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Incrementally Yours

Unless you work at an integrated resort on the Las Vegas Strip, where more than 65 percent of revenue is generated by non-gaming amenities, you’re devoted to the casino floor. In most other jurisdictions, including the “locals” casinos of Vegas, gaming revenue accounts for at least 70 percent of total revenue, up to as much as 95 percent.

It’s no surprise that many casinos are slow to grasp the importance of non-gaming revenue and the capital reinvestment it requires. When most of your revenue is a result of gaming activity, why upset the apple cart? And how much “incremental” revenue will these costly non-gaming attractions bring in anyway? Your current customers provide great action, and you take good care of them. Why try to draw people who may not gamble—or not as much—and may get in the way of your best players?

Good questions. And the answers can sometimes be down in the weeds.

The definition of incremental revenue is a slippery thing. It can mean a very small portion that will add pennies on the dollar. It can also mean revenue you don’t now have, that you can build on and increase over time with a sincere commitment to the concept.

Non-gaming attractions are already part of all casino operations, no matter how gaming-centric. All casinos need restaurants. If a hotel is involved, you’ve got a pool, sometimes a spa, a gym and maybe a small number of meeting rooms. You’ll need a gift shop to sell your logo merchandise and other high-margin items. And in most cases, you need entertainment, whether it’s a lounge with a torch singer or a showroom with star attractions.

In fact, a casino is often a collection of different businesses under one roof. So if you’re in the hotel business, why not make the best you can? And we all know repeat customers are the rule at great restaurants. How about more than a gift shop? Quirky and unusual stores are sometimes big hits in a casino. And of course meeting and conventions can be a very lucrative business if you get the right mix of groups and excellent execution.

I know players are our lifeblood, and if they want a comped room or meal, that will eat into profitability. But that’s where revenue management comes in. If you’re getting your profit on the casino floor, you can afford to give up something in hotel or food and beverage.

But there’s another element to this equation as well—increased competition. You’ve got to protect your territory, and what happens if existing or new competition adds the elements you’re missing? Full suites instead of just rooms? A noodle house for your Asian customers? Or an outlet mall connected to the property? You could lose loyal customers, no matter how well they’re treated, if there are more reasons to visit your competition. So be proactive. Don’t let your competition get the jump on you. Your property needs to be the leader in the market, not the follower.

You stand to lose your loyal customers no matter how well they are treated because there are more reasons to visit your competition. The only answer is to be proactive. Don’t let your competition get the jump on you. Your property needs to be the leader in the market, not the follower.
The biggest argument for non-gaming amenities is to protect your market. If you’re truly treating your players right, they’ll sample the competition and then return to the place that makes them feel special.
Don’t let complacency rule. Take the lead and control the market.

Welcome to Casino Style

For the past dozen years or so, Global Gaming Business has produced Casino Design, an annual magazine dedicated to the architects, designers and builders of the casino industry.
    
In recent years, the pace of growth in that sector has slowed, even as the industry expands. At the same time—and for many of the same reasons—casino revenue has flattened, and non-gaming revenues have become more important. More and more, casino executives are looking to non-gaming amenities to grow their properties.
    
As a result, Casino Design required a revamp and a re-branding. Welcome to the first issue of Casino Style.
    
The cover story on entertainment is indicative of Casino Style’s new direction. Whether your guests buy in or are comped, entertainment is one of the most powerful ways to define and brand your property.
    
Building and renovation won’t cease—far from it. Just look at our “Building Excitement” department to note the extraordinary, cutting-edge, relevant work of the industry’s best architects and designers. But Casino Style is about more: restaurants, pools and spas, meetings and conventions, entertainment and nightclubs, and even cleverly built promotions. We’ll cover the new ways casinos reward customers for non-gaming spend, and explain how to find and keep those non-gaming guests.
    
One holdover from Casino Design is the Q&A compiled by Julie Brinkerhoff-Jacobs of Lifescapes International. What makes it different this year is a roundup from experts outside the design field, and a new emphasis on marketing. The experts brought together by Julie provide insight that will benefit all casinos.
    
Casino Style will be distributed at G2E and appropriately, the Integrated Resort Experience exhibit dedicated to non-gaming amenities. Exhibitors at IRE will be prominently featured in upcoming editions, along with their products and services.
    
So welcome to Casino Style. It’s an exciting new venture for us at GGB. We invite your feedback and perspective as we develop this valuable new tool for the gaming industry.

Entertainment Revolutionary

Entertainment has always played a big role in the casino industry. From the lounge acts of the 1940s to the Rat Pack of the ’50s and the crooners of the ’60s and ’70s, entertainment was often a reason guests visited casinos (while of course partaking in a few bets here and there).
   
But casino entertainment had stagnated by the 1980s, though few realized it. The standard performers were regulars: Sinatra and his crew, including Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Joey Bishop, etc. Movie stars like Ann-Margret put together revues. Even the legendary Elvis Presley was considered staid and respectable.
   
So in 1983, when a fresh-faced Tom Cantone arrived at his new job at the Sands Casino Hotel in Atlantic City (he had previously worked at Hersheypark outside Harrisburg), few noticed. After all, booking casino entertainment wasn’t rocket science. You just did what had always been done.
   
Cantone had different ideas. A new generation of entertainers was creating lots of buzz—Eddie Murphy, Robin Williams, Billy Crystal, Steve Martin… The list was long, and growing longer. Cantone figured these acts would be perfect for Atlantic City, particularly for the upstart Sands and its intimate showroom, the Copa Room.
   
He had one problem.
   
“If I had a nickel for every time I heard an agent or manager say ‘He’ll never play a casino,’ I’d be a millionaire,” says Cantone.
   
It was especially true of young, up-and-coming stars. Eventually, Cantone broke down the agent for Eddie Murphy, at the time a big movie star and headliner on Saturday Night Live.
   
“He was the hottest entertainer on the planet at the time,” Cantone says. “And from that moment on, the walls came tumbling down.”
   
Murphy’s performance instantly transformed the Sands into the hottest place in Atlantic City, surpassing Caesars, Resorts and Steve Wynn’s Golden Nugget.
   
Like Cantone, the other executives at the Sands were also young and aggressive. It didn’t take much to convince them this was the way to go. “Bill Weidner, Brad Stone, Rob Goldstein… They allowed me to experiment and take risks,” says Cantone. “It was overwhelmingly received. Not always to everyone’s satisfaction, but it worked.” Soon other young stars were flocking to the Sands.
   
Cantone later joined the Trump organization as vice president of marketing for three Atlantic City properties. Larry King says hiring Cantone was Trump’s best decision in Atlantic City. Under his oversight, the Trump properties brought the newest and hottest acts to the 5,000-seat Mark Etess Arena.
   
Then it was time for a move. Foxwoods in Connecticut was looking for a way to establish itself as a major player in the market. Cantone provided that.
   
“Tom’s leadership, especially his ability to connect with people, our values, and culture as a tribe, helped bring the Foxwoods brand to the global stage,” says Rodney Butler, chairman of the Mashantucket Pequot tribe, the owners of Foxwoods.
   
Cantone’s success attracted the attention of the neighboring Mohegan tribe, which recruited him to book entertainment at Mohegan Sun, home of a 13,000-seat arena. Cantone has brought in some of the biggest names in the business, including Billy Joel, Taylor Swift and Ringo Starr.
   
He has one regret.
   
“I’ve tried to book Paul McCartney for years, so far without success,” he says. “But with our arena at Mohegan Sun, I’ll never give up.”
   
In 2015, Cantone wrote a memoir, Book ‘Em: From the Man Who Revolutionized Casino Entertainment. It’s a fascinating read, heavy with anecdotes about the amazing array of entertainers Cantone has booked over the years.
   
And in September, Cantone received the Lifetime Achievement honor at the Casino Entertainment Awards at G2E. Typically, he credits others.
   
“It’s a great honor, but it’s not mine alone,” he says. “I’ll accept it on behalf of all the people who helped me along the way. Without them, I would never have been able to achieve this recognition.”

50 Years of Amenities

When Jay Sarno designed Caesars Palace as the first fully themed casino hotel in Las Vegas, he wanted each guest to be treated like a “Caesar.” The hotel logo featured busty women feeding grapes to a reclining man (who looked suspiciously like Sarno himself).
   
But it wasn’t only a theme that made Caesars Palace stand apart from other Vegas casinos in 1966. It was the nascent development of non-gaming amenities, which would become the property’s signature.
   
The pool at Caesars Palace resembled a Roman bath. Although the pools of those days were hardly extravagant, current resort pools and spas are direct descendants of those water wonders.
   
And while every Vegas casino had the requisite high-end restaurants, steakhouses and buffets, Caesars Palace had the Bacchanal. Guests were advised to reserve at least three hours for this incredible dining experience, complete with toga-clad waitresses dubbed “Wine Goddesses” who offered mouthfuls of wine from bags carried on their shoulders. They’d even offer a back rub to any gambler stiff from sitting at the blackjack tables. (Today, the Bacchanal Buffet isn’t quite as elaborate, but it does feature the most unique buffet experience in Las Vegas.)
   
In 1992, Caesars Place opened the Forum Shops, becoming the first casino to recognize the link between shopping and gambling. The venture was so successful, it expanded several times and inspired a dozen other shopping venues on the Las Vegas Strip and around the world.
   
And while every Las Vegas casino had entertainment, when Frank Sinatra left the Sands to take up residence at Caesars Palace, it became the place to be. He was joined by Rat Pack friends Sammy Davis Jr. and Dean Martin, among others.
   
In 2003, Caesars Palace opened the Colosseum for a residency with Celine Dion, and entertainers such as Elton John, Bette Midler, Shania Twain, Rod Stewart and others flocked to the property for mini-residencies of their own.
   
If nothing else, Caesars Palace was built for high rollers. The original casino, the Forum, is surrounded by 20 black Italian marble columns with white marble and gold-leaf trim. No other casino has been center-stage in so many movies, from Robert Redford’s Electric Horseman to Dustin Hoffman’s Rain Man to the ultimate buddy movie, The Hangover.
   
In August, Caesars Palace celebrated its 50th anniversary. It barely resembles its original silhouette (the first hotel tower has been renovated at least three times), and it has at least a half-dozen towers, a Nobu Hotel, and some of the world’s best restaurants including Guy Savoy, Rao’s, Nobu, Old Homestead and Mesa Grill.
   
For 50 years, Caesars Palace has blazed the trail for non-gaming amenities, a strategy that’s been copied far and wide, from small tribal casinos to the massive integrated resorts of Asia.
   
Despite the financial woes of its parent company, Caesars Palace will continue to set the bar for non-gaming amenities—and revenues—in the industry.

A Whole New Game: Making Money Beyond the Casino Floor

With gaming revenues flat or decreasing, it’s more important than ever to develop non-gaming revenues through meetings and conventions, food and beverage, retail, entertainment and more.
   
While few casinos away from the Las Vegas Strip can generate more non-gaming than gaming revenues, there are numerous ways to boost profitability off the gaming floor. Casino Style spoke with 12 industry experts to find out how.
   
The roundup was compiled by Julie Brinkerhoff Jacobs, president and CFO of Lifescapes International, the design firm behind the volcano at the Mirage, the lake at Bellagio, and landscaping landmarks across the industry.

Participants include:

  • Brad Friedmutter CEO, Founder and CEO, Friedmutter Group
  • Leonard BergmanPresident/CEO, Bergman, Walls & Associates
  • Tom HoskensFounding Principal, Cuningham Group Architecture, Inc.
  • Dike BaconPrincipal/Planning and Business Development Leader at Hnedak Bobo Group (HBG)
  • Michael ShulmanExecutive Director of Design & Business Strategy, Illuminating Concepts
  • Paul GordonSenior Vice President of Sales, Rymax Marketing Services, Inc.
  • Paul Curtis SteelmanCEO, Steelman Partners
  • Nick SchoenfeldtVice President & Principal, TBE Architects
  • Thomas A. WuchererPrincipal/ Founding Partner, YWS
  • Thomas J. SykesPrincipal, SOSH Architects
  • Lee TorresChief Marketing Officer, Pechanga Resort & Casino
  • Diego AlessiSenior Principal/ Landscape Architect, Lifescapes International, Inc.

Non-Gaming Revenues

To satisfy customers and maximize profits, what non-gaming amenities are essential?

Wucherer: There isn’t a single answer that works for every market or property, but there are a few must-haves.

Food and beverage has the No. 1 impact on customer satisfaction in just about every market. However, a well-rounded offering of retail and entertainment is typically just as important.

For maximum profit, casino properties must have a deep understanding of their customers. Who are they? What do they like? It’s different for every market, and each property should cater to the desires of their target market by offering an array of amenities.

It’s also important to consider the right brand associations, right price points, the right interaction between venues, and how the venues are organized. All impact customer satisfaction and revenue potential.

Hoskens: Las Vegas casinos get 60 percent of their revenue from non-gaming. The key is activities that attract a wide variety of vacationers. High on the list are outstanding restaurants, then convention centers and retail, and now we’re seeing stadiums as the big draw, pulling in thousands for individual sporting events and concerts.

That still leaves 40 percent of revenues from gaming. As Las Vegas looks toward the future and with technology advancing at hyper-speed, gaming companies should continue investing in games research to see what can be the next big attraction. Games are going to change quickly.

To maximize profits, you need to have your finger on the pulse to be the “first in”—that’s where the highest rewards are. Keep your IT people looking to that. The Venetian putting in an arena-style gaming environment is about being ahead of the curve. They’re diversifying for their guests and building clientele for the future.

In emerging markets, there are many opportunities beyond restaurants and convention facilities. Look to theaters and other entertainment like bowling, retail such as outlet malls, specialty hotels, pools—anything to create a varied entertainment experience and attract a regional market.

Friedmutter: Property access. Providing adjacent, climate-appropriate parking and entries is key to customer satisfaction.

Knowing your customer and tailoring amenities like food and beverage create a synergistic experience and establish brand loyalty. Center bars, sports bars, electronic content-based venues and dynamic gaming areas increase the energy of the property, creating fun and competitive environments for players.

Gaming is a serviced-based industry. Making the customer feel like they’re No. 1 and getting a good value for their dollar is as important, if not more important, as any brick-and-mortar amenity.

Schoenfeldt: For the first time, we’ve included a Zen garden and noodle bar adjacent to an area appealing to the Asian guest.

Structured, covered parking remains one of the most critical and cost-effective amenities. It enables guests to get closer to the floor and protects them from the heat, cold, rain and snow. Parking can consistently turn a slow gaming day due to the elements into one of the best.

Hotels are always an asset. The key, like most major investments, is to make it right-sized. A quality environment, including superior bed sets, linens and a multimedia experience, is critical. The single biggest hotel draw has followed the real-estate trend in luxury baths. “Experience” showers, superior linens and lighted wall mirrors are just a few of the upgrades our clients are insisting upon.

Also, the salon/spa concept has evolved as well. We’ve seen them become more focused on hands, feet and body. Hair has declined, but styling stations still persist.

What would you consider a good mix of non-gaming amenities for local, regional or large-scale casino properties?

Bacon: The roadmaps are pretty loose. Every market is different, and one size or program mix doesn’t fit all.

In most markets, the percentage of non-gaming to gaming amenities is increasing, but it can vary widely. We see the percentages of non-gaming amenity seats to gaming positions ranging from 25 percent to 50 percent, depending on total resort size or proximity to urban environments.

Friedmutter: The casino business is very interesting because it’s open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. The market changes through the seasons, months, and even in the course of a day.

To engage customers, local properties become extensions of the community, with amenities that serve gamers and non-gamers alike. These can include dining venues, marketplaces, theaters, bowling, meeting spaces, bars and pubs and other places people want to return to on a frequent basis.

In regional markets, these amenities expand to include retail districts, sport facilities, and proportionate hotel components for well-needed getaways, while keeping a residential scale and feel.

The integrated resort approach is the best model for large-scale properties, creating memorable, iconic moments that people take away for a lifetime. Theme parks, beaches, shows, arenas, convention centers and world-class retail put anything you desire within reach. That captures customers’ imaginations and creates a returning, loyal fan base.

Hoskens: At local casinos, minimal amenities can work. Great food, great meeting spaces, and great games—it can be that simple for locals.

In more regional markets, you need to complement gaming with amenities like theaters and bowling, some retail, other sports-related venues, and then of course hotels and hotel-related amenities. Drawing people in from farther away—especially for multi-day stays—takes those added attractions.

In the case of large-scale casinos in emerging markets, a standard amenity mix is pretty tried-and-true: convention center, great pool, water feature, cinema, bowling and retail.

Golf is a good differentiator that larger resorts can support. Branded restaurants also come more into play in large-scale venues. An overall amping up of the typical attractions works best for that type of market.

What are the secrets of honing non-gaming amenities?

Bacon: The challenge is not to define products that appeal to one audience or another, but take cues from all generational perspectives and customer demands, and incorporate them in new and exciting ways.

Alessi: Educational group opportunities in culinary arts may set a unique trend. With Las Vegas becoming a food-driven destination, casino resorts should create packages for guests centered on a culinary experience through the eyes of a chef.

Destination clubs are an interesting offering for adventure-driven clients, where they get adrenaline-boosting activities for enjoyment.

Hoskens: As architects, we believe “wow” spaces are still part of the nongaming attraction of resorts. Whether an iconic building element, a dramatic entry experience, or that branded destination within a property, good design gets people interested in and excited about visiting a place.

We’re also seeing more casinos open up their gaming environments to the outdoors—to the pool area or to landscapes and natural views. These can be great differentiators in contrast to the dark, closed-off spaces we typically see. Another trend we’re seeing and have worked with is supplying clean air at the floor rather than ceiling so that the fresh air comes right to the guests.

Schoenfeldt: As professionals, we’ve been in the “place-making” mode for some time with gaming properties. We now recognize that the refinement of space is more important. The essence of what’s happening is on a personal-interaction level; our spaces need to facilitate that interaction.

Younger patrons want contact with people. All day long they work and play on machines and listen to canned music. They were raised in the “Kentucky Fried” system of daycare. They want release from the everyday machine. They yearn for interaction.

The underlying trend is to provide a space that encourages and facilitates the interaction of guests with each other and with the staff.

Sykes: While nightclubs are your traditional focus, day clubs are ever more engaging and rewarding for patron and property. Pool scenes interlaced with nightclub amenities—private access and VIP areas, bottle service, celebrity DJs—are important attributes, as are the character of the space and the whole focus of parties in the sunshine.

Wucherer: We’ve been talking about micro-environments for a while—a cluster of amenities grouped together to satisfy the needs of a specific customer psychographic profile.

In the past, we’d design casinos to encourage the movement of people around the whole property; now I think it’s important to captivate a specific type of customer and engage them in a smaller physical space.

The Millennial Moment

What attracts millennial customers? What makes them stay?

Alessi: Millennials tend to favor a social, more experiential attitude, often spending as much money as Gen Xer’s, yet staying a shorter time. Work and play go hand-in-hand, and often the expectation is for a more communal and convenient environment. Urban settings are popular.

Tech, quality of design, walkability, flexibility, and outdoor living are the key attributes of project amenities.

Bacon: Millennials as a pure demographic segment aren’t currently good casino customers. They don’t have the time, disposable income or propensity to gamble. A recent survey indicated they contribute an average of 5 percent or less of total gaming revenues.

For sure they’ll be better casino customers in 20 years, but it’s impossible to predict what they’ll want then. Meanwhile, the industry seems to be losing sight of a huge, untapped market potential. The next significant customer demographic post-baby boomers is Gen X, which is estimated to be 80 million people. Many of the current sociocultural innovations can be traced to this market segment, not millennials. And they have money to spend.

Bergman: As a generation that grew up with hand-held and console games, millennials have shown less interest in traditional slots and prefer more interactive entertainment such as table games and sports betting. To stay relevant, slot manufacturers are quickly developing skill-based games to meet the demands of a clientele with constant entertainment available on a tablet or mobile phone.

We’re not far from seeing games like those millennials grew up playing against friends in their homes, but in a casino setting and with money at stake. The advantage of this lifelong practice—whether real or perceived—is attractive to millennials. They’re competitive and expect to see their results, especially when compared to those of their friends.

Steelman: Right now millennials are attracted to nightclubs and pools. In the future, we’ll need to design casinos to attract them. These casinos will need to feature new and unique skill-based gaming.

Sykes: Millennials crave social interaction and want to be fully entertained—whether it’s dining out with friends or experiencing the latest interactive games and technologies. The variety of offerings will attract them to the property. Entertainment and engagement will keep them there.

Wucherer: Emerging consumers want to explore, so how casinos package their offerings matters. Static experiences bore them. Remember, they’re part of a society that has lots of information available to them. Finding the right elements and remaining genuine (not gimmicky) is key.

Nightlife. Still as hot as ever? What are the latest trends?

Bergman: Absolutely! In Las Vegas and major urban areas, nightclubs are going strong. World-class DJs establish residencies at the top clubs, and even midweek entertainers draw sizable crowds and long lines. Day clubs are popular during warm weather and offer the opportunity to enjoy a nightclub atmosphere with the bonus of working on a tan. Tops are frequently optional for all guests.

While these high-energy venues are big draws, there will always be a demand for smaller, low-key bars and lounges. Guests have many of the same expectations for their bars as for restaurants. From locally brewed craft beer to house-made syrups and bitters, even booze is elevated to surpass the offerings we once accepted.

Schoenfeldt: Nightlife with live music is growing, and guests are becoming more demanding about their expectations.

One trend we see is higher-quality spirits and designer drinks. While these drinks tend to be more expensive, millennials seem to be satisfied with fewer of them, and prefer a quality non-alcoholic alternative as well. The dress of nightlife patrons has improved. Baby boomers still prefer jeans, but millennials make a night of it, dressing more elegantly. As the father of three millennial daughters, I know—I pay the bills.

Again, quality is the key. This generation saw the rise and fall of MTV, and when they’re out on the town, they want the real thing. An interesting component is the cigar-and-scotch bar, reminiscent of a simpler, more elegant time.

Shulman: Yes, it’s still hot! It’s about the brand of the internationally known DJ, interactive design interlacing with the interactive and personal relationship to the physical environment, and the external stimuli created by one’s senses.

The trend is not about the five traditional senses broken down into their individual siloes, but the combination highlighted by the “sixth sense,” or what can be deemed the X-factor. Millennials want real-time connection to each other and the world around them.

Steelman: Nightlife is not hot. Several casinos have successful nightclubs, but little is translated into the casinos. Most clubs are open three or four nights per week. People have overspent to create temporary attractions for a few. Over 50 nightclubs in Vegas have gone out of business. Today’s high rollers hate nightclubs. Nightclubs put young drunk people into the casino at 5 a.m.

I believe in what Bob Stupak said: “The casino is my nightclub.” When casinos feature skill-based gaming, the younger casino market will be reborn.

What would encourage millennials to share their experiences?

Gordon: Millennials and actually most of today’s demographics live in the moment. Watch the cell phones light up at a concert or at a tourist spot. Everyone needs to share their experiences now. So experiential is a very new part of the casino experience.

Torres: Millennials are unique due to the diversity of the group. They range from 16 to 35, giving them a huge spectrum of mindsets. On one end, you’ve got people in their mid-30s settling into careers and settling down. At the low end, you’re talking to teenagers.

Age gap aside, millennials are driven by experiences and are digital natives, always aware of their options. By staying ahead of digital trends and making them comfortable and engaged, you’ll gain loyalty from this seemingly unsolvable generation.

Food Fight

What are the current trends in F&B? How often do operators change their F&B offerings and why?

Bergman: Dining out is less and less a special occasion and more the norm. Social, unfussy venues are popular with diners of all ages and backgrounds; a space that’s equally approachable for families with small children, young professionals at happy hour and baby boomers ensures that these restaurants remain busy.

A focus on health and social responsibility means sustainably and locally-sourced food is preferred. Chain restaurants with lengthy menus are losing ground to one-off venues featuring fewer dishes that allow the freshness and quality of ingredients and skill of the chef to shine.

Friedmutter: The perceived value of food and beverage is the same as it was in the old-school casino world. Customers want variety, quality, and great service for the best price.

Gaming properties need to stay on top of their business by assessing the market and giving the best they can. You have to have the exact number of blueberries in every muffin!

Staying current and keeping up with trends is paramount to a property. Celebrity dining, healthy options and farm-to table are all in vogue.

Hoskens: Brand-name franchises in casinos continue to be the trend. We’re also seeing a shift towards more food markets that feature display cooking and presentations and more branded elements than traditional food courts or buffets.

We’ve noticed that as operators renovate and remodel their casinos, they’re totally changing their food venues to offer the latest concepts and brands.

Shulman: Trending right now: upscale, fast-casual, deconstructed food, farm-to-table organics, and mostly being part of the experience.

People don’t want to leave the action for a meal. The food experience should be part of the overall casino experience, not hidden in a dark corner. Staying relevant isn’t about the real estate, it’s about the offering, the menu, the event and the see-and-be-seen culture.

Sykes: Within food and beverage trends, alcohol is leading the charge. In the last few years, more beer-focused F&B concepts have emerged. Other trends we’ve observed include more marketplace food/farm-to-table, wine bars and beverage options, and coffee shops and lounges that offer small plates and high-end cocktails, craft beers, and fine wine and whiskey selections.

Restaurants tied to celebrity chefs and other strong brands are also trending right now.

Social Interaction

How do your clients use social media to attract customers?

Bacon: To enhance its online customer service, our client the Sycuan Tribe and Sycuan Casino strengthened their social media communication on Twitter and Facebook. They’ve leveraged cutting-edge cloud technologies to design and develop the gaming industry’s first truly engaging and responsive mobile application for iPhone and Android users. The app provides quick and easy access to important information about entertainment events, dining options and personal club accounts, and lets patrons participate in exclusive offers and rewards.

It’s visually inclusive of younger and older generations. Their customers consistently say the new phone app is a major driver in where they decide to game.

Bergman: BWA recently completed a tribal casino bar centered entirely on social media engagement.

From the name of the venue to the drinks on the menu, every aspect was designed to be shared. When patrons use certain hashtags on social media sites, their posts are shown in real time on screens throughout the bar. Gone are the days of “no photos in the casino.” Properties today know that a lack of social media presence means they’re out of touch.

Friedmutter: Many of our clients are using social media as a way to create a “pre-opening” fan base for their properties.

Projects are sharing what used to be secret industry information: live construction cams, renderings, naming, branding, sneak peeks of interiors, key employee profiles and live webcasts, community outreach, giveaways, employment opportunities—the list is endless! Starting early to raise awareness of the brand and build excitement has effectively created customers before the doors even open.

Shulman: Social media is the event journal of millennial life. It’s not about inventing new social platforms but reinventing the physical space though the revolving reinvention of digital experience. It’s also not about verbal bragging rights. It’s about global social credit.

Wucherer: In this day and age, guests are looking for their 15 minutes of fame, 15 seconds at a time. Providing a variety of opportunities for shareable moments is most certainly the goal.

Operators are also using their own social pages to promote the latest and upcoming events. This stream of conversations from consumers helps properties understand what’s resonating and what’s not, and refine their environments/events/experiences to meet and exceed consumer expectations.

What social media platforms do you find most effective? How do you use them to drive engagement, customer acquisition and retention?

Gordon: Rymax has been in front of the revenue shift because we saw that ancillary services created a greater revenue stream than gaming. This was due to the aging of the boomers and the emergence of the millennials.

We took an in-depth look at all social media so we could speak to the broadest possible audience. Casino promotions and calls-to-action via various sites are important, but creating a social network that reinforces the attributes of the casino and its promotions through actual players is paramount.

Traditional social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram drive engagement, customer acquisition and retention. Facebook is consistently the most successful platform to run marketing campaigns and drive engagement through contests and promotions. It’s great to connect current and potential clients with the events and activities on our main web page or blog. But Facebook is starting to be less of a force for the younger demographic, and that demographic is quick to seize on opportunities at the spur of a moment.

Social media is a vital proponent of the marketing strategy. It provides invaluable data about what players like, don’t like and want to see more of. It lets us tailor our programs to fit the targeted audience and successfully promote, implement and maintain our programs in the industry.

Torres: If you ask most businesses, they’ll say Facebook is a huge factor in digital marketing success. We’re no different. Some look at Facebook as a simple social network, but it’s much more than that. With the ability to target posts and ads using an exhaustive list of demographic and psychographic attributes, you can be sure you’re getting your message in front of the correct audience for maximum effectiveness. This helps not only engagement but loyalty, creating brand ambassadors to advocate for your brand.

What impact do rating sites like TripAdvisor and Yelp! have on your clients’ decision-making?

Gordon: We live in a new world where rating sites need to be looked at carefully. If a service is provided to 1,000 people and they’re all satisfied, the percentage of people from that group who will take the time to offer a review is fairly low. Their expectations were met, and they were satisfied.

Get one or two people in that group who had a bad experience or felt less appreciated, and the probability of them saying something negative increases. Negative reviews can come from “trolls,” the competition, or from a customer’s legitimate feeling that they were not satisfied. We stress that our clients always look for promotions that initiate trial. Let players experience and decide for themselves.

Recommendations from peers, friends and coworkers are very powerful. If there’s a common thread of discontent, it can be addressed. Rating sites serve an important function, but should not be the only criteria for a player to make a decision.

Torres: Review sites are the new word-of-mouth advertising. With such a large population of online users and reviewers, a bad review on Yelp!, TripAdvisor or a community forum could devastate your business.

Maintaining a positive image on these forums is essential to a thriving business these days.

Ace in the Hole

Bigger isn’t always better—except in Las Vegas. That’s where Dallas-based Topgolf and YWS International developed an extraordinary “golftainment” center spanning four levels and 115,000 square feet on eight acres adjacent to MGM Grand.

“The driving range gives the feeling of a fresh outdoor environment in the desert,” says Holly Casswell, YWS senior interior designer.

Interior and exterior seamlessly connect, allowing guests to migrate from golf bays and pools to bars to cozy lounging niches. A mobile Sports Book in the Yard lets fans enjoy the action on giant HDTVs. The Yard is also home to Topgolf’s main entertainment venue, which showcases local and national acts.

The greatest challenge: deciding what to do first. Play interactive golf hitting micro-chipped golf balls onto an expansive green? Explore the pools, retail shop or Callaway Fitting Studio? Visit the VIP suites or cabanas? Or simply enjoy the views in sleek, modernist golf bays with seating for up to six friends?

This is Topgolf “Vegas-ized”—an upscale, playful venue unique to the Strip.

For more information, visit ywsinternational.com.

Cheers!

Your casino’s sensational. Your hotel rooms are out of this world. But for positive buzz, repeat business and diehard customer loyalty, you’d better have a great bar.

When the San Manuel Indians undertook a $50 million renovation of their San Manuel Indian Bingo & Casino near San Bernardino, California, the bar underwent a total makeover, expanding occupancy, gaming and entertainment and transforming it into a dramatic centerpiece visible throughout the casino floor.

With 20 table-top video poker terminals, three blackjack tables and seating for 70, the memorably named Bar Bar Bar designed by Thalden Boyd Emery Architects extends and enlivens the casino floor, giving guests a place to relax, play, sample artisan cocktails and craft beers and observe all the action.

The bar features a dazzling light show in which layered, internally lit leaves create a glowing overhead canopy. Color-shifting special effects can be modified for holidays and other special occasions. Bar Bar Bar gets high marks for its vibrant design, friendly vibe and can’t-miss location.

For more information, visit tbe.com.

Fast, Fresh & 24/7

Casino resorts are known for unlimited dining choices, from high-end restaurants to all-you-can-eat buffets. But when your guests crave a fast, filling meal on the go, Subway is a natural choice.
        
Customers love the hearty, healthy food and speedy service. Casinos value the internationally known brand, strong corporate support and Subway’s ability to turn even small spaces into profit centers.  
   
Perhaps most importantly, the restaurants are open 24 hours, says franchise owner Donna Curry, who operates locations in 22 Las Vegas casinos. “When other restaurants and nightclubs close, we serve guests who want a bite to eat in the wee hours,” Curry says. “Guests who want to grab a sandwich and get back to the gaming table choose Subway.”
   
Subway restaurants succeed because they fill a need—quickly and deliciously. Their sandwiches are made to order with fresh produce, lean meats and cheeses and other healthy ingredients on fresh-baked bread. In 2012, the American Heart Association chose Subway as the first restaurant chain to display its Heart-Check Meal Certification logo on selected meals.
   
As the undisputed leader in fast, healthy food, Subway is a winning bet for casinos.
  
For more information, visit subway.com.

Lobbying for Change

Talk about sophisticated marketing.    

When the Solaire Resort & Casino opened in Manila in 2013, Bloomberry Resorts Corp. and Steelman Partners took an innovative approach to the lavish $1 billion-plus resort, the first of four to be developed in the capital’s Entertainment City.
   
A distinctive “stratified” design featured lobbies and entryways for each of four guest segments, with games, restaurants and bars tailored to each customer category. The approach was and is unique to Solaire.
   
“Today, we design casinos into distinctive segments,” explains architect and Steelman Partners CEO Paul Steelman. “In the near future, the casino will be designed in segments that allow a millennial to have a unique experience too. That experience will not be able to cohabitate with a 60-year-old slot player.”
   
As for results, the numbers don’t lie. In July, Entertainment City resorts recorded overall gross gaming revenue of PHP7.2 billion (US$155 million), up 25 percent year-on-year for the sector’s third best month ever.
   
“Casinos are changing drastically in almost every way, from planning to design to operations to marketing,” notes Steelman. “It’s a whole new world.”

For more information, visit steelmanpartners.com.

The Suite Life

When SOSH Architects designed the new hotel tower at the Scarlet Pearl Casino Resort in D’Iberville, Mississippi, they ensured that each guest room had unobstructed views of the Gulf Coast.

Light and air stream in through floor-to-ceiling glazing. Ceiling heights top out at nine feet to maximize the views and fill the rooms with natural light, but blackout drapes ensure a restful night’s sleep.

Lavish guestroom amenities include natural millwork, polished onyx countertops and California king-sized beds with exquisite leather headboards. Deluxe suites feature a living room and dining area that seats four.

The spa-like baths feature Italian porcelain tile, walk-in showers with recessed LED cove lighting, wall-to-wall vanities in a driftwood tint, and veneer silver travertine countertops. Suites include drop-in bubble tubs with Italian mosaic relief porcelain tile and luxurious gold tub decks.

The suite level includes a Concierge Lounge, where guests can enjoy those panoramic views under a “star-lit sky” ceiling feature.

Just say, “Ahhh…”

For more information, visit sosharch.com.

Where Business Meets Intelligence

In the age of Big Data, casinos capture more customer information than ever before: a landslide of intelligence on guest behaviors, preferences, spend, receptiveness to special offers, etc.

But data without analysis is nothing but noise. In a competitive industry, gathering customer data is just the first step in a business strategy that defends a property’s market position, builds customer loyalty and beats the competition.

The Atlanta-based Rainmaker Group mines those mountains of data, sifts out value and develops plans of action that produce meaningful, measurable results. Among its proven proprietary solutions:

  • guestrev, to forecast room demand and set rates based on total customer value
  • grouprev, to optimize rates for group business  
  • revcaster, to maximize ADR and drive profitability
  • revintel, a web-based platform that gathers all the information that matters to revenue management and places it at your fingertips

Rainmaker distills complex datasets from multiple sources and turns them into highly prescriptive recommendations and actionable insights.

So put Rainmaker on the case. And put your data to work.

For more information, visit letitrain.com.

Furnished to Perfection

Four stars. Five diamonds. Two thumbs up.

When it comes to hotel accommodations, the ratings that matter most are those you get from your guests. That means rooms and suites that aren’t just stylish and comfortable but exceptional, with furniture, fixtures and equipment that meet your high standards—and theirs.

Purchasing Management International is the industry’s premier FF&E and OS&E purchasing company. With extensive experience in large luxury projects, PMI works with designers, architects and owners to offer the accuracy, integrity and buying power needed for demanding resort projects.

The company has purchased and installed more than $2 billion in furnishings, operating equipment and systems at Bellagio, Tropicana, Caesars Palace, MGM Grand, Harrah’s, Treasure Island, Mirage, Hard Rock and Station Casinos’ Red Rock Resort. Beyond Vegas, PMI has worked on casinos from east to west including Borgata, Harrah’s Cherokee, Wind Creek Casino, Wild Horse Pass Casino and Sandia Casino.

PMI offers a seasoned staff, deep vendor knowledge and checks and balances like a separate expediting department that controls custom approvals, deliveries and final delivery costs.

For the operator, that means projects that are completed on budget, on time, every time. For guests, that means opening the door to an extraordinary experience.

For more information, visit pmiconnect.com.

VIP Seating

Smart casino operators know every customer is a VIP whose comfort comes first. That starts with seating. For more than 20 years, Patir Casino Seating has created premier seating for the casino and hospitality industries.

“Player seating is subject to constant wear and tear,” says Natalie Heldt, sales director for the firm’s Las Vegas branch. “It must be manufactured according to the highest quality standards with fabrics that are exceptionally robust. Comfort has a direct influence on the length of stay at the machine.”

Patir seating is known for its beauty, function and flexibility. Consider the recent Noblesse Collection, with quality finishes and accessories including:

  • Stylish metal hand-pulls for easy movement
  • Elegant quilted patterns on backrest covers
  • High-gloss mahogany finish on the collection’s wooden chairs
  • An innovative new material, Depar, with improved flexing endurance, tear strength and color fastness

Patir can customize seating from existing bases and upper seating components, or create exclusive seating just for your property.

Patir casino seating makes the difference—on the floor and in the bottom line.

For more information, visit patirseating.com.

Paradise Found

When the 5 million Pechanga Resort & Casino expansion is completed in December 2017, it will bring a veritable Garden of Eden to Southern California’s Temecula Valley.

Lifescapes International—the creator of iconic landscapes at the Bellagio, Wynn and Venetian hotels, among others—was selected to design the resort landscaping and create a sumptuous pool area spanning four full acres.

Flowers, grasses and shrubbery will flourish throughout the property, from a lush rooftop garden to secluded private gardens in a bi-level stand-alone spa. Guests will stroll along meandering pathways edged with greenery and paved with cobblestone accents. The Lifescapes team will emphasize landscape elements native to the valley including live oaks, sycamores and pepper trees.

Ready for a dip? The pool area will include not one, not two, but eight fabulous pools including five hydrotherapy pools, a family-friendly pool with water slides and a lagoon-style pool. The pool area will also feature a swim-up bar, fire pits and cabanas for shade, relaxation and entertaining. It’s a fitting addition to the resort, which has earned AAA’s Four Diamond rating since 2002.

For more information, visit lifescapesintl.com.

 

Invitation to the Dance

When guests enter the newly expanded Wind Creek Casino and Hotel in Wetumpka, Alabama, they’re greeted by an overhead “sky of ribbons” that unfurls throughout the resort’s lower level, leading them on a journey of discovery.

Starting in the hotel lobby, the design treatment by Hnedak Bobo Group echoes the ebb and flow of wind and water along the nearby Coosa River. Designers also drew inspiration from a native ribbon dance to create the concept, which comes to life in a curving, shimmering pattern of lighting elements. Shifting colors illuminate the hanging sheer metallic mesh fabrics and crystal, creating a feeling of vibrant motion.

The sky of ribbons and custom flooring patterns direct guests to the casino, where the ribbons strengthen in mass along the ceiling plane, curving and intertwining around the resort’s showpiece: a dazzling 360-degree aquarium center bar.

It’s intriguing. It’s artful. And it leads guests naturally and intuitively on a tour of the resort’s many attractions.

For more information, visit hbginc.com.

Best Seats in the House

When the Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians expanded the gaming floor of their Alpine, California casino in 2015, they added 2,500 new slots requiring 2,500 new chairs. For Rich Marino, VP of slot operations, there was little question which firm would provide the seating: Gasser Chair Company.

“Many companies build a beautiful chair, but my concern is functionality,” says Marino. “Gasser chairs are the most durable and high-quality.” With a patented Halo circular base that “floats” across the carpet, the chairs “move like a dream.”

Because Gasser is a manufacturer, it can craft custom designs like its famous “corset” chairs for the Bellagio with laces crisscrossing the back. The company even makes its own foam, and can adjust the firmness to meet the needs of each operator.

The Viejas team chose seating with a wear-resistant, textured fabric, gleaming bronze accents and rich hues that complement the casino colors. “Our customers immediately loved them,” says Marino.

Beautifully engineered and built to last, Gasser chairs don’t merely perform. They dazzle.

For more information, visit gasserchair.com.

The Comfort Zone

Gary Platt Manufacturing produces seating exclusively for casinos including slots, table games, poker, bar-top and bingo. The company was founded on the concept that a high-quality, more comfortable chair would increase players’ time on device, and as a result, boost casino revenues.
   
In the business since 1996, the company relocated from Southern California to Reno in 1999. It supplies IGT, Scientific Games, Aristocrat, Everi, Aruze and Konami with seating for all their participation games. As a result, Gary Platt seating is in virtually every casino in the North America.
   
The company’s proprietary foam, which is the heart of the chair, is unique in the industry. The foam is injection-molded with built-in lumbar support and other contours to fit the human form.
   
The seat has a waterfall front edge to relieve stress on the player’s legs. The wood is also fully contoured to match the foam, ensuring that neither will break down over time. Moreover, Gary Platt’s chair frames incorporate slider glides that make the chair easy to move and more user-friendly.
   
For comfort and innovation, operators rely on the only chair manufacturer that focuses exclusively on gaming chairs for the casino market, Gary Platt Manufacturing.
  
For more information, visit garyplatt.com.

Bedazzled

It may be one of the most talked-about attractions in Macau: the spectacular “Fortune Diamond” show in the lobby of Galaxy Macau.
    
The display was created by Entertainment Design Corp., the firm behind James Cameron’s Titanic Experience at Fox Studios Sydney and Nicki Minaj’s 2015 Pinkprint World Tour, among other extravagant productions.
    
During the show, the massive, glittering Fortune Diamond arises from a cascading water fountain and hovers in air, its facets seeming to change in color and reflectivity before it submerges once more. The gem symbolizes abiding prosperity—a fitting icon for the world’s No. 1 gaming destination.
    
Casino Style asked Entertainment Design Corp. CEO Alex Calle to share a few of his creative secrets.

Casino Style: What technical challenges came with creating the Fortune Diamond?
Alex Calle: It was one of those projects where we pitched the idea during a creative charrette and it immediately landed. The sentence started with “What if…?” and the next thing we knew, we were building a show that magically revealed an eight-meter diamond floating in the middle of the main lobby water feature.
    
One of the biggest challenges was to make a diamond with the qualities of a real diamond on a grand scale. We did mock-up after mock-up, testing mirror boxes in different configurations, testing inner facet reflections, mirror quality, finish—and then, testing how to light such a fantastic icon.

CS: How did you create the special effects?
AC: We turned to our trusted film/television vendor relationships to help create these magical moments. They bring their long history in movie magic to help problem-solve efforts in our work—on a daily basis.

CS: Start to finish, how long did it take?
AC: Around 14 months from concept through design development, with eternal sketches, concepts and models until we settled on the perfect form to illustrate our core narrative.

CS: So the design relates a story?
AC: Absolutely. We pride ourselves as being storytellers, no matter the project. Working with Galaxy Vice Chairman Francis Lui, we established that we wanted guests to have a sense of fortune. Our hope was to make Galaxy Macau the luckiest place on the Cotai Strip.

For more information, visit entdesign.com.

Natural Splendor

When Cuningham Group Architecture designed the Harrah’s Cherokee Valley River Casino in North Carolina, it didn’t fall back on the typical Appalachian rustic style (exposed beams, stacked stone, carved totems, et al.).

The structure emerges from the forest through bold vertical lines, with angled roof planes that echo the undulating terrain of the Smoky Mountains. Dappled multi-hued patterns on the façade are inspired by the forest canopy. Tall, vertical windows allow views in and out of the Great Hall and connect the activity inside with the landscape outdoors.

“There’s a sense that this building belongs here—it’s not just a box plunked down on the landscape,” lead architect Sam Olbekson told the Smoky Mountain News.

A member of the White Earth Band of Minnesota Chippewa, Olbekson was uniquely qualified to lead the project. “I had the lens of my own experience of a native person living in a modern world and the duality of that,” he said.

The resort, which opened in September 2015, is both contemporary and timeless—and as alive as the hills that surround it.

For more information, visit cuningham.com.