By ANN Correspondent Rob Milford
The big announcement at ICAS
was all about national sponsorship for all kinds of aviation
events. Only problem was… the lawyers said “hold off
on naming names” so the impact was not as spectacular as it
could and should have been. ICAS Marketing Director Deb Mitchell
(pictured below) has been working on this project for months, and
she told ANN that it will signal a “defining moment”
and a “major shift” in how airshows do business, and it
will impact everyone, from performers to promoters, to the
volunteers who make so many airshows happen.
“We’re talking about major national
sponsors…name brands, Fortune 500 companies” she
said…”this will move the industry forward and it will
become more of a business, when we help these companies promote
their products.”
It had been a fast and furious few days in getting the show
ready, and then being available from 6AM until Midnight, and
talking to pretty much all the attendees, but Mitchell was still
“fired up” over the announcement. “This will be a
major shift, in a positive direction. It has huge potential to
increase attendance and revenue. It will help shows of all sizes,
military and civilian.”
“Without naming names, let’s look at a couple of
examples: You don’t see major package goods companies, like
Proctor and Gamble or Nabisco involved in Aviation. We think with
more than 40 percent of our audience being women, and a large
number of young families, we are the perfect marketing event for
showcasing and promoting products. That leads to increased sales in
a given market. ICAS has more than 400 events on the calendar for
2004, with millions of people. This is attractive and affordable to
national sponsors, and no one has ever developed this
market.”
One place the ICAS sales team won’t tread: Your local
brewery. “Seems like most airshows have their own, local
deals with the beer distributors. Those are well established
relationships and there’s no reason for us to go
there.”
I asked about the challenge of maintaining “collective
memory” at airshows, where there seems to be a steady
turnover of people, in both management and staff positions:
“We have 25 to 30 percent of new attendees to ICAS every
year. By offering the Air Show University classes,,, we’re
hoping to get them up to speed quickly, and still offering them
exposure to the acts, and what needs to happen now, in the off
season, to help to guarantee a successful event.”
On the gripes about the Dallas location and Hotel:
“We’re in an unusual situation, needing so many rooms,
but our trade show being too big for most hotels, and too small for
most convention centers. Going to a convention center would
increase the cost of a booth. Dallas IS different, and we’ll
be heading back to Las Vegas in 2004, 2006 and 2008, Orlando in
2005 and 2007.
Look for the ICAS announcements of these major national sponsors
in the next few weeks, as well as how it will impact an airshow
near you. Think about more in-store promotion, more advance
publicity in different venues, and more banners and commercial
displays at the airport.