Thursday, January 12, 2012

The 'Land of Enchantment' Needs a Lift

What do you think – is New Mexico a well-kept secret? What would your state slogan be?

New Mexico calls itself the Land of Enchantment. But the spell isn't working all that well.

Overnight tourist trips in New Mexico have dropped by nearly 10% in the past three years, and spending on everything from souvenir magnets to turquoise jewelry fell by hundreds of millions of dollars.

When state tourism officials convened focus groups in Chicago, Houston and Los Angeles to ask prospective travelers about their perceptions of New Mexico, the same depressing descriptions kept cropping up: "Arid." "Barren." "Dull."

Also: "Close to Arizona."

So state officials are launching a $2.5 million effort to rebrand New Mexico as a place of charm and character, adventure, excitement—and really good green chili cheeseburgers. As a model, the state is looking north to Colorado, which routinely gets praised in focus groups as "majestic," "glorious" and "heavenly."

But rebranding a state can be a risky proposition. New Jersey hired a consultant a few years ago to come up with a new tourism slogan. The result? "New Jersey: We'll Win You Over." That may have been an improvement over its 1970s tagline, "New Jersey's Got It," which inspired innumerable jokes about venereal disease. But state officials thought "We'll Win You Over" sounded defensive and spiked the campaign.

New Mexico, too, has had some marketing misfires. One recent come-hither campaign played off conspiracy theories about UFO landings in Roswell, N.M., and featured bug-eyed green aliens. The state's Rose Parade float in 2008 featured the creatures.

REBRAND

By Jessica Austerlitz - Art at a gallery in Santa Fe.

"I don't know that it resonated," said Veronica Valencia, who recently joined the Tourism Department as marketing director.

The department also has a new tourism secretary, Monique Jacobson, who comes to Santa Fe fresh off a decade spent marketing PepsiCo Inc. brands such as Gatorade and Quaker Oats.

The way Ms. Jacobson sees it, New Mexico ought to be an easier sell than warm porridge.

"Oatmeal was tough because people knew they didn't like the texture," Ms. Jacobson said. "With New Mexico, it's not an issue of people not liking what we have to offer. It's a question of them not knowing what we have to offer."

Indeed, the focus group members seemed clueless about New Mexico, which is celebrating its centennial. It entered the union as the 47th state on Jan. 6, 1912. Yet several focus group members wondered aloud whether they needed passports to visit. Others, apparently confusing Albuquerque with Acapulco, said they had heard good things about the landlocked state's beaches.

Even some tourists who ventured into New Mexico over the holidays had low expectations. Kamran Mogharreban, who is 57, came from southern Illinois to visit his brother—and was surprised to find himself enjoying touring museums in Albuquerque, shopping in Santa Fe and taking the commuter rail that zips between the two cities. It wasn't at all what he had expected of New Mexico. "I thought it would be more backward," Mr. Mogharreban said.

The tourism department hasn't yet announced its new slogan, but Ms. Jacobson says it will be built around the premise that New Mexico offers visitors "adventure steeped in culture."

A key goal: attracting younger families. State figures show 24% of tourists who stay overnight in New Mexico are 65 or older—a higher proportion than in nearby Arizona, Colorado and Utah, where on average 17% of overnight visitors are senior citizens.

Those demographics matter because older visitors tend to spend less—and aren't as likely to generate a positive buzz for the state by tweeting about only-in-New Mexico experiences such as llama trekking in Taos, spelunking in Carlsbad Caverns or tramping in the dusty footsteps of Billy the Kid.

REBRAND

By Jessica Austerlitz -  The entrance to Carlsbad Caverns, where tourists watch the bats leaving the cave at dusk.

At the moment, fully a third of overnight visitors to New Mexico are just passing through, state officials said. That pains Lynnae Molidor, who owns a clothing boutique in the historic Santa Fe Plaza. "People think New Mexico is all hoity-toity, high-end—or, for the real out-there people, there's Roswell" and flying saucers, Ms. Molidor said. "They don't think there's an in-between."

To focus all its firepower on the new campaign, set to launch in the spring, the Tourism Department has cut some staff at its promotional magazine and this year scrapped its tradition of entering an elaborate float in the Rose Parade.

That leaves $2.5 million for advertising—far less than some neighboring states spend. Arizona's governor recently announced a $7 million investment in marketing. Colorado spends more than $12 million a year.

On the other hand, in this era of perpetual budget crises, many states have eliminated promotions altogether.

Washington State recently closed its tourism department and Connecticut's was shut down for stretches of 2009 and 2010. (As a result, the state didn't pay its dues to a regional marketing collaboration—which retaliated by erasing Connecticut from the map of New England on its website.)

In New Mexico, Ms. Jacobson, the tourism secretary, says she's confident she can leverage her limited resources to build "a strong, iconic brand."

Some of the state's biggest fans, however, aren't so sure they want her to succeed.

Jimmy Dietz, a veterinarian from Houston, regularly brings his family to ski at Taos. He can't get over the peace, the lack of crowds, the friendly and attentive service, he says. In fact, he loves New Mexico so much that he has stopped touting it to his friends, for fear that an invasion of tourists would ruin the small-town charm.

"New Mexico is one of the greatest-kept secrets in the U.S.," Mr. Dietz says. "And it's nice because of that."

Write to Stephanie Simon at stephanie.simon@wsj.com

Read more http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204257504577150570289294592.html

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Letters From Billy The Kid On Display

Would you have pardoned Billy the Kid?

In honor of the state's centennial celebration, the history museum is opening a new exhibit featuring hand-written letters from Billy the Kid to Gov. Lew Wallace.

In the letters, the legendary outlaw asks for a pardon.

"In the late 1800's one of the things that was standing in the way of New Mexico's bid for citizenship was its well-earned reputation for lawlessness -- Billy the Kid being one of the most popular," Kate Nelson with the New Mexico History Museum said.

The infamous outlaw never got a pardon. The museum said there are theories that Billy the Kid may have penned the letters while he was shackled, but nobody knows for sure.

"Come here and read Billy the Kid's letters, and then take a trip down to Lincoln County and see the street where it actually happened. It looks pretty much the same way it did," Nelson said.

It took New Mexico more than 60 years after it became a territory to finally become a state.

Read more: http://www.koat.com/news/30141900/detail.html#ixzz1iiCOPoxA

Friday, December 30, 2011

Cliff's Amusement Park Discounts for 2012

DEAL ALERT for Cliff's Amusement Park - just minutes away from Lincoln Place Apartments!


We all love Cliff’s Amusement Park, and while we know they’re closed till next summer, and next summer seems a long way away right now, it’ll be here soon as blinking. So plan with early bird discounts, whether for yourself or as a gift!


Get $30 off Cliff’s Amusement Park 2012 season pass till April 6, 2012, or while supplies last. The $59.95 pass (usually $89.95) allows unlimited rides on each visit, for unlimited visits through the 2012 season.


Or opt for $3 off a ride pass for a single day with unlimited rides – the discount price is $21.95.


You can also get 10-20% discounts on Cliff’s Fun Cards to use on rides, games, and food:
Buy a $55 Fun Card for $50

Buy a $92 Fun Card for $80

Buy a $120 Fun Card for $100


Find all the early bird discounts for Cliff’s Amusement Park (formerly known as Uncle Cliff’s) on their ticket sales page.


It’s slightly odd thinking about waterslides and amusement park thrills before Christmas, and before we’ve barely strapped on our bindings for winter ski deals. But ours is not to wonder why. Ours is just to pass on the deals, and we know ABQ on the Cheap readers LOVE Cliff’s Amusement Park discounts.


Cliff’s Amusement Park opens again on April 7, 2012, and is located at 4800 Osuna Rd NE.

Source: ABQ on the Cheap.

See all Cliff's Amusement Park deals here!

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Merry Christmas!


Lincoln Place would like to wish you Merry Christmas and Happy Holiday's!

Friday, December 16, 2011

New Mexico Bowl Week Festivities Today and Tomorrow

We have a few Bowl Week activities left before game time! Are you planning to go to either?

Friday, Dec. 16

Pep Rally
This event, which is open to everyone at 4:15 p.m., provides the head coaches, team captains and their school’s respective cheerleaders, band and mascot a chance to interact with the fans. The event is capped off with a 5:30 p.m. fireworks show. The rally is being held at Old Town Plaza for the first time this year.

Saturday, Dec. 17

Fanfest at University Stadium
This event is open to everyone for free beginning at 9 a.m. With entertainment, food, displays and giveaways, the New Mexico Bowl Fan Fest runs the gamut in pre-game entertainment. Two stages will feature live entertainment throughout the event, one dedicated solely to dancing performances and the other for live music. The kids’ corner, located in the Northeast section of the lot, is complete with a giant slide, jumpers and a batman obstacle course. All are welcome to get their face painted and Fun Time Airbrushed Tattoos will be on hand with spray-on tattoos. Santa Claus will also be on hand in the kid’s corner. For the “bigger kids”, there will be a full sized obstacle course courtesy of the Army National Guard.

Read more (and see photos from Bowls past) at http://www.gildannewmexicobowl.com/index.php/events/2008-bowl-week-activities

Saturday, December 10, 2011

600 New Jobs for Albuquerque

Lots of new jobs on the way for Albuquerque.

This building on Jefferson NE just south of Osuna was once home to an AOL call center and more recently a Convergys operation. It will soon go through a $15 million renovation and become a Lowe’s customer support center, eventually employing 600 people.

Home improvement giant Lowe’s announced plans Thursday to open a customer support center in Albuquerque, creating about 250 jobs by March and a total of 600 positions by the end of 2013.


The center will move into a building at 6301 Jefferson NE, said Don Easterling, vice president of contact centers for Lowe’s. The 60,000-square-foot complex once housed an America Online and, more recently, Convergys call centers.


“We will be looking for skilled workers, people who’ve got prior experience, plus new people to the workforce,” Easterling said. “The jobs will include from site director all the way down to agents who will be operating on the telephone and working email and social media.”

Gov. Susana Martinez joined Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry and Bernalillo County Commissioner Maggie Hart Stebbins in announcing Lowe’s plans at an investors’ luncheon of Albuquerque Economic Development.


The governor hailed the news as the “most recent example of what happens when the state is open for business.”


“The millions of dollars that will come into our local economy will boost both large and small businesses,” she said, noting the company also plans to invest more than $15 million in infrastructure for the center.


“This is great news for Albuquerque and for New Mexicans who are eager to get back to work,” she said.


Easterling called the center an expansion of its customer support center in North Carolina, where the company is headquartered. Lowe’s has 14 retail stores in New Mexico, including six in Albuquerque, and employs about 1,700 people in the state.


“The selection process was very detailed and very cadenced,” Easterling said. “We started with 900 sites, and we slowly narrowed that down to one, and that one was Albuquerque.”


Asked to name some of the competition, he said, “Let’s just say you beat out some top competitors, but second place wasn’t really close.”


He said the company sought a community with a workforce suited to customer service and noted that Albuquerque’s bilingualism “is a plus.”


He said positions will be full time, spread among four basic services – customer care, repair services, sales and store support. Wages, he said, will be competitive within the industry and “very competitive here in Albuquerque.”


“We will accept a portion of the employees as part time because we’re really looking for students, and we’re looking for people that want part-time work,” he said.


Easterling said a recruiting team will start interviewing for leadership positions Monday. He said people can also apply for position by visiting the website lowes.com/careers.


“Now that the announcement is out, I’m sure we’ll see a lot more activity, but we’ve already seen some résumés and several requests for positions,” he said.


Stebbins said she was proud of Bernalillo County’s role “in making this all happen.” The County Commission will consider an ordinance Tuesday authorizing an industrial revenue bond issue of up to $16 million for Lowe’s.


“They (Lowe’s ) are financing their own bonds, but utilizing the IRB for tax abatement,” said Mayling Armijo, director of the county’s Economic Development Department.


Stebbins said the commission next month will consider adopting a Local Economic Development Agreement committing $150,000 each from the state and the county toward building improvements for the Lowe’s center. It would be the county’s only cash inducement and has clawbacks if Lowe’s doesn’t meet the employment goal, she said.


“I anticipate both will be approved by the commission,” she said.


The city will donate space and parking accommodations up to two months at the Albuquerque Convention Center for Lowe’s to conduct job interviews, hold job fairs and make other operational preparations, according to Breanna Anderson, spokeswoman for the Mayor’s Office.


Lowe’s announcement wasn’t the only good economic news delivered at the AED luncheon.


Tempur-Pedic announced it will add 100 jobs over the next 12 months to the 123 jobs at its Albuquerque plant. The company said it is expanding operations at the Albuquerque plant because of the quality of the workforce and the incentives they receive.


The new jobs will be in management, engineering, administration, warehousing and production.


The company is having a job fair at the plant Saturday to begin filling 51 jobs in January and February. The rest will be added by the end of 2013.

Read more http://www.abqjournal.com/main/2011/12/09/news/600-new-jobs-for-abq.html

Friday, December 2, 2011

Marine Toys for Tots – Donate or Request a Toy

Every year, the Marine Albuquerque Toys for Tots Foundation collects and donates thousands of new toys and distributes them to local children who otherwise might not have gotten any presents. If you find yourself in a rough spot this year, but still want your kids to have a nice Christmas, you can request toys for your family by following the instructions below. If you’re having a good year, please consider donating a toy so that other families can enjoy the holiday season too!


Requesting Toys

Those living in the Albuquerque, Rio Rancho and Bernalillo County New Mexico areas wishing to request toys for their children, will need to register through our friends at the Albuquerque Department of Family and Community Services.

Please contact them at 505-256-2070.

DOCUMENTS REQUIRED:

1. Valid Government issued ID

2. Birth Certificate (for each child 12 years old and younger)

  • Child must be 12 years old on or before date registered to qualify.    
  • Only the parents listed on the Birth Certificate will be allowed to register.
  • If you are not the parent you must show Legal Custody Documents.

3. Current bill must be one of the following:

  • Electric, Gas, Phone bill, Comcast, Direct TV or a Current Lease
  • Bill date must be within 30 days of registration date.
  • Bill must have the name and current address of the parent that is registering.
  • Current Lease can not be expired and must have Parent/Legal Guardian listed
    as a tenant.

* * * The LAST DAY to register is 12/08/11 at John Marshall HSSC, 1500 Walter SE, Albuquerque, NM 87102 * * *

Donating Toys

Check out this link for a list of places in Albuquerque where you can drop off toys: http://albuquerque-nm.toysfortots.org/local-coordinator-sites/lco-sites/donate-toys.asp. Toys must be new and unwrapped to be accepted.

Read more: http://albuquerque-nm.toysfortots.org/local-coordinator-sites/lco-sites/request-toys.asp

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