Andy wrote:oasis wrote:That would work if we didn't train in Salford. This is one of the down sides of our training model at present.
Always Ultra wrote:
I live in Lancaster now and even the, relatively tiny, club here have a sizeable billboard on the main road, which happens to be near the train station
Jonty wrote:This is an article lifted from the site- "The Political Economy of Football". The last paragraph hits home. Yes ticket deals are great and we need to bring new fans in but we also need those fans coming in at a price that is going to balance the books. The seriousness of this cannot be underestimated. We will not reach the 3rd round of the FA cup every year and to sustain our position in BSP we need to break even with the gates. - Article reads-
"However, non-league clubs defeated in the 3rd round have benefitted from their cup run. York normally lose £300,000 a year and received a £150,000 boost from their trip to Stoke City. Luton's trip to Southampton earned them about £150,000 which will be used to reduce budgeted losses. Barrow made £200,000 from this year's cup run. However, the club's regular attendance of 1,000 - 1,300 at home games is not really enough to support Conference football, let alone promotion to the Football League. 1,600 - 1,700 is needed for the club to break even, but they are aiming at an average of 2,010 for the remaining games of the season to help them financially"
http://www.footballeconomy.com/

mickmike wilson wrote:Jonty wrote:This is an article lifted from the site- "The Political Economy of Football". The last paragraph hits home. Yes ticket deals are great and we need to bring new fans in but we also need those fans coming in at a price that is going to balance the books. The seriousness of this cannot be underestimated. We will not reach the 3rd round of the FA cup every year and to sustain our position in BSP we need to break even with the gates. - Article reads-
"However, non-league clubs defeated in the 3rd round have benefitted from their cup run. York normally lose £300,000 a year and received a £150,000 boost from their trip to Stoke City. Luton's trip to Southampton earned them about £150,000 which will be used to reduce budgeted losses. Barrow made £200,000 from this year's cup run. However, the club's regular attendance of 1,000 - 1,300 at home games is not really enough to support Conference football, let alone promotion to the Football League. 1,600 - 1,700 is needed for the club to break even, but they are aiming at an average of 2,010 for the remaining games of the season to help them financially"
http://www.footballeconomy.com/
Our Attendances are good when you consider that yesterday we were the 4th best supported fixture in our league, with TEN lesser supported fixtures, thats right (( 10 )) less supported fixtures ( some of them had less than 500 ffs)
E Boro hosted Wrexham who were on a winning streak and would have took a fair few, Same as title chasing York visiting Kettering,they are well supported away from home, Both CUFC & S Boro had fairly shot journeys and would have took a lot of support also, yet all of these fixtures all had less than we had.
With ONE home league win since mid October the long suffering 1277 home fans want applauding into the ground by the BoDs. Were still in a building period, keeping a workable budget, Stay up and push on next season
Always Ultra wrote:The, albeit, bigger than Barrow, Morecambe even rented out an entire bus to advertise on when they played Carlisle in the cup. It had pics of the players and the Eric Morecambe statue on it etc. etc. and drove around Morecambe and Lancaster for awhile before the game.
Steelworks End wrote:Lancaster Branch wrote:The town' needs to decide whether or not it wants to support its team back into the Football League or stay sat on its collective arse watching Soccer Saturday and having a 'day out' once every blue moon.
I feel that it's probably the latter, and is likely to remain so until facilities are improved at Holker Street. Whilst the die-hard supporters may be prepared to put up with uncovered terraces and toilet facilities that were primitive when the ground was built and haven't been improved since, casuals will expect something better - perhaps not on a par with the Riverside or the Stadium of Light but something more than a roof on one side and a wall to have a leak against.
Also, with the inexorable move towards all-seater stadia - or even grounds with a higher seat-to-terrace ratio than before - the club probably needs to consider whether the existing stand is big enough for future requirements ( I say this as someone who far prefers to spend 90 minutes upright than sat on my backside).
Unfortunately, its a Catch-22 situation; without the extra income we can't improve facilities, and without the improved facilities we won't attract casual supporters. Perhaps the feasibility study will highlight areas where cost-effective improvements can be made - we shall wait and see.
It's worth noting, though, that even in Football League days, we were one of the poorest supported clubs.
donny bluebird wrote:You really don't go to home games becasue £13 is too much???
Always Ultra wrote:Andy wrote:oasis wrote:That would work if we didn't train in Salford. This is one of the down sides of our training model at present.
If you can pinpoint an equally good facility in Barrow I'm sure the lads would happily train there (CLUE: There are no decent sporting facilities in Barrow).
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As for ways of drumming up attendance, I always thought the Radiohead model of 'Pay what you want' was something that could be transplanted onto football. Its interesting that Mansfield did it with massive success this weekend. People payed from 3p to £50 and they actually drew a much bigger gate financially and got double the regular number of people through the turnstiles.
Another issue is exposure. Where do you ever see the club's next fixture advertised properly? No-one reads the Mail.
I live in Lancaster now and even the, relatively tiny, club here have a sizeable billboard on the main road, which happens to be near the train station, that has the next opponent and ticket price on it. Morecambe have a similar thing on the main route into Lancaster too. I've never seen Barrow's equivalent, if it exists. How expensive is a big lump of wood with writing on it?
The, albeit, bigger than Barrow, Morecambe even rented out an entire bus to advertise on when they played Carlisle in the cup. It had pics of the players and the Eric Morecambe statue on it etc. etc. and drove around Morecambe and Lancaster for awhile before the game.
Is Barrow's official website ever even plugged anywhere? Is it advertised in the ground? That's a good way of giving people something AFC related to do straight after leaving Holker Street. The tannoy dude should be telling people not to forget to go to AFC's site and social networking pages (if they exist) to read about/comment on the match they've just seen. That would trap people in a little bit. Or am I too new fashioned?
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