I'll admit I've not had the desire and heart to jump into this conversation — but why not.
As a young fresh Ad Man — our team had the opportunity to work with the Marketing team back in 89, creating the Furman Best of Times work.
We did a series of ads with people going about normal life stiff; cutting the grass, laying by the pool, wearing a Furman football helmet. We did billboards, a little tv, and heavy radio too.
I had started the year before '88' working with the marketing team - designing the Gold and Sterling football poster.
Things were very different back then. Furman won a national championship in 88, there was even a parade in downtown Gville for the champs. Also, with a modest budget, we could stand out in the crowd.
I gave up on traditional marketing years ago (billboards, television, radio, print) for the last 15 years my discipline is community initiatives and word of mouth marketing—yes that's a marketing discipline, and I know of two books you can read - if interested (hint hint).
My take FuBear listed the best plan.
There is a book (The Experience Economy) this book is my bible for creating customer experiences.
People want experiences today - not just stuff.
Step one create a great experience and put a quality product on the field.
Step two build community relations and public relations - this is low-hanging fruit stuff.
Step three I would look at targeted ad buys on Facebook, YouTube, etc.
Step four incentives for families with kids to experience a game and have a tailored experience.
Step five incentives for football fans that moved into the area (not interested in CU/USC) and have a tailored experience.
HERE IS THE PROBLEM (with all of our armchair marketing acumen)
All of your marketing tactics should be stress-tested - what I mean by that is you should create your marketing plan from qualitative and quantitive research. Large scale regional surveys, face-to-face intercepts, and places like a Drive baseball game. Done right this is a 50K to 100K investment before you start any tactic.
I believe we're in good hands.
Mr. Covington gets it.
AD Donnely gets it.
I don' know Mr. Osborne but I believe he gets it.
I like what they've done in elevating the gameday experience, this will take baby steps.
add-on thinking - we also might have to face the reality that for Furman expecting a 12,000 to 16,000 attendance game isn't a reality. It's just a different world today — we all have a lot going on in our lives, plus every game is streamable.
Playing a game like the A&T game is our best shot at creating some buzz interest and bringing in a large visiting crowd.