Tag: tourism

Ackermann PR’s Rick Laney draws national attention to Smokies as a hot spring break destination

Posted by – March 7, 2011

The Great Smoky Mountains Region

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – Because of its expertise in travel and tourism in the Great Smoky Mountain Region, Ackermann PR continues to be the primary source for major national media outlets wanting more information about the nation’s most visited national park and the communities that surround it in Tennessee and North Carolina.

Last week, Ackermann PR Vice President Rick Laney turned up across the country talking about why the Great Smoky Mountain Region is quickly becoming a major spring break destination.  His comments about the appeal of the Smoky Mountain Region appeared in major media outlets including ABC News, CBS News, Chicago Tribune, Washington Examiner, Huffington Post, Charlotte Observer, Atlanta Journal Constitution and MSNBC.

“Our approach is completely different,” Laney said.  “While small, individual communities around the Smokies have touted what they have to offer for decades, no one has successfully marketed the region as a whole.  The funny thing is that tourists who come here don’t even recognize the little individual towns – they only recognize the Great Smoky Mountains.

“When you travel to somewhere like the Smokies for a vacation, you make it a point to see all there is to see, and the Smokies cover countless little communities in two separate states.  Our visitors hike in the Smokies, visit attractions in Gatlinburg, Hendersonville, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville, Asheville, Cherokee and Bryson City.  They go back and forth between North Carolina and Tennessee to take in the entire region.

“It only makes sense that the premier attractions and resorts are now marketing that way.”

For more information about Ackermann PR and its unique approach to travel and tourism marketing, call (865) 584-0550.

Media Contact
Shane Rhyne
(865) 584-0550
srhyne@ackermannpr.com

Ackermann’s Rick Laney talks travel and tourism changes in the Smoky Mountain Region with WBIR (NBC) television

Posted by – January 19, 2011

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Ackermann PR ’s Rick Laney sat down to talk with WBIR (NBC) television about dramatic changes taking place in the tourism industry in and around the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  In recent years, Ackermann identified some significant shifts taking place in the local travel and tourism industries and conducted a private study of visitors during 2007 and 2008 (with updated data for 2009 and 2010).

Two key figures came to light through the study:  The Smoky Mountain Region is drawing a huge number of first-time visitors every year (as high as 41 percent in some areas) and traditional tourism cycles that tied closely to the school year had disappeared and the Smoky Mountain Region is now a year-round destination.

Click on the image below to watch the entire report from WBIR television.

Click to watch complete WBIR segment

Ackermann PR is leading the way in changing Smoky Mountain Regional tourism

Posted by – December 27, 2010

Tourism transition: Survey shows that times, they are a changin’

By BOB MAYES
Managing Editor, The Mountain Press

SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. – Dec. 26, 2010 — Laura Hall grew up in Canada, then moved to Florida, married and now has a 9-year-old son.

Rick Laney (right) shoots a segment for the Travel Channel about the Smoky Mountains Region with Aiden Eads and Christine Eads.

When her sister, who also lives in Florida, proposed a family reunion in eastern Tennessee as winter was approaching, Laura and her husband Andy and son Ansley came on board.

“I was hoping for mountains, scenery and snow, and I got mountains, scenery and snow,” said Hall, whose family was visiting the Sevier County from Palatka, near St. Augustine, for the first time. “There was lots of snow, especially when we were coming through the national park.”

The Halls are typical of what the Ackermann public relations firm found when it did an independent survey to find out trends about the Smoky Mountains. Ackermann found that what Bob Dylan first sang about in 1964 rings true: The times, they are a changin’.

What Ackermann, headquartered in Knoxville, didn’t know was how much, and the agency wanted to find out the latest trends on tourism in the Smoky Mountains — one of things Ackermann learned was that a large percentage of visitors surveyed were coming here for the first time.

The year-long survey was conducted from spring 2007 through spring 2008, in an effort to define what “the Smoky Mountains” meant to tourists.

“The typical tourist to the Smoky Mountain region doesn’t know or care where Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville, Asheville, Knoxville or Hendersonville start or stop,” senior account executive Rick Laney said.

“If they travel hundreds of miles by car or by air, they want to take in everything that eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina has to offer.”

In recent months, Laney has consulted and worked with Travel Channel, MTV Productions, National Geographic Television and countless regional travel shows.

Ackermann estimates the actual number of annual visitors to Sevier County to be just under 11 million. That figure includes visitors from surrounding counties who may come to Sevier to shop, dine out or go to an attraction or show, and then return to their homes the same day.

Laney said there are two primary reasons the times have been changing in Sevier County — and in the Smoky Mountain region tourism industry.

“Number one, we were seeing a different type of tourist,” he said. “We started doing some surveying just in Sevier County, and what we were finding was that at the newer attractions — not just the ones we represent — nearly half, 41 percent, had never set foot in East Tennessee.

“The second part was that we also saw they were not following the typical seasonal patterns. Part of that change was due to changing school schedules and that we have more to offer people in what used to be the ‘off season.’

“With changing school schedules (more regions going to year-round school systems) and with more year-round attractions being built in the region, we have essentially become a year-round destination.”

Among the revelations from the survey:

-  First-time visitors to East Tennessee at the higher-end ($150 and up per night) resorts/lodging equal 41 percent.

-  First-time visitors to East Tennessee at the newer attractions (less than three years old) equal 38 percent.

-  The new visitors are coming from far more affluent ZIP codes (wealthier suburbs of Atlanta, Indianapolis, Nashville, Charlotte, etc.) than in the past.

-  The new visitors are coming in larger groups (averaging 4.8 visitors per group as opposed to the 3.7 overall in this region).

-  January to March traffic from first-time visitors was very heavy when compared to “traditional” vacation timing patterns.

-  A far higher percentage of first-time visitors flew into the area as opposed to driving in.

-  While recent visitation numbers for November 2010 vs. November 2009 were down (Gatlinburg was down 25 percent), the new attractions had double-digit growth (November 2010 vs. November 2009)

-  The new visitors are staying on average just over one additional day per stay.

Laney said first-time visitors do not match the historical demographic profile either — coming from more affluent communities.

“They are looking for a different experience than what Pigeon Forge, Gatlinburg, Sevierville, and the Smoky Mountain region has offered in the past,” he said. “They do not stay stationary, and many of them are arriving by air.”

In just the last five years, Laney said, what was considered the slow season (January through March), is now booming. Whereas the higher-end resorts commonly averaged 30-40 percent occupancy during the slow season, it is now common to see 90-95 percent.

Laney is regularly asked to speak about tourism in the Smoky Mountains Region throughout the Southeast.

The “new” tourist also fits a different financial profile, Laney said. The survey shows that only 4 percent earn under $25,000 per year, while 32 percent earned $50,000 to $75,000 annually and 35 percent earned more than $75,000 annually.

“While we still see heavy activity from our primary feeder markets such as Nashville, Atlanta, Greenville, etc., we are seeing large increases from more distant cities like Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Dallas, Minneapolis, Chicago, Washington, Philadelphia and all parts of Florida,” Laney said. “In the Smoky Mountain region, more than 56 percent of the visitors surveyed were from more than 200 miles (and) nearly 25 percent were from more than 500 miles away.”

Laney said that with the market rapidly changing, businesses that fail to evolve with it will be left behind.

“I see it all as ‘The Smoky Mountain region’ because that’s how our tourists see it,” he said. “They come for the pristine mountains, the wonderful resorts, the premier attractions and to enjoy time with their families.

“In doing so, they go to Townsend, Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Knoxville, Sevierville, Asheville, Hendersonville and anywhere else their journeys take them along the back roads of this great area.

“Rarely, if ever, do they stay in one of these areas without venturing out to other destinations.”

Story courtesy of The Mountain Press – read more: The Mountain Press – Tourism transition Survey shows that times they are a changin’

Ackermann PR drawing unprecedented national attention to East Tennessee travel and tourism industry

Posted by – October 29, 2010

Knoxville, Tenn. — October 29, 2010 — In just the past few months, Ackermann PR has brought in the National Geographic Channel, MTV Productions, the Travel Channel’s “Bert The Conqueror,” Channel Four (a major television network based in London), national morning television shows including CW’s The Daily Buzz, and a number of travel shows based in Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina to East Tennessee for special reports about our travel and tourism industry.  Ackermann is also involved in discussions with a major Hollywood film company to produce part of a major motion picture in East Tennessee.  This week, Ackermann’s Rick Laney served as a senior consultant to a pilot television show being shot for the Travel Channel.  Because Ackermann PR approaches East Tennessee’s travel and tourism as a regional effort that crosses local political lines, we have succeeded at focusing national attention on the tremendous assets our region holds.

Laney was featured on WATE-TV (ABC) in a report by Jamie Lynn Drohan about the impact all of this national and international attention has on the local economy.  The entire segment can be watched by clicking the photo below.

Media Contact
Rick Laney
(865) 584-0550
rlaney@ackermannpr.com

Award-winning magician Terry Evanswood featured on WBIR’s Live at Five at Four

Posted by – May 11, 2010

Knoxville, Tenn. –  Terry Evanswood, who recently announced he has a new permanent home for his “Wonders of Magic Show” and “Hall of Magic” museum at WonderWorks in Pigeon Forge, was a guest on WBIR’s Live at Five at Four yesterday with Beth Haynes and Russell Biven.  Evanswood brought along a few priceless pieces of magic memorabilia and magically made Beth extremely strong (or Russell extremely weak).  Watch the entire segment below.

Video courtesy of WBIR.

Internationally-recognized magician Terry Evanswood makes new, permanent home at WonderWorks

Posted by – April 27, 2010

Terry Evanswood

Terry Evanswood at WonderWorks

Pigeon Forge, Tenn. – The movies have the “Oscar” and magic has the “Merlin.”  Both are highly sought-after awards given only to the most outstanding performers and artists.  WonderWorks in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. is now the permanent home to Terry Evanswood, one of a very select group of magicians to ever earn a Merlin.  Harry Blackstone, Doug Henning, Siegfried & Roy, and David Copperfield are a few of the past Merlin winners.

In addition to Evanswood’s daily performances of “Wonders of Magic” at WonderWorks, a new museum called the “Hall of Magic” just opened inside WonderWorks showcasing some of magic’s most treasured artifacts from legendary magicians like Harry Houdini, Howard Thurston and Harry Blackstone.  A huge collection of priceless props, costumes, autographs, mechanical toys, memorabilia and antique magic sets are now on display in the free Hall of Magic museum.

Over the years, Evanswood has thrilled audiences with his performances throughout the world, with some of his biggest fans being other famous magicians.  Now that Evanswood has found a home at the popular WonderWorks attraction in Pigeon Forge, he is within a one-day drive of most major cities in the Eastern U.S. and a must-see for visitors to Pigeon Forge, Gatlinburg and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

“When I begin my show,” Evanswood said, “I look out and see an audience full of children, parents and grandparents. By the time I am half-way through my performance, I look out on each and every face and I see an entire audience of kids.  The look of complete awe and wonderment on their faces turns every single person in the room into a child.  That’s the most impressive magic trick I can ever hope to perform.”

Merlin Award

Terry Evanswood's Merlin Award in the Hall of Magic Museum at WonderWorks

Evanswood, who knew he wanted to be a magician since he was 9 years old, has performed in front of well over a million people (including being invited twice to perform at the White House in Washington, D.C.).  Along with his cast – Brittany McElroy. Natasha Volvacheva, Linda Black and Mike Phillips –  Evanswood continues to thrill huge crowds daily at WonderWorks with magic, illusions, sleight-of-hand, Houdini-style escapes and a dose of comedy.

WonderWorks, is an indoor theme park that opened in 2006 and has nearly 60,000 square feet of fun for all ages. WonderWorks is housed in an upside down building (you have to see it to be believe it).  The building appears to have been ripped from its foundation and set back down on its roof.

Inside WonderWorks, guests will find 120 interactive adventures that include the “Challenge Zone” with a rock wall climbing, physical and psychological endurance competitions and even a “bed of nails” to lie on.  In the “Space Zone,” visitors are entertained with interactive, 3-D films about outer space plus life-size recreations of space suits they can try on for size, a Mercury Space Capsule, and simulators that allow guests to land the Discovery Space Shuttle as it glides in from outer space.

WonderWorks also houses a “Sound and Light Zone,” a “Natural Disaster Zone” (where guests can experience a 5.3 earthquake), and the “Control Center” where visitors create roller coasters on computers and then get to ride the roller coaster they created in a coaster simulator.  WonderWorks also features the WonderDog Café where guests can enjoy the world-famous WonderDog with its secret recipe chili sauce without ever leaving the attraction.

Every evening, WonderWorks comes to life with the “Hoot N’Holler” dinner show – one of the most popular shows in the Great Smoky Mountains.  For years, visitors have enjoyed a fantastic three-course dinner with their family while experiencing the 90-minute performance featuring “Scraps,” whose antics leave guests rolling in the aisles with laughter.  Kids are always FREE at the Hoot N’ Holler diner show with a paying adult.

ValueVacation tickets to WonderWorks are available in a variety of packages that meet the needs of any size family.  To learn more about WonderWorks, the Hoot N’Holler dinner show and the new Wonders of Magic show featuring Terry Evanswood, visit www.WonderWorksTN.com or call 865-868-1800.

WonderWorks operates from 9 a.m. to midnight every day.  We also operate in Orlando, Fla. and will open soon in Panama City, Fla. and Myrtle Beach, S.C.

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Media Contact
Rick Laney
(865) 584-0550
rlaney@ackermannpr.com

Wilderness at the Smokies, Titanic Museum Attraction and WonderWorks on Sirius-XM Radio

Posted by – April 26, 2010

Christine Eads

Christine Eads recently asked Ackermann PR’s Rick Laney to do a travel segment about East Tennessee for Sirius-XM Radio’s national talk show BroadMinded.  Christine and her son came down from Washington, D.C. to East Tennessee for a few days and Rick had the opportunity to show them some of the best new resorts and attractions the area has to offer.

The interview includes Wilderness at the Smokies resort, the new Titanic Museum Attraction and WonderWorks.  All three are clients of Ackermann PR.

The interview (which can be listened to below) has been divided into two segments.  The first segment covers primarily Wilderness at the Smokies resort and the second segment covers mostly the Titanic Museum Attraction.  Take a few minutes to listen in, even if you live here.  You might be surprised at how people from other parts of the country respond to East Tennessee.  You might want to take in some of the new local attractions yourself — they’re just down the road.

A special thanks to Christine Eads and the crew from Broadminded.  We look forward to seeing them back in East Tennessee again real soon.

Wilderness at the Smokies segment

Titanic Museum Attraction segment

Interview is © Sirius-XM Radio’s BroadMinded.