Which is exactly why they won't come unless it's very cheap! ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by CollegeTillIDie
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Which is exactly why they won't come unless it's very cheap! ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by CollegeTillIDie
I see Cork (and also Waterford now) have a scheme whereby they'll upload match posters to their websites for people to download and put up around town. There's a new UCD Supporters' website soming on line in the next while - will have to see if this is somethig we can incorporate (read - rob :) ) as well.
That's a positive idea but may not be very successful with a club with as small an active fanbase as ours. :o Any rough timescale on this new site and what will be on it?Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
True, but every bit helps.
We hope to have the website up in the next month or so - it's being put together at the moment. It's effectively a STIG website, just with far more content... :)
STIG you say? Good news. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
That sounds truly diabolical, and I mean that in the best sense of the word.Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
Not a fan of STIG I take it? :confused:Quote:
Originally Posted by el tk
We need to think laterally. We need to get all the WUFC fans on campus to get off their ass and go to that game to support their own team, as well as increasing our own support. It's all more money and a better bottom line for our club at the end of the day.Quote:
Originally Posted by Poor Student
I think the best sense of "diabolical" would be evilly...well, evil, in which case, it's a nice compliment!
No I am! I meant it in a good way. See Stu gets itQuote:
Originally Posted by Poor Student
I was a bit slow on the uptake. :o ;)
Poor student
I think Irish people are flakey or as we normally say fickle.
Look at so called GAA Supporters.
National League the Dubs can barely fill Parnell Park....capacity 10,000
All-Ireland series... they fill Croker... capacity 80,000 approx.
AILRugby Division 1 average attendance 1,500
Irish Rugby international at home average attendance... 50,000
Eircom League Premier Division average attendance ...1,000 approx
International soccer game at home attendance 34,000 and they could probably sell more tickets if the capacity was there.
It just hit me today while taking a mental leave of abesnce during my part time job would it not make sense for tickets for UCD games to be sold around the college? Say the SU shops, maybe the bookshop, maybe the sationary place around the photocopiers outside Th. L, the sports bar (after all it is laden with UCD AFC memorabilia) and maybe other places in the sports centre. Obviously there would have to be a sign up saying they are available to entice the person to buy it. Maybe someone new will make the compulsive buy. Surely it would be easier to rope someone into coming via selling them tickets in conventient outlets than them having to grapple with the perceived burden of later on bothering to get to the ground and find it and then buy the ticket. Perhaps we could even offer a further discount on tickets bought in these outlets. Also wouldn't it be hander if posters for games said: Tickets available at SU shops etc.? Does this idea sound decent to anyone? Have we ever tried it before?
The ticket office on matchday is conveniently located at the most prominent part of the stadium from the point of view of access...i.e beside the turnstiles doesn't come any handier than that. Attempts to attract students before have been tried off and on for the past 26 years and have been mostly unsuccessful. Most students are just a lazy shower of barstoolers I'm afraid. :rolleyes:Quote:
Originally Posted by Poor Student
CTID I noticed your attitude on this is particularly negative. :p From my experience of working in a shop if you put something beside a counter people buy it. When we put a sign hanging off the till saying we sell phone credit with no surcharge, sales rocketed. Put a certain product by the till and its sales rocket. Perhaps if we could get some outlets to have a sign by the till saying "Tickets on sale here for UCD v Team X" people may impulsively buy. Perhaps if we sell them in the Sports Bar and centre people may also buy after all it is in theme. To get them to buy the tickets right now they have to find a will to find the ground and go there. If you got them to buy the tickets first then they must find it and go there. You really think people are just hopeless?
Been involved in several promotion efforts during my student years... The season we were Cup holders and were lying 2nd in the table , we only got 250 to games for chrissakes !.... so I know what a waste of time many efforts of this nature have been. Besides with most of the season clashing with either Exam time or summer break it could be a very short term boost even if it was slightly successful at attracting extra punters.Quote:
Originally Posted by Poor Student
The biggest success in recent seasons has been the summer camps and attracting local kids and their parents. That coupled with links with some local schoolboy league clubs has had benefits to UCD. But it has all been relatively small scale....... my view is still this we need to also target summer school language students. By producing information about the club in say Spanish Italian and French we could maybe attract some of them.
Then like ManUre we could have a different bunch of supporters in every home game :)
Plus another major thing which all and I mean all EL clubs need to try to do is get their home games listed in tourist information brochures especially as we now have " summer soccer". We get small numbers of tourists ,in Belfield Park, as things stand but these tend to be football addicts.
CTID those are decent suggestions and it also occured to me seeing the Milan kids that perhaps it might be a good idea to think about all the foreign language students on the campus during the summer. But on my idea, what would we have to lose by offering tickets for sale in some of the outlets? In theory the SU should do this for us as they shouldn't be hell bent on profit like normal shops. The sheer volume that pass through SU shops and that have to queue is massive. Combined with posters letting people know they are available on the campus perhaps we could get a few more people. What would the club have to lose by attempting this? Or have you seen this exact idea implemented in the past?
Putting tickets on sale or maybe vouchers for tickets which could be redeemed at the box office on matchday might work. Postering on campus does not work. Thousands of punts and €uros have been spent on this (campus postering) over the years... and has been met with outright apathy.Quote:
Originally Posted by Poor Student
We could try local shops just off campus i.e. Woodbine Avenue shops, those in and around Fosters Avenue and in Clonskeagh obviously, and also Cranford Shopping centre and the Montrose itself especially the petrol station next door. It gets back to numbers on the ground to do this as pineapple stu has pointed out there are a small number of people on the committee and they are left to do most of the many jobs necessary. Which is why so many of the STIG and UCD Supporters Club people are so much part of the scene on matchdays.
The tickets sold on campus could be for say €5 therefore giving you an added incentive to get them there and then plus they're cheap. Your idea about the shops near the campus I've thought of too however they may not be as receptive as college affiliated shops (for all I know they may not want to either) as I sincerely doubt we'd be offering even a cent of profit margin in this. The tickets could be a different colour so we could measure the effectiveness or lack of with such an idea.
CTID what I mean is a poster or announcement campaign in conjunction with the sale of them around the place. Seeing a poster advertising a game tomorrow or days later somehwere a km or so away is perhaps more effective if the ticket was instantly available at cut price only meters away.
There was also the League Cup final - the club had a stall outside Theatre L (the usual place for all these kind of things). Idea was that you could get your ticket for the away leg of the final there and if enough people wanted one, the club would organise a bus to the game and back. Don't think anyone went for either option. At all (bar the four or five of us, obviously)