Henfield One
Well-known member
- Aug 5, 2003
- 466
Before and immediately after the stadium opening the Albion performed the amazing trick of going from gates of six or seven thousand to over 20,000. Brilliant marketing (notably the free direct debit offer) capitalised on a huge reservoir of goodwill generated by the long struggle for a new ground. 15,000 regular new supporters appeared on the scene. It was almost without precedent - building a supporter base is normally a glacial affair.
Every single one of those 'JCLs' should be welcomed with open arms by older supporters. Hopefully they are. The newcomers might not have been around when times were tough but they are key to good times in the future. Equally, the club needs to handle the 'new improved bigger than ever' supporter base with kid gloves. It needs to put the mighty season ticket database in cotton wool, nurturing it with care and respect, because, by absolute definition, the names on it are, on average, less committed than those on other clubs' season ticket holder lists.
Doing this now, and for as long as it takes to get the new supporters as bedded in as most of us on this board already are, should be the central part of the Albion's marketing strategy. Go out to attract new supporters by all means, but understand that the person most likely to buy a season ticket next year is the person who is buying one this year. Understand too, that many of those people, especially the newcomers, are starting to fray round the edges. This has something to do with poor performances but it goes much deeper than that (to coin a phrase).
In all honesty, I don't believe that the club's management under Paul Barber has the wit or inclination to understand the problem. They think, by way of a small example, that the ideal way for the chairman to physically communicate with his best customers shortly before season tickets come up for renewal is to send them a folded bit of board masquerading as a Christmas card with a load of players' ('our heroes!') names printed inside. They even think that that is sufficient for members of the club's business networking group.
The problem is that once the new supporters, attracted to the club by a new stadium, good marketing and a fantastic sense of community, start to drift away it will be very difficult to get them back. It's different at Spurs - pee off 5000 supporters and you just send out to Hertfordshire for replacements. Here you can't. The metro managers and corporate rabbiters at the top of the Albion don't, sadly, get it.
Spot on - the Board and the Club's senior staff would do well to heed such wise words. New Year, new approach. To ignore (or to pay lip service to) this posting would be unforgivable.