For once we're starting to market our state to other markets like Dallas, Little Rock, Kansas City, etc. It's about time! I kind of think the OklaCool, OklaSoul and OklaModern themes are corny, but at least we're advertising our state finally. I've been waiting for this for years.
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"O-K-L-A sends tourists state's way
By Ryan McNeill
The Oklahoman
As the most popular travel period of the year approaches, state tourism officials are unveiling the next phase of an advertising blitz aimed at increasing in-state travel and luring visitors from nearby states. Oklahoma parks and visitor numbers
Most visited
1. Lake Murray: 1.94 million
2. Lake Texoma: 1.85 million
3. Robbers Cave: 1.20 million
4. Beavers Bend: 1.15 million
5. Lake Thunderbird: 1.03 million
Least visited
1. Black Mesa: 19,479
2. Alabaster: 24,397
3. Beaver Dunes: 36,245
4. Natural Falls/Lake Eucha: 40,980
5. Walnut Creek: 64,995
Most profitable in 2004
1. Beavers Bend: $2.11 million
2. Lake Murray: $1.19 million
3. Robbers Cave: $1.13 million
4. Little Sahara: $880,000
5. Lake Tenkiller: $550,000
The state Tourism Department will spend $2.8 million this fiscal year, including about $2 million on TV and print advertising as part of the OKLA-Modern campaign.
The campaign, in its second year, is credited with enhancing interest in Oklahoma as a tourist destination.
Television commercials feature Oklahoma City, Tulsa, rural areas and the 400-mile stretch of State Highway 66.
Words like OklaCool, OklaSoul and OklaModern are superimposed on quick-moving clips of scenery and people as upbeat music plays.
"We tried to merge 'Okla' with all the words you wouldn't expect to associate with Oklahoma," said Robb Gray, state Tourism Department executive director, who said Oklahoma is the only English word that begins with O-K-L-A.
"They are words people would not expect to see with Oklahoma -- like cool, modern or grand -- but we are all those things."
Tourism officials are buying time in 13 TV markets including Dallas-Ft. Worth, Kansas City, Wichita, Little Rock and Amarillo. The ads will also appear on Tulsa and Oklahoma City TV stations.
About 80 percent of the money will buy advertising outside Oklahoma, where viewers "are being flooded with our commercials," Gray said. He said the ads are so popular, some TV stations are inserting the commercials into open spots for free.
The commercials are an attempt to grab a bigger piece of what Travel Industry Association of America researchers say is a $593 billion a year industry.
Destinations
One Tulsa commerical shows a newly married couple leaving the landmark Boston Avenue United Methodist Church. The art deco-themed skyline of Tulsa and Cain's Ballroom are shown as a narrator encourages visitors to enjoy "the urban vibrations of Tulsa."
The Oklahoma City version features an aerial fly-over of Bricktown and downtown and a saxophone player in Deep Deuce as a narrator tells viewers to seek out "the urban reinvention of Oklahoma City." Clips of the Oklahoma City Museum of Art and the state Capitol complex are included.
A common theme is the rural landscape that surrounds both cities, promoting "the most changing landscape in America."
The Travel Industry Association reports most U.S. travelers want shopping, outdoor recreation and the sights of rural and urban landmarks.
The commercials feature all those activities.
The campaign is an expansion from last year, when only Oklahoma City and Tulsa were featured in two commercials, Gray said.
Funding
Money for the commercials, which were created through a $4.4 million annual contract with Oklahoma City-based advertising firm Ackerman McQueen, comes from a one-tenth of 1 percent tax on gross receipts from tourism-related industries. Bids for the next advertising contract are now being accepted, Gray said.
The contract includes money for airtime, production and even music, which was created by Siren Cues, the company involved with advertising for Lord of the Rings and the Harry Potter movies. Tourism officials sought a diverse score, which includes elements of rock, jazz, country and American Indian music.
After the debut of the OKLA-Modern campaign last year, travel inquiries increased 50 percent, and Gray said independent research shows the commercials caused a 60 percent increase in people motivated to visit Oklahoma.
Gray said the advertising campaign caused $26 million in direct spending in Oklahoma, which is about $12.30 for every $1 spent on advertising in 2004. "
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