Las Vegas Casinos Can Restore Magic of Earlier Era by Reconnecting With Customers: Gaming Expert
Posted on: December 6, 2020, 01:05h.
Last updated on: June 30, 2021, 08:56h.
By getting back to “personalized attention,” Las Vegas casinos can recapture the magic that defined the famous Rat Pack era from decades ago, says a gaming historian.
David G. Schwartz told rjvxnlsm.shop the personal attention that smaller casinos like the now-demolished Sands provided on the Las Vegas Strip are harder for the larger resorts of today. The Sands began in the 1950s with 200 rooms before expanding to 777 rooms. Newer resorts have thousands of hotel rooms.
With technological advances, however, “It may be possible to reconnect with customers in a more accommodating way,” Schwartz said.
Schwartz is associate vice provost for faculty affairs at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Among his books is the recently published At the Sands: The Casino That Shaped Classic Las Vegas, Brought the Rat Pack Together, and Went Out With a Bang.
“I think that, for Las Vegas at least, the brand has overshadowed the experience,” Schwartz told rjvxnlsm.shop. “Casinos will tell you how awesome they are. But they don’t always do such a good job of communicating what will make the experience inside them unique and worthy of a trip.”
With tourism in a slump since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in March, casinos are seeking unique ways to attract customers. Two resorts in Las Vegas only allow patrons age 21 and over onto the main property. These adults-only properties are Circa Resort in downtown’s Glitter Gulch and the Cromwell on the Strip. Also, Park MGM recently became the first smoke-free resort on the Strip.
The Rat Pack
Schwartz noted that “promotions and press relations” were important to the Sands. The property played up the entertainers who performed in its marquee Copa Room. These included Rat Pack members such Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., and Peter Lawford. Hollywood stars like Marilyn Monroe could be spotted at the Sands.
Schwartz said people are “entranced by this era mostly because of the personalities.”
Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis, Jr. were larger than life icons,” he said. “The Copa Room at the Sands let customers meet and mingle with the stars in an intimate setting.”
In 1996, the Sands was closed and demolished to make way for the Venetian and Palazzo on the east side of the Strip. A plaque and replica footprints are on display outside the Venetian where the Rat Pack’s well-known members once posed in front of the Sands’ iconic “A Place in the Sun” sign.
‘It’s Disneyland’
Nicholas Pileggi, who co-wrote the Las Vegas Mafia movie Casino with director Martin Scorsese, recently told rjvxnlsm.shop he liked the intimacy of the Sands. He stayed there while writing the nonfiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas. The book became the basis for the 1995 movie.
For decades, Las Vegas mainly was a town for gamblers, Pileggi said. Employees remembered customers. Walking into a casino was “like seeing a friend,” he said.
Beginning in the 1980s, corporations realized they could make more money with larger resorts that offer gambling as “an additional amenity,” Pileggi said.
While he misses the intimate appeal of the Sands era, Pileggi said the never version of the city has its upsides.
“It’s Disneyland,” he told rjvxnlsm.shop. “The climate is good. These hotel-casinos are spectacular. It’s just unbelievable.”
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Last Comments ( 37 )
Used to go in the 70s a lot from Phoenix. Always stayed at the showboat. Knew the pit bosses and most of the dealers. Always got comped a nice room and steak dinners and I wasn't a big stakes gambler but I was there often!
I love the way the city is now, but I also miss the way it used to be. I worked there in the mid-'90s, around the time the Sands was imploded, and I loved the Sands.
Where do you start? Can you find a GM on the strip that has an actual gaming background? Most of them do not come from the gaming industry but imported from elsewhere, mostly have financial degrees and little job experience. We call them No Men as they do not understand what it means to provide customers with outstanding service, they do not understand because they cannot clearly see the financial result of the expense expended to have a great customer service program. They tend to have little to no personality and huge egos. The days when gamblers were the coveted prize, these days, all of the marketing efforts are being spent on looking hip, slick and cool going after millennials and the like. I remember hearing from a GM, who was born and raised in the gaming industry, "YOU GET WHAT YOU MARKET TO", and Vegas has not been marketing to gamblers, thats for sh*t sure.
The problem nowadays is simple greed. I'm always hearing about the glory days when the mob ran things & you'd get your dinner comped or were given free tickets to a show after gambling a bit. These corporations always ruin things because they insist on making money on every aspect of the business.
First, I appreciate and commend Vegas for what they are doing to make it safe during this horrible virus situation. That aside, I started going regularly in 1997 and still love it. However, the most discouraging thing to me has been the jackpot totals that have seemed to decrease steadily over the years. It seems so difficult to find a machine with a high jackpot for a relatively small bet (not talking progressives that hit and reset). I could go for a week and make my gambling budget last but that's difficult to do now because of the minimums required to hit those small jackpots. The end result is I spend more time walking around the casino, or going to a different strip casino, searching for a viable machine to play. Increased free play would help! Hoping Vegas does become more 'customer friendly', that old personal touch was great!
I can only speak for my husband and myself but Las Vegas started losing some of its "Magic" when the "Theme" hotels begin losing their "Themes"! Every one down the Strip is all alike. You used to feel like you were IN Egypt, or New York, Monte Carlo, Italy, Paris, or Treasure Island, (Pirate Show), little by little all the "fun stuff" came down and they were all homogenized to look oh-so-adult! Only one left, at least the last time I was in there, was the Venetian....still like being in Italy! Bring back the "Fun"!
Color me surprised that nickle and dimeing your customers for short term gain is leading to suffering. Corporations got too big for their britches and now find that chasing the fickle young and dumb along with the ultra rich is producing diminished results. The comment about corporations starting in the 80s treating gambling as just an additional amenity says it all. Without gambling Las Vegas isn't a destination. You can find resort pools and nice shopping in to many other areas of the country. Treat your customers habitually worse with diminishing value and you are committing financial suicide. That's the sad part: it is self inflicted.