
|
Los Angeles City Guides
|
Article History WASHINGTON (Map, News) - D.C.’s on a power trip. Or at least, it would like its visitors to be on one.
The city unleashed its latest marketing campaign Wednesday, a $2 million branding effort with the theme, “Create Your Own Power Trip.”
“The competition for tourism dollars is just relentless right now,” said Dan Mesches, chairman of Destination DC, formerly the D.C. Convention & Tourism Corporation. D.C. has been outspent by major cities such as New York and Orlando, Fla., in tourism dollars, particularly in anticipation of a slowing economy, Mesches said at a media event at the Shakespeare Theater Wednesday.
The new campaign is the result of more than a year’s worth of research that showed people most associated D.C. with the word “power.” They also thought of it as inspiring, beautiful, a place for learning, and a place to make and experience history.
The campaign will include print, online and television media spots with slogans such as “Power Play” and “Flower Power,” referencing popular draws such as a Capitals game or the Cherry Blossom Festival. Mayor Adrian Fenty is featured in one ad running in Rock Creek Park.
Tourism is a $5.24 billion industry for D.C.
At the media event, Fenty said the city hopes to capture not just family visitors, but other groups such as urban explorers on
weekend getaways.
The newly designed Washington.org also has a spot where locals can share insider tips on where to go in the city.
For a city-marketing campaign to be successful, it should be evocative of a place’s distinguishing characteristic and not try to erase the past, said Mickey Rowley, Pennsylvania’s deputy secretary for tourism. A city also shouldn’t rebrand itself too frequently. Pennsylvania actually at one point tried to pass a law that state slogans not change with each political administration, he said.
It also helps when a slogan is flexible and can be adapted to many types of interests, according to Peggy Bendel, senior vice president of Development Counsellors International, who helped develop the “I Love New York” campaign. Bendel said that approach has served neighboring Virginia well, as its “Virginia Is For Lovers” slogan can be appropriated to mean lovers of everything from the history to the outdoors.
melissa.frederick@dcexaminer.com
Not ranked |
EMAIL ME THIS STORY |
ARTICLE HISTORY |
Sports
Business |
Real Estate Family Movies and Books Venues, Sports and Music Concerts, Artists and Tickets Be Inspired - Quotes and Stories |
Comments from Examiner Readers
10:34 AM MST on Wed., Jul. 9, 2008 re: "Harborplace vacancies open door for national chains"
Report as inappropriate
11:15 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 25, 2008
re: "Harborplace vacancies open door for national chains"
Report as inappropriate
11:00 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 25, 2008
re: "Harborplace vacancies open door for national chains"
Report as inappropriate
12:57 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 25, 2008
re: "Harborplace vacancies open door for national chains"
Report as inappropriate
10:40 AM MST on Mon., Jun. 16, 2008
re: "Ocean City hopes for average numbers in tough economic season for tourism"
Report as inappropriate
10:05 AM MST on Thu., Apr. 19, 2007
re: "Study: City needs more tourist attractions"
Report as inappropriate
Sean from Baltimore said:
Remember the original variety, quirkiness and charm of the Pavilions? It's GONE. The interior layout has been hacked up and blocked off, restaurants keep closing, and the remaining high-quality specialty shops are leaving one by one. The upper floor of the Light Street Pavilion is a WASTELAND beyond the food court. General Growth Properties has done a HORRIBLE job.
4 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
rouse, then owner, said this about horrible place 10 years ago, hat in hand for city $. do your homework. some figures and perspective might make your business stories relevant to somebody.
3 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
journalism -- or press release, which some construe and present to the world as journalism on the cheap. it shows.
3 agree | 1 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Bill said:
um...Fire & Ice *is* a national chain. Ok, so fill the empty space with 'upscale national retailers'. What have you got? TowsonTown Center South. BFD.
4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Rocko said:
I was in OC this past weekend and it was VERY quiet down there. Much fewer people than I am used to seeing this time of year. I have been going to OC at least8 times per year over the past 20 years, and it was much quieter than usual.
2 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
mike johnson said:
As a native born Baltimorean, I have always had an inferiority complex next to Philly and Washington DC. There have been places that are must-sees for people coming into town, like the architecture around Mount Vernon, the restaurants of Little Italy and Inner Harbor East, the wineries in Carroll and Harford County (in season), and the world class gems of the Walters and BMA. Historically, Philadelphia shined in the colonial period and has been lovingly restored. Washington is the home of a thousand federally funded tourist attractions. Baltimore became a major city in that period of time after the powdered wig era and before Washington became capital of the world. Americans have lost track of how much of the US of today would not exist without the sailing ships, steam locomotives, warehouseman and factory workers that met here. Show me the last time one of the conventioneers was murdered in Baltimore. Baltimore is a city, not Disneyland, but I like it.
279 agree | 286 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree