It is now playoff time in baseball, with Tuesdays Twins-Tigers winner take all game getting fans started. The Los Angeles Dodgers, however, had the luxury of something the teams that battled to the wire didn’t have…the luxury of time. Yes they struggled and almost blew the division lead to the Rockies in the last week, but Joe Torre's team will be in the postseason, and coming down the stretch used that time to get out and find new ways to engage fans especially with the Angels also heading to the postseason. Now have the Dodgers had to struggle to sell tickets and gain brand recognitio. No, they remain one of the iconic draws in MLB. However, their brand development folks, led by people like Dennis Mannion and Charles Steinberg, have found ways to make it grow, just like Steinberg did with the Red Sox before he moved west. Recent case in point, the Dodgers took the ticket and memorabilia item to the streets, by using the neighborhood ice cream truck model and turning it into a door to door ticket selling truck. It was a very smart move in a region that is spread so wide and not connected by mass transportation…a way to bring the Dodgers brand literally to the doorsteps of each community with a vehicle that people can relate to as it has been seen in their neighborhoods countless times before. It is not the “fan van” that many teams use for community and traditional field marketing. It looks different and offers a different product and leaves a solid branding impression, whether it sells tickets on the spot or not. Nice piece of innovative and simple branding that resonates with the community in a very unique way. An initiative that is surely going to be copied and expanded on.
Some other good reads…The Washington Post's Mike Wise had a great profile of Capitals owner Ted Leonsis…the New York Post had a good q and a with the UFC's Dana White… and Crain's Chicago's Ed Sherman offers up his views on why the Windy City should try again for the Olympics…