BrandingWire: Estes Park

Derrick DayeJuly 9, 20073 min

This month the BrandingWire Team has set its sights on Place Branding.

The resort town of Estes Park, Colorado is our focus.

Estes Park may be new to you – it was to me. This brief will give you a full sense of Estes Park. As is the spirit of BrandingWire, each month members share their perspectives on how to help strengthen the chosen brand.

Place Brands
It’s clear that the strongest place brands are positioned to be relevant, unique and compelling and are built by community leaders, stakeholders, and organizations that promote the competitive advantage by speaking with a unified voice. Economic Development Organizations, Convention and Visitor Bureaus, Chambers of Commerce, and Government bodies are all in synch with each other when communicating the brand promise.

The community delivers on the promise because it’s who they really are.

The Estes Park Brand
As I’ve stepped closer to Estes Park I like what I see. It seems like an inviting place with much potential. Like every brand, Estes Park has its strengths and weaknesses. Based on the brief I propose these ideas:

Promote Local Economic Strength
Change the economic game with Estes Park Evergreens – the currency, not the trees. There are a handful of municipalities in the United States that have successful currency systems. Like these municipalities, Estes Park would strengthen its economy through manufacture and circulation of its own currency – keeping money local, promoting community self-reliance, community participation and controlling more of their economy than they do now. Ithaca, New York and South Berkshire Massachusetts offer prime examples of this system at work.

Currency Promotions
Recognize out-of-state drivers licenses or passports as VIP cards, making holders eligible for more ‘Evergreens’ on the dollar or add on value such as a dinner or a night’s stay depending on the volume of dollars exchanged to Evergreens. This idea could extend to airline ticket stubs and car rental agreements. Promotions involving Estes Park currency where an ‘Evergreen’ = $1.10 will provide a proof-point that money goes further in Estes Park, a perception that now holds in comparison to competing ski-resort towns.

Airport Advantage
Estes Park is closer than any of its competitors to Denver’s airport. This advantage can be leveraged for the traveler segment through strong and highly visible partnerships with the airport and car rental companies. A ‘Gateway Gate’ would help put Estes Park in the consideration set for travelers. Sponsoring airline ticket jackets, baggage carousels would also help create awareness for this featured ‘first-stop’ in a Rocky Mountain experience.

Co-marketing
Estes Park has always been a summer destination. This is what Estes Park is known for and what it can defend. Presumably it is at a major disadvantage in competing with winter destinations it deems competition. One strategy is getting more out of its top producer – summer. Partner with ski-resort towns promoting them as a winter option while they promote Estes Park as a summer destination. Find mutually beneficial ways to play off each other’s strengths.

Gateway Marketing
For more than a century Estes Park has been seen as a gateway. What other gateway destinations are in this region of the U.S.? The entire country? Reach out to those other destinations and form an alliance that works to create awareness for each.

Green Branding
Global Warming is not a fad or twisted science it’s a real world fact that will be top of mind until we move to a new planet. Estes Park may find a leadership role under a green flag. What if all merchants went green and Estes Park became a destination of green living and green ideas? Beyond preserving the lifeblood of its existence what new business could it attract? What events could be held there? What companies would want to co-brand with Estes Park?

These green thoughts stem from this question: What can Estes Park be first in? The key is in finding something it can be first in and rallying the community around it.

Brand Building on the Internet
Consumers will tell you – “if I can’t find you on the Internet you don’t exist”. A robust online experience with a search engine optimization strategy would serve Estes Park. Can I interact with Orbitz through Estes Park website and buy a ticket? Help them find and get to you. Bring them closer.

What ideas can you share for Estes Park?

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7 comments

  • Lewis Green

    July 9, 2007 at 3:15 pm

    Derrick,

    It was worth the wait. Great ideas, especially promoting a local currency and partnering with others. Very smart stuff.

  • Steve Woodruff

    July 9, 2007 at 3:57 pm

    Very creative stuff, Derrick! Evergreen currency is a great way to stand out with a uniquely humorous twist, and provide value at the same time.

  • Douglas Karr

    July 9, 2007 at 4:04 pm

    My favorite place on Earth! Fall River, the Sombrero Ranch, the Glass Blower, Stanley Hotel…. wow! I hope you get a few business trips in!

    If I were Estes Park I would work hard to combine the disparate web sites into centralized blog of sorts. I can’t think of anyone who visited who wasn’t amazed at how beautiful it is.

    Put people like me to work for you, Estes Park… use social media to your advantage. Let site visitors meet your business owners and have them talk about their businesses through blogs.

    Did you know there are 12,500 images on Flickr tagged with “Estes Park”?
    http://www.flickr.com/search/?w=all&q=%22estes+park%22&m=text

    How’s that for a start!
    Doug

  • Valeria Maltoni

    July 9, 2007 at 4:44 pm

    Derrick:

    Passed with flying colors! Kidding. Well, one color — green. I like the idea of keeping the business local.

    We have a restaurant here in Philadelphia that has done just that — and it has changed the game for a lot of local and regional businesses. It’s called The White Dog Cafe’. The owner, Judy Wicks, won the lifetime achievement award at this year’s sustainability awards. When you have such magnetism between local businesses, everyone wins.

    I also thought of partnering with the airlines… specifically Delta in a tie in with Southern Living lifestyles. I stayed away once I reminded myself of the last two trips I had.

  • Martin Jelsema

    July 9, 2007 at 6:50 pm

    Derrick:

    I really think you’ve hit a really responsive chord that could energize and unite the residents of Estes Park. As you know they’re older and well educated for the most part. And they choose to live where they can still experience wilderness and nature. A major “greening” project or event sponsored by the town could well be the unifying thread the town now lacks. With inspired leadership, this could be the linchpin to a new economic era for Estes Park based on the preservation and/or restoration of the natural environment.

    Martin

  • Kevin Dugan

    July 10, 2007 at 9:32 pm

    The smart simplicity of your first three ideas are inspiring. Well done!

  • Derrick Daye

    July 10, 2007 at 11:14 pm

    Thanks for your comments. Many powerful ideas have come out of the http://www.brandingwire.com collaboration.

    I would love to see the currency idea here at work in the poorest city in the U.S. – Camden, New Jersey. I think it could have a greater impact considering their challenges.

    Derrick

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