Quote from: cheltenhamlion on April 13, 2016, 09:14:42 AMOne of the criticisms constantly thrown at the club is they don't do anything imaginative on ticket sales. They won't fill the ground next year by freezing prices. Why not give them some ideas that might keep people coming through the doors next season and that would be palatable to our worn down support?I've had conversations in the past with both Nicky Keye and Paul Faulkener about our ticket prices. Surely the objective is to fill our ground, not just for the next game, but for the next x number of years, kids ticket prices being the key to the longer term goal.All they throw back at you is that our prices are good compared to other clubs. That's true, but isn't really that relevant. It doesn't matter to me how much other clubs charge, I'm not going to start going elsewhere because they are £5 cheaper than Villa. This applies to all Villa fans I would assume. Ticket prices at Villa are what gets the fans through the doors, not how much our tickets are compared with Everton, Stoke, Hull etcThey really need to get the kids through the doors next season when, hopefully, we will be winning more home games. If they don't. they will lose the next generation of potential Villa fans to becoming TV fans of Man City, Utd, Chelsea etc
One of the criticisms constantly thrown at the club is they don't do anything imaginative on ticket sales. They won't fill the ground next year by freezing prices. Why not give them some ideas that might keep people coming through the doors next season and that would be palatable to our worn down support?
Quote from: oswald funkletrumpet on April 13, 2016, 07:31:38 AMnot sure i get it fans telling the club how to price tickets, what next?what team should be picked? how the grass should be be cut on the pitch? what brand of pies to sell?What's wrong with fans having an opinion on tickets prices and letting them be known?
not sure i get it fans telling the club how to price tickets, what next?what team should be picked? how the grass should be be cut on the pitch? what brand of pies to sell?
Quote from: ez on April 13, 2016, 07:01:51 PMWould they close part of the ground such as the upper witton lane stand home section maybe?I overheard an old gentleman in the Trinity Rd Lift saying they were going to shut the top tier next season.I am not so sure though, they will be the most expensive tickets with matchday revenue more important next year.
Would they close part of the ground such as the upper witton lane stand home section maybe?
Quote from: saunders_heroes on April 13, 2016, 07:12:36 PMQuote from: oswald funkletrumpet on April 13, 2016, 07:31:38 AMnot sure i get it fans telling the club how to price tickets, what next?what team should be picked? how the grass should be be cut on the pitch? what brand of pies to sell?What's wrong with fans having an opinion on tickets prices and letting them be known?nothing at all but be honest do you think that the club will think hang on a minute that was going to be our pricing structure but having received a letter we will change itnice idea but will never happen on planet earth
They need to learn from West Ham - a club that has never had higher gates than us as far as I can remember - and see how they've managed to shift all their season tickets for a 60k seater stadium. Like you say, it's not just about prices, it's about ambition, top level marketing and connecting with fans. The Club has failed at such things for far too long
Some sort of reward for continuously renewing over the last five years would be nice. I bet it doesn't happen though.
Quote from: Chris Harte on April 14, 2016, 07:43:27 AMSome sort of reward for continuously renewing over the last five years would be nice. I bet it doesn't happen though.we should be rewarded with a white unremoveable jacket for that
QuoteThey need to learn from West Ham - a club that has never had higher gates than us as far as I can remember - and see how they've managed to shift all their season tickets for a 60k seater stadium. Like you say, it's not just about prices, it's about ambition, top level marketing and connecting with fans. The Club has failed at such things for far too longEasy, you just get a tax-payer funded 60k stadium which cost £750m to build and pay £2m a year to rent it, sell adult season tickets from £500 - £900 and charge everyone £10 just to go on a waiting list to find out more information. With West Ham and their owners ( who I wouldn't be surprised to see sell the club next season to the highest overseas bidder) it is all about the prices and the money. Their model seems to be to squeeze every extra penny out of the affluent support base. I don't think there's much we need to learn from them, except maybe their kids' season ticket prices.
Would the same happen at Villa if we showed genuine ambition, engaged with fans and employed top marketing strategies? I have no doubt at all that it would.
Quote from: Billy Walker on April 14, 2016, 01:42:31 PMWould the same happen at Villa if we showed genuine ambition, engaged with fans and employed top marketing strategies? I have no doubt at all that it would. Probably not. History shows that regardless of what happens the Villa fanbase tends not to move around too much. This is part of what caught Randy out - he thought he could buy this underachieving Birmingham club, give the local populace something to get behind and the fans would come in their thousands. What he found was that our attendances peaked the first year we finished 6th and actually fell over both the next two seasons, despite us finishing 6th again and bettering our cup performance from the previous year both times.If we moved the club to London however...