Is your youth hockey program battling to reverse a down-turn in participation? We're here to help. Behind every good fighter, is a good trainer. In your corner, is skilled and seasoned
hockey mom, Kristin Fleet Haag, CPA Treasurer, with Rome Youth Hockey
Association. Rome's program has seen a remarkable turnaround, thanks to a strategy of working as a team to grow their teams.
How to Grow The Game
By Kristin Fleet Haag
We are located in
Back in 2008-2009 our City
completed a $3.0 million renovation on our facility - the Bill Fleet Rink at
the John F. Kennedy Civic Arena. Shortly
after that our numbers declined pretty drastically.
Our learn to skate or
initiation program numbers decreased from over 100 skaters to just 60
skaters. Of course, that is the feeder
program to our higher levels. We knew we
had to take action.
I joined our board in 2012,
when my son who was going to be a second year Pee Wee, was not going to have a
travel team to play on. By the time the
season actually rolled around, there was no house team either. My youngest boy had just started in the learn
to skate program as well. At that point,
I knew I needed to do something. I
joined the board. My dad, who is a
lifetime member, also was actively involved.
We held meetings with community members and hockey folks to brain storm
how to get our numbers up.
Keys to Victory
* Hired a marketing firm and launched a print
and media campaign. It was expensive
(around $5,000), but well worth the investment.
Our IP numbers grew back to over 100 that year. We continue to run the
campaign each year. We used our hometown
NHL/AHL Stars Tim and Tom Sestito in the commercials for us.
* Worked with our City to reduce our ice
fees. My first year - I negotiated a
temporary reduction. The second year, I
negotiated a permanent reduction. We
went from an average of $105 per hour to $85 per hour. If our ice fees are lower, we can lower our
reg fees, and increase volume....
* We sold ourselves to the community. We started attending community events
(ie. Honor America Day Parade, Home Show, Dog
Show). Also, we made our ice slots more
working parent friendly. Some teams used
to practice at 6:00 am before school. We
rearranged the ice slots so that all practices started after 5:00 pm. We also sold our great coaching staff!
* My second year, we wanted a better handle on
our numbers, so we offered an early registration discount at 25-30%
savings. My third year, we reduced even
further. We are now arguably the lowest
price shop in town...Squirt and up are at $425, Mites at $215, and Learn to
Skate at $160. This year we launched our
online registration process.
* Tournaments - we invested time and sweat
equity into these. My first year on
there was no Mite Tournament. Last year
we hosted a Mite Tournament with 18 teams, this year we had 26 teams with over
310 kids.
* We rebranded ourselves. Changed our colors, logo, and new jerseys (we don't
charge our members). One of our board
members wrote a grant. He secured
$22,000 for the purchase of new
jerseys .
* This year we purchased cross-ice dividers,
partnering with our City. Also, we
applied for USA Hockey's grow the game grant, which I believe we will secure
the funding.
We are a 501C3 which is
pretty important when looking to secure grant funding.
Best of luck to you and your
organization!
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