Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Mammoth - Come As You Are, Do What You Love

Mammoth ReBrands Itself


I participated in a branding workshop last week in which siegel + gale presented their findings from research done on Mammoth as a brand and requested our ideas on ways to improve certain touchpoints where guests experience Mammoth.


Classic MBA stuff, so I loved it. I have heard many presentations by branders in the past and have felt many of them were filled with fluff, but these guys were good. The research done was thorough and relevant. It was comissioned by the Mammoth Mountain Ski Area and by the Town of Mammoth Lakes as a combined investment in creating a future where we all try to attract visitors together and make their experience one they wish to repeat.


I won't go into all of their findings or our ideas (the main one we tackeld was how to improve aprés ski activities), but will share their idea on the re-branding of Mammoth as a city, as a ski resort, and as a mountain getaway. Why try to compete with the other great ski areas on basis of days of sunshine, number of ski runs or amount of vertical when we all can claim #1 in some area. Don't compete based on the position of superlatives (best pow, most beautiful terrain, highest peaks). Let's differentiate. Duh. We are not an Aspen/Vail.


And why try to be something we are not. We do not have the most amazing service in the world and probably never will. Let's elevate and align expectations to embrace a new brand of hospitality...California hospitality. We're casual in California and we're definitely casual in Mammoth. (Just go to a church service or a wedding and you'll see what I mean). But when is laid back too laid back? Gotta be careful there.


We can enable our guests to create their own kind of vacation on their own terms. Our guests want meaningful experiences, not just ones where they check the "been there done that" box.

We'll welcome you and help you create your own adventurous and athletic or even spa-filled vacation. Loyal Mammoth visitors love to be thought of as locals. They are always quick to tell me how many years they have been coming here or what ski runs they broke their leg on or or what peaks they've climbed or name drop what ski instructor they had. As if they yearn a local's acceptance of them and wish not to be thought of as a tourist. (I'm usually the one that makes them feel good, because I have not yet climbed every peak or even skiied every run.) I think it's great. It is what makes Mammoth more than just a po-dunk map dot. It connects us with the culture and vibrance of SoCal. And if you're a locl who's lucky enough, you have a SoCal friend who will stock you up with Trader Joe's every time they come up.

And while you Mammoth loyalists are hopefully not going to ditch Mammoth any time soon, marketers know we need to cater to you and encourage you to spend more money while you are here. And you will influence people back home. And since 'back home' is one of the most trend-setting cities in the world, many other places will notice Southern Californians going to Mammoth.


So, it's all well and good to release a new brand and tag line, but it is an entirely other thing to implement the change that is wanted. How are the ski area and the town going to motivate the 18-yr old ski rental employee to engage with visitors with California hospitality instead of hiding behind their hat to hide the hangover in their eyes?

It's hard to appeal to any competitive juices when Mammoth does not have any visible competitors within 200 miles. And it's hard to motivate them with money when most businesses are strapped anyway with the seasonality of their businesses. Altruistic approach? Nuh-uh.


It is going to take a long time and money. It is going to take the constant training of supervisors everywhere (at gas stations, retail shops, at resaurants) to instill a higher level of service. Again, not the service expected at a Four Seasons, but a new kind of service that says "Here is your key, help yourself to a drink and make yourself at home."


So, in your opinion, did siegel + gale come up with a good idea? Does this speak to you and help differentiate Mammoth from other mountain resorts?

Are we on track to have a brand like Harley Davidson or like K-Mart? Like Nike or like Enron?

Now is the hard part....delivering consistently on Mammoth's promise to customers at every customer interaction.

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Labor Day review, 60 Days 'Till Ski Season

Mammoth Lakes, Labor Day-style:


Arts & Crafts festval at Sam's Woods site. Fun to walk around, run into locals, chat it up and get a Brat at Red's hot dog cart. Steven White's furniture is always amazing.


Free Mountain Biking: Took my brother (F-15 pilot) and his buddy (test pilot) mountain biking. If you don't want to pay to mountain bike on the ski area, here are two trails that are just as good, if not better than most of the trails on the mountain:



Mountain View Trail: Drive up Minaret Rd all the way past the ski area's Main Lodge and park at the Minaret Summit parking lot. Follow the signs (brown sign with yellow arrow and with little mtn bikes in all four corners of the sign) down and away from the main lodge on nice hard packed dirt. Emerges into a pumice field with criss crossing snowmobile paths. Then along hillside with brief bet great views of the Inyo craters. The trail basically parallels Minaret Rd down to the earthquake fault. 1 hour.



Lakes Basin - Panorama Dome - Mammoth Rock Trail: Fun single track / hiking trail around Horseshoe Lake, on past the west side of Maime, and then taking Lake Mary Rd down to the Panorama Dome trailhead. Talk about short but sweet. Feel like you are an Ewok on one of those antigravity speeders winding through trees, dodging branches. Packed dirt, fun banked curves. Lets you out onto Old Mammoth Rd. Cruise down a 1/4 mile to the Mammoth Rock trailhead. Great views of the Snowcreek meadow and of town. Cruise past old avalanche paths and beneath the monstrous Mammoth Rock. Lets you out on Sherwin Creek Rd. Turn left and head back to town. 1 hour.

Mammoth Rock Race: Speaking of the Mammoth Rock trail, Andrew Kastor (High Sierra Striders) and Ilana Levin (High Sierra Tri Club) put on another fantastic 10k race. Starting at Mammoth Creek Park, head out Sherwin Creek Rd, up Mammoth Rock Trail and down Old Mammoth Rd. I was 29 seconds shy of meeting my goal of breaking 50 minutes. Photos here: http://stimbo.myjalbum.net/Mammoth%20Rock%20Race/


Real Estate over Labor Day: NO condos went into escrow during this past week that included Labor Day. I'm finding it better to go out and meet people at outdoor social events and talk real estate than to sit an open house - my colleagues report dismal attendance at their open houses.


60 Days 'Till Ski Season! If you are a buyer and want to get into a rental condo before Ski Season, September 8th is 60 days (i.e. a good escrow period) away from Opening Day.

  • Ten condos are reduced 15%+ from their original list price.

  • I like the Bridges (ski-in/ski-out)2bd/2ba for $731,000 (which you could probably get for $715,000).

  • I like the Eagle Run (ski-in/ski-out) 2bd/2ba for $799,000. Sierra Megeve 2bd/2ba for $525,900 is walking distance to Canyon Lodge and a good deal.

  • The Pointe owner is desperate to sell - listed at $839,900 for 3bd/3ba/garage.

  • Timberridge 2bd/2ba/garage owner is also willing to sell for a loss (he bought for $665k but will probably take under $600k). You can ski-in/ski-out from this property, too.

  • Western Slopes Villas 1bd/1ba/garage for $375,000 is becoming more of a deal. Great condition, walk to Canyon Lodge.

  • If you are in to Crowley Lake, for $650,000 you can get 3bd/2.5bath/2-car garage/ 2300 sqft house on 1 acre with stream and view of Crowley Lake.

Cool Health Website: Saw a cool website today, http://www.wellfolio.com/, where you can input key health statistics and see how you match up with celebrity athletes, like our own Deena Kastor.



Fall Colors: While anxious about summer coming to and end soon, the fall colors are always such a beautiful site. Don't worry, they are not here yet, but some of the Aspens have started fading to a yellowish-green. Great areas to visit include the June Lake Loop and Lundy Canyon. Even South Lake above Bishop is great.



See you around town!