.) Now the state is preparing to beat the stuffing out of its history as marketers gear up for a heavyweight historical event: the 400th anniversary of the founding of Jamestown. As 2007 approaches, be prepared to see a tsunami of tricorns, a slew of sabers, a horde of American Indian headdresses and even more Civil War re-enactments than usual as Virginia marketers ramp up for the gold mine that they hope the commemoration will yield.

A quadricentennial, after all, doesn’t come along every day. In anticipation of large crowds, hotels in the historic Williamsburg-Jamestown-Yorktown triangle have undergone millions in renovations. In Richmond, the venerable, Jefferson-designed state Capitol is sprucing up with an $83 million restoration. If celebrity invitees, including Her Majesty the Queen of England, attend some of the special events, Virginia doesn’t want to look shabby in what could be a glare of national publicity.

History is becoming an ever more important tourism niche both here and around the country. With so many historic sites, Virginia already is a leader in promoting its heritage, and technology is providing new tools to tell the story. But the competition for today’s tourists is intense. With the growing number of options people have for vacations thanks to the convenience of the Internet, some historic destinations are seeing drops in attendance and are looking for ways to be more interactive and engaging to stay in the game.

Marketing history just right — with or without the fanfare of a big event — is important because travelers pack an economic punch. According to the Travel Industry Association of America, they contributed $555 billion to the national economy in 2002. Last year, Virginia hosted 35 million visitors, making travel and tourism the fifth largest private-sector employer in the commonwealth with 280,700 full-time jobs. With an economic impact of more than $15 billion in 2003, the industry provides 5.1 percent of Virginia’s gross state product. So important has travel and tourism become to the U.S. economy that in 2002 it ranked as the first-, second- or third-largest employer in 29 of 50 states.

Surveys show that history attracts tourists. “The top two reasons people travel are rest and recreation, and scenic and historic sites,” says Bill Austin, director of the History & Tourism Center at Shenandoah University in Winchester. In addition, surveys commissioned by the Virginia Tourism Corp. — the state agency charged with promoting Virginia’s history — find that heritage tourists, as they are called, stay longer and spend more than other segments of the tourist market. So it’s no wonder that states are trying to lure them, particularly since the spoils include billions of dollars in tax revenues.

In 2003, Virginia’s tourism industry generated $2 billion in combined state and local tax revenues, an 8.9 percent increase over 2002’s $1.8 billion. By comparison the Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism reported in 2002 that its $11 million investment in tourism returned less than $1 billion in local and state tax revenue. Pennsylvania recouped $2.4 billion in revenue the same year, but it spent $38 million marketing the state to travelers, more than two and half times VTC’s annual budget of nearly $14 million.

One could argue that nearly every inch of Virginia bears some historical significance. “You have the Colonial Williamsburgs and the Mount Vernons, the Monticellos of the world that everybody wants to see,” says Austin. But, he adds, there are other sites around the state connected to historical figures and events. As the 400th Jamestown anniversary nears, savvy marketers are digging up less known, even less savory history than that found in school books in an effort to take advantage of the trend toward historical tourism. For example, the Distilled Spirits Council, a national trade group, has put up $1.2 million for the excavation of George Washington’s distillery near Mount Vernon. Plus it has offered an additional $300,000 for a museum on the site to be completed by 2006, just in time to catch the Jamestown 2007 wave.

While Virginia arguably has the most history to market, competition for travelers’ dollars is strong, especially among states that recognize the dollar value of the tourist trade. West Virginia, for instance, has an aggressive matching grant-advertising program that yields humongous tourism budgets. “Last year, West Virginia had $43 million in the marketplace,” says Alisa Bailey, executive director of the Virginia Tourism Corp. and the former tourism commissioner for West Virginia. “That’s what we have to compete against.”

Still, when it comes to marketing heritage, Virginia has been doing it longer than most — for nearly 80 years. The state’s first tourism ad campaign debuted in 1927 in the form of pen and ink drawings. Of the first six ads produced to beckon tourists, half of them (St. John’s Church, Monticello and what was then the unreconstructed site of Jamestown) were renderings of historic sites. Since then, the state’s tourism efforts have proved to be visionary. Take the “Virginia Is for Lovers” campaign that began in 1969. It spawned imitators globally, from “I (heart) New York” to “Je t’aime Paris.”

Virginia marketing gurus have followed with other firsts. Civil War trails and brochures first appeared in Virginia, and other states were quick to follow. And, as with the “lovers” campaign, the vision hasn’t been limited to history. “A few years ago, we were promoting places where you could stay with your pet,” says Martha Steger, the public relations director for VTC who has been pitching the state for more than 20 years. Now, you rarely have to ask where Fido is welcome. Pleasing travelers and their pets has become an upfront selling point for hotels, motels, campgrounds and even spas.

That kind of forward thinking has served Virginia’s tourism industry well. After 9/11, when tourism fell dramatically nationwide, Virginia Tourism Corp. addressed consumers’ post-strike fears of mass transit by promoting short driving trips that packed in as many attractions per square mile as possible. Virginia’s overall numbers dipped only slightly in 2001 and 2002 and, aside from the brief tremor of 9/11, have grown every year since the state first began keeping records in the1970s, says Steger.

Some historic sites, though, continue to see drops in attendance, which one hospitality official credits to a paradigm shift in the traveling American public. “The American traveler once was very content to go to a quiet museum where they could passively experience the exhibitions. … People are no longer content to do that. They want to be entertained,” says Tim Andrews, director of public relations for the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. While typically 2 million to 3 million people traipse through the restored 18th century capital each year, total paid admissions of 730,000 in 2003 were down from the previous year. Paid admissions were expected to come in at about the same level or below for 2004, although Colonial Williamsburg was full during the December holidays, Andrews says. While many historic sites are finding ways to be more interactive with costumed interpreters and touch-screen computer monitors, “there’s no museum in the world that can compete with the multibillion advertising and marketing budget of places like Disney,” notes Andrews.

With communications technology expanding marketing opportunities exponentially on an almost-daily basis, it’s hard to stay in front of the pack. “Each person receives about 3,800 messages a day,” says Bailey. “We compete with TiVo, satellite radio, the Internet.” Still, VTC may have found the bull’s-eye to penetrate the market. “The reason we’re having such success is that we’re fully integrated,” Bailey explains.

“Fully integrated” means internally, focusing all divisions — public relations, sales and marketing, electronic marketing, advertising, and customer relations — to carry a common message. It also means exhaustive cross marketing. “What people need to realize is that people who do heritage tourism are the same people who do other things,” Steger says. “Heritage travelers statistically go to the beach more often, do more antiques shopping. But then beach travelers do more of the heritage attractions than the average traveler. Nothing stands alone.”

Consequently, VTC seizes on any opportunity to cross-market directly and simultaneously to a variety of travelers. For instance, of the various wine country vacation packages VTC promotes, one is specifically devoted to “The Thomas Jefferson Experience” and includes deluxe accommodations at a hotel near Monticello and a driver for visits to and from nearby wineries.

There is also what Bailey calls “guerilla marketing,” the in-your-face approach of handing out brochures, coupons or samples, providing yet another opportunity to cross-market. Last October when the state announced that Virginia was the first to have a statewide birding and wildlife trail, Bailey’s people gave out samples of birdseed in a package with the “Virginia is for Lovers” Web site on it. The new trail includes scads of historical locations and landmarks. “The trail is another example of how history is integrated into almost everything we do here,” says Steger.

In recent years, the cross-marketing of anything historic has stimulated Virginia tourism across the board. Building on other events has become almost reflexive for VTC strategists. When the film “Gods and Generals,” a Civil War epic filmed in Virginia, premiered in 2003, VTC piggybacked on the event with electronic marketing to travelers. “Requests for information on our Civil War sites went up 80 percent,” says Bailey.

European countries have long milked “old” and “historical” to draw visitors. But now it is becoming even more than a marketing niche; it’s becoming an industry unto itself. Shenandoah University has raised the bar with the creation of its History & Tourism Center. With $3 million in federal grants as seed money, the university steered the center’s development from its initial concept of a Civil War orientation center into a broader concept in which an academic center, high-tech exhibits and visitor information on historical sites in Winchester and Frederick County will be housed under one roof, connecting the region’s historical sites and resources. “What we would like to see at Shenandoah University is a full curriculum in heritage tourism,” says Director Bill Austin.

For now, the center’s focus is education. Austin terms heritage tourism as “the diamond in the rough in our region. Our efforts previously have been somewhat disjointed,” he notes. While many area organizations promote history, an overall umbrella agency is needed to plot strategy. “Winchester can’t do it alone. Staunton can’t do it alone. Harrisonburg can’t do it alone. But if you look at these areas up and down the valley, they can create a total destination. We think that the center is a vital resource to tie these communities together for heritage tourism marketing.”

Having a comprehensive state strategy also is important, says Dick Cheatham, president of Living History Associates in Richmond, which provides costumed historical interpreters for events. He says marketing should not only highlight the state’s proud moments but should acknowledge those once kept in the shadows. “It should be more provocative,” says Cheatham.

The U.S. National Slavery Museum in Fredericksburg proposed by former Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder — Richmond’s newly elected mayor — may fit that bill. The $200 million museum, which broke ground in 2003 and is scheduled to open in 2007, would tell the story of slavery in America through a variety of ways: the replication of a slave ship, artifacts, a library, virtual reality exhibits and a theatre. So far about $10 million has been raised, including a $1 million pledge from actor and comedian Bill Cosby.

For now, though, the state is concentrating on the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the Jamestown colonists. Leading the effort to coordinate the state’s role in the quadricentennial is the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. As part of the 2-year salute that begins in 2006, archaeological programs are being expanded, living history presentations are being enhanced and there will be new reproductions of the Godspeed and the Discovery, two of the three ships that brought the first settlers.

But Jamestown isn’t merely the jewel in Virginia’s marketing crown. In another example of smart marketing, the foundation’s steering committee — made up of representatives of state agencies, historical organizations and the citizenry — mapped a shared-cost strategy to get every whistle-stop with a shred of history involved without the foundation having to foot the whole bill.

The Jamestown 2007 Web site includes a five-step guide for civic groups, local jurisdictions, even neighborhoods to sponsor quadricentennial events or develop their own under the Jamestown 2007 banner. With an extra $1.5 million earmarked for Jamestown 2007 over the next two years, VTC hopes to raise awareness of the state’s rich history among its citizens. “Nationally, 40 percent of tourism is people visiting friends and relatives,” says Steger. “… So it’s very important to have the citizenry informed in order for them to be ambassadors for all the friends and relatives to come.” By last month, 83 communities around the state had signed on as official Jamestown 2007 communities. That's 81 more than the number of corporate sponsors. So far only two companies, Norfolk Southern Corp. and one other that a foundation official wouldn't name, have agreed to put up money.

Over the course of the 2-year commemoration, there’s no telling how many tourists will land in Virginia. Some will come for the history; others will golf and go to the beach. A recent survey of guests (primarily from the Northeast) who stayed at Kingsmill Resort and Spa in Williamsburg posed this question: What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you hear of Williamsburg? The answer, says Kingsmill’s Managing Director Joseph A. Durante III, was surprising. “Most people said Busch Gardens.” That the nearby themed entertainment park won out over Colonial Williamsburg sparked a change in the resort’s marketing materials with current brochures featuring more photos of golf and Busch Gardens than earlier materials.

Perhaps that’s a portent. Don’t be surprised if one day you see an illustration of John Rolfe in a golf cart or riding a roller coaster.

Return to Virginia Business - January 2005


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