Return to Virginia Business - April 2003

Around the Old Dominion


Click away for economic development

Virginia’s coalfield region marketers are using an old toy in a new marketing pitch to get noticed. They’re are giving out View-Masters — those classic low-tech toys with a drop-in disk — to site-selection consultants around the country with images of the seven-county region’s best business sites and local culture.

The hope, says marketing director Sandy Ratliff, is that the novelty will keep the region’s marketing material from getting tossed. The idea has been used by attractions such as resort hotels and theme parks, but Ratliff says she can’t find any place that’s used it for economic development. “It hopefully will change the perception people have of this area,” she says.

The first mailing went out with a free View-Master and a disk with images of a new industrial park in Lee County. That’s not exactly Disneyland or Old Faithful, but it may buy a few seconds of attention. They’re mailing out another disk every month through June, with images of other industrial parks, business sites and nearby attractions such as the Barter Theatre and Bristol Motor Speedway.

The idea came out of a dinner meeting last summer with a site-selection consultant, when Ratliff asked her what caught her eye. “She said, ‘Well, something unique.’” The View-Master idea emerged and Ratliff found an Oregon company that would custom-make the disks. They had the 3-D images shot by a local photographer.

Ratliff says the region’s promoters haven’t gotten any feedback from out-of-state site consultants yet. “We knew we wouldn’t have overnight success,” Ratliff says. They’ll decide this summer whether to continue the Lebanon-based campaign.

Virginia Business - April 2003