Ho empire looks to the future

Stanley Ho enjoyed a monopoly on Macau casinos for over 40 years, but welcomed his first competitors (Las Vegas Sands International, owners of the Venetian Las Vegas, and Steve Wynn) this year. According to his daughter, Ho is hoping to rebrand his casinos and effectively compete with the newcomers. From China Daily:
In an exclusive interview with China Daily, Pansy Ho expounds the family’s strategy that involves a fundamental restructuring of its many gaming and tourism assets to focus more specifically on different segments of the market. Those assets, grouped under Hong Kong-listed Shun Tak and privately-held STDM, or Sociedade De Turismo e Diversoes De Macau, include several casinos, numerous hotels, the world’s largest ferry fleet, office and residential properties and interests in the Macao airport as well as Air Macao.

In the past, little effort was put into branding and marketing because “everybody who came to Macao knew about us”, Ho says. That’s hardly surprising as more than 80 per cent of the 10 million or so visitors to Macao each year were from Hong Kong where Ho senior and “Po King,” as his flagship casino – Lisboa – is called in Cantonese, have become household names.

But now this is all changing. The Closer Economic Participation Arrangement (CEPA) with the mainland has opened the door to Macao for a flood of tourists from the many cities and townships in neighbouring Guangdong Province. “We expect at least 6 million, or about half, of the 12 to 13 million visitors to Macao in 2005 will be from the mainland,” Ho says. “This large influx of mainland tourists is expected to fundamentally change the way business is being done in Macao,” she says.

Moreover, Ho says she expects the opening of the new US-operated casinos to attract many more visitors from the US, Europe and neighbouring countries in Asia, particularly Japan and South Korea. “Unlike the past, we are going to have tourists coming from a much greater variety of sources,” Ho says. “They also have vastly varied needs and requirements.”.

A much more aggressive marketing and branding strategy will be needed to attract the different groups of tourists coming to Macao, Ho says. STDM already owns a range of hotels from luxury resorts to budget inns and the company also has casinos that appeal specifically to big gamblers and those that cater to the casual player.

“But we believe that there is a need for us to market and brand our properties differently to tell our potential customers in various market segments of the full spectrum of our products and services,” Ho says. The opening up of the gambling industry in Macao has “created a bigger draw effect” which has helped greatly expand the business opportunities in the one-industry town, she says.

Gambling empire bets on rebranding

Macau is on pace to earn about $5 billion in gamign revenue this year, more than Atlantic City ($4.5 billion, give or take), and catching up to Las Vegas (over $6 billion). It is entirely plausible that within five years Macau will displace Las Vegas as the world’s leading casino destination, at least in terms of gross gaming revenue.
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I’m off to the city that is always turned on, Atlantic City, for a few days. I will make an effort to post, but if the blog is dark on Monday and Tuesday, that’s the reason. Hopefully the jitneys are still turned on at 3:30 AM, my estimated arrival time on Absecon Island, if SEPTA and NJ Transit cooperate.

In any event, I’ll be sure to enjoy a pizza at Tony’s Baltimore Grill for you. Later.

Porn or advertising?

The Nevada Gaming Control Board still hasn’t decided whether racy Hard Rock billboard ads are legitimate advertising, pornography, or inducements to cheat. There is now a trial (!) set for November. Commissioners had already rejected a $300,000 settlement of a three-count complaint, and now the adventure continues. From the LVRJ:

Hard Rock Hotel President Kevin Kelley said for now all the billboards that caused the initial fuss have either been taken down or the wording in the advertising has been modified.

However, the billboards now around town still show models engaged in the physical activities that precipitated the uproar. But the written messages on the signs have been altered so they cannot be construed to suggest illegal activities, which the Gaming Control Board in May claimed was the real issue.

Cowan said Thursday the attorney general’s office have been making “gratifying” progress in settlement negotiations since then, but admitted it appeared impossible to resolve two issues.

The stumbling block is the extent to which gaming regulators should be involved in private sector advertising decisions, which has been the focus of public comments on the case. Civil liberties attorneys have argued against any infringement on First Amendment rights of casino operators.

Hard Rock ad issues unresolved

If you are curious, here is one of the offending ads:
temptation to cheat

If I was on the Commission, I too might decide that this issue, and material like this, must be studied with scrupulous attention to detail–particularly the female model.

It’s funny that this guy has hit blackjack, has a huge stack of chips, and is practically on top of a topless, gorgeous blonde (added bonus: biting the card, signifying an oral fixation), and he has this look on his face like he’s reading an actuarial table. Lighten up, man. At least grin a little. If I was in that situation, they’d have to surgically remove the smile from my face.

I also like the subtle messages the ad sends. Note that the determined-looking gambler is simultaneously drinking (martini glass), smoking, gambling, and rubbing up against a topless girl. I think that he hit a veritable grand slam of vices there.

That’s the great thing about how Las Vegas is promoted. In most cities, you can go to a bar and get sloshed, smoke, play at least bingo, or sit out in the sun. In Las Vegas, you can do all of them–simultaneously. This is why the people who market the city are geniuses–something for everyone.

The other funny thing is looking at this from a gaming perspective. When I was in surveillance, I had occasion to see many things transpire at the blackjack tables, but nothing like this. Of course, in New Jersey, players aren’t allowed to touch the cards, let alone bite them. Still, I can just imagine getting a call: “You might want to keep an eye on table 6, one of the players has taken off her top and sprawled herself across the layout.”

In closing, the commission’s response gives you a window into the Nevada psyche. Playing blackjack topless in a pool, smoking, and drinking is no problem at all, but the mere mention of “cheating” sends everyone into panic mode. While “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas,” don’t you dare try to mess with the games: they are sacred.

I still don’t understand how this thing is going to trial. It’s not like this is Inherit the Wind or something. I’m a little confused as to why this advertisement has sparked a controversy that will end up in court, but another case of casino employees rigging a game of chance (not a casino game, but a raffle drawing), ended with only a fine.

For info about the initial complaints see It’s a Hard Rock life, Hard Rock not solid, and Hard sell too edgy.