Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Keeping WGI On Track With Social Media

I recently had the chance to speak with Paul Hemingway of Watkins Glen International Speedway in Watkins Glen, New York. Paul is the Senior Director of Sales and Marketing at the track and leader of the track's social media efforts.

WGI was recently recognized by sportsin140.com in the first "Most Valuable Tweet" awards. I was interested in how WGI was using social media and Paul was kind enough to oblige.

BT: When did Watkins Glen start using social media?

PH: Roughly 2006 with MySpace


BT: What social media tools are you using?

PH: FaceBook, Twitter, MySpace, YouTube, LinkedIn


BT: How did you know it was the right thing to do?

PH: We didn't! Great thing about social media is there is very little risk/investment. Worth its while for trial and error. We took a look at the sports/entertainment landscape and saw less dependence on traditional communication methods.


BT: What are you trying to achieve through social media?

PH: Bridge a gap inside the consumers mindset of where they are now and where they want to be. Create track affinity.


BT: Describe a social media success story.

PH: Staged first IndyCar "tweet-up" at WGI in July. Created means for our followers to come together and mix/mingle along with IndyCar drivers/teams who embrace Twitter (Tony Kanaan, Ed Carpenter). Created a lifetime connection with fans.


BT: In your opinion, what businesses are using social media well?

PH: Zappos, ESPN, Phoenix Suns


BT: In five years, will social media be more or less important to businesses. Why?

PH: Interestingly enough, I think equal to or less. I think traditional media advertising will rebound with economy and sophisticated consumers will see through many rogue attempts to connect disingenuously through social media platforms. MANY businesses do not embrace social media, but do it because everyone else is doing it. If you don't own it as a culture, it becomes transparent.


A success that Paul attributes to Twitter was the Indy Car tweetup. He essentially took online offline and made followers "friends" in the true flesh-and-blood sense. This is a fantastic lesson in how to make Twitter work and give the online efforts a tangible result.


Paul presents and interesting viewpoint on the future of social media. Seemingly attributing a portion of the success to a down economy, the future growth of this new marketing medium may dwindle as the Dow climbs. In fact, recent activity on social media sites Twitter and Facebook show traffic stagnating. At the same time the Dow has cracked the 10k mark. Conspicuous timing that supports his theory.


The WGI contingent has truly embraced the social media technology and continues set the pace for other tracks around the country. To keep up with Paul and the gang follow @WGI on Twitter.

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