Originally published Monday, June 9, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Come-ons for free gas gaining traction
Two magic words are turning consumers' heads lately. Not "Get rich" or "Lose weight. " Try "Free gas. " Businesses from banks and hotels...
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Two magic words are turning consumers' heads lately. Not "Get rich" or "Lose weight." Try "Free gas."
Businesses from banks and hotels to golf-club makers and blood-donation centers are offering promotions that involve free gas — generating more attention and goodwill from price-stunned drivers than traditional promotions might deliver.
For example, Callaway Golf is giving away gas cards worth as much as $100 with the sale of certain drivers. Guests who book three nights through hotels.com will get $50 gas cards. And TCF Bank, based in Wayzata, Minn., is giving $50 gas cards to customers who open checking accounts.
The Pacific Reef Hotel in Gold Beach, Ore., recently began giving guests gas gift certificates worth $10 for a night's stay.
"We watch the news and we read the newspapers and see that folks are struggling with the cost of gasoline right now," said hotel General Manager Jon Younce. "We thought it was an excellent way to help them defray some of the cost to come to the southern Oregon coast for a visit."
The trend will grow in the short term as more businesses jump on the free-gas bandwagon, predicts Baohong Sun, a marketing professor at the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University.
"A lot of companies, when they make decisions, they don't think independently," Sun said.
"They'll jump into whatever their competitors are doing, so more companies are likely to mimic this strategy."
She expects the trend will fade by summer's end.
Some companies, such as sporting-goods makers, don't have obvious ties to gas prices. But others, such as hotels, have found that guests who arrive by car are especially seduced by the idea of a free fill-up.
Doug Symes, 48, knew he wanted to plan a summer vacation in the Wisconsin Dells, a tourist hot spot in south-central Wisconsin.
He debated staying at one of two resorts, and his decision was clinched when he heard that one, the Kalahari Waterpark Resort, offered a promotion that includes a free $40 gas card.
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Most promotions have been under way for only a week or two, not enough time for companies to gauge how effective they have been.
Reservations at Kalahari are up 5 percent this summer over last year, General Manager John Chastan said.
"It's hard to tell how much of that is because of the gas card, but in general we're doing pretty good," he said.
Summer promotions are nothing new to the Northern Ohio Blood Services Region of the American Red Cross.
Blood donations can drop 20 percent in summer months as high-school and college students scatter, so this year the group is offering summer donors the chance to win a gas card. The prizes are one $3,000 gas card and five $500 cards.
After the blood center's promotion launched last week, donations rose 6 percent over the same period last year — although the number of days available for comparison is small and it's not certain the increase is due only to the raffle. But organizers say the early numbers are encouraging.
While consumers will always need gas, marketing experts say motorists will eventually tune out free-gas promotions if too many businesses offer them.
Also, as the price rises far enough past the emotionally charged $4 threshold, people will again learn to accept the cost.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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