Title: The Economics of Parks and Recreation
1The Economics of Parks and Recreation
- The Keys to Park and Recreations Future Viability
John L. Crompton
- www.rpts.tamu.edu/faculty/crompton.shtml
2Marketing Myopia
- Narrow, short-term thinking
TN Levitt HBR July-August 1960
3- The view that an industry is a customer-satisfying
process, not a goods-producing process, is vital
for all businessmen to understandGiven the
customers needs, the industry develops
backwardcreating the things by which customer
satisfactions are achieved.
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10MOVIES 1950s
11What Business Are We In?
- Charles Revson
- In the factory we make cosmetics. In the store
we sell hope.
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13Gray and Greben, 1974
- Professional perspectives of parks and
recreation are activity centered. Definition in
terms of activities is unsatisfactory. - We should have discovered long ago the nature of
the business we are in, but we have notThe
critical questions are not, How many were there?
Or Who won? The critical question is, What
happened to Jose, Mary, Sam and Joan in this
experience.
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16- Promotion/selling focuses on the needs of the
seller. - Marketing focuses on the needs of the buyer.
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18- People expend their money and time resources with
the expectation of receiving benefits, not the
delivery of the services themselves. People
dont buy programs or services they buy the
expectation of benefits. Programs themselves are
not marketable. Only their benefits have a value
to client groups. The physical service or
program itself is simply a vehicle for the user
benefit it conveys. The distinction has enormous
significance for the way in which a recreation
and parks agency defines its businessParticipants
purchase benefits the programs are simply a
means to an end.
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22- Social interaction with friends and family kin.
- Social interaction with previously unknown
others. - Ethnic and cultural identity
- A gain in prestige social recognition status.
The mastery of particular skills may be regarded
as a form of conspicuous consumption, which
brings forth peer group recognition. - Excitement an adrenaline rush exhilaration.
- Ego-satisfaction of achievement and
accomplishment a desire to be successful. - Security to be part of a group that gives a
sense of belonging, connectedness to others, and
sense of affection. - The feeling of being important and having
responsibility growth of self-worth and
self-confidence.
23- Fantasy illusion offering temporary escape from
the realities and routines of everyday life. - Relaxation and alleviation of stress and tension,
which may be obtained from hard or no physical
effort. - Catharsis from flow to alleviate negative
tensions, anxiety, anger and unwanted adrenaline. - Acquisition of knowledge satisfaction of
curiosity. - Feeling of well-being and vitality that derive
both from exercise and physical fitness, and from
mental alertness. - Regression the desire to let your hair down
and act in a puerile, adolescent way. - Aesthetic enhancement derived from being in an
attractive natural environment. - Challenge and risk, which lead to
self-exploration, self-discovery, and
self-development and may be obtained from sailing
or skydiving, or from acting, dancing, or fly
fishing.
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25Why Do People Go Fishing?
- To
- Experience the outdoors
- Develop skills
- Pit wits with the fish
- Be with friends
- Share skills with others especially children
- Mental change and relaxation
- Escape from pressures of everyday life
- Take a trophy
- Get food
26Motivations For Fishing
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28Despite Limitations, User Benefits Are Important
29- A gain in prestige social recognition status.
The mastery of particular skills may be regarded
as a form of conspicuous consumption, which
brings forth peer group recognition. - Excitement an adrenaline rush exhilaration.
- Ego-satisfaction of achievement and
accomplishment a desire to be successful. - Security to be part of a group that gives a
sense of belonging, connectedness to others, and
sense of affection. - The feeling of being important and having
responsibility growth of self-worth and
self-confidence. - Acquisition of knowledge satisfaction of
curiosity.
3020 Occupations Projected to Have the Largest Job
Growth
31Despite Limitations, User Benefits Are Important
- Meet basic human needs
- Individual users are the primary advocates and
infantry in lobbying and referendums - Some recreation services are explicitly intended
to deliver only user benefits through enterprise
funds - The benefit chain of causality. Many
community-wide benefits accruing to society are
dependent on individuals receiving benefits
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34Implications of the Range of Benefits Continuum
35Incongruency Associated with the User Benefits
Paradigm
36The Tax Support Downward Spiral
Increased Priorities Given to Revenue Objectives
Reduction in Priority Given to Communitywide
Objectives
Reduced Tax Support
Less Justification for Public Subsidies
37Gray and Greben
We are turning control of our social enterprises
over to the accounting mind. The accounting mind
reaches decisions by a method in which
short-range fiscal consequences are the only
criteria of value. Recreation and park services
will not survive in that kind of environment.
Most of the great social problems that disfigure
our national life cannot be addressed in a
climate dominated by that kind of value system
38The Voluntary Exchange Conceptualization of
Marketing
Fees
39- We are not a business. We are a social service
which adapts the methods of business where they
are appropriate
40- User satisfaction is an inadequate measure of the
success of park and recreation agencies. Most
taxpayers are not users of most of our services,
so why should they support them? Need wider base
of support.
41- User satisfaction is an inadequate measure of the
success of park and recreation agencies. Most
taxpayers are not users of most of our services,
so why should they support them? Need wider base
of support. - It is off-site benefits that count highest, not
on-site benefits.
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43- User satisfaction is an inadequate measure of the
success of park and recreation agencies. Most
taxpayers are not users of most of our services,
so why should they support them? Need wider base
of support. - It is off-site benefits that count highest, not
on-site benefits. - The fields sine qua non is that it performs a
necessary service for the community beyond
responding to the demands of particular user
groups
44The Economic Rationale for Urban Parks
- Regenerated working people so they would be more
productive workers - Attracted tourists who spent money in the local
economy - Raised property values and the property tax base
45The Social Rationale for Urban Parks
- Public health
- Provided fresh air which counteracted miasmas
- Foster democratic equality
- Different classes mingle together while
strolling, picnicking, and croquet playing, thus
social homogeneity are nurtured - Social coherence
- Parks were incubators of safety and social order
they alleviated crime by strengthening local
pride and affection of the inhabitants for each
other
46Public Swimming Pools Rationale
- Pre 1890---Public baths no baths in houses
- Physical squalor cultivated moral delinquency and
citywide epidemics - Germ theory emerged
- 1890s---Athletics exercise, physical fitness
boom among urban middle-class - 1910-20---Alleviate delinquency among young
working class males by expanding their surplus
energy - 1920-30---Community, gender and class integration
- 1930-40---CWA and WPA unemployment relief from
heat and hard times for public and those who
built the pools - 1960s---Alleviate juvenile crime and rioting
(hydrants) - Today?---Alleviate drowning? Leisure literacy?
47Public Recreation
- Alleviate juvenile crime among young males
encourage civility and civic responsibility
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49- In a letter dated April 30, 1909, President
- William Taft wrote to the Playground
- Association of America I do not know
- anything which will contribute more to the
- strength and morality of that generation of
- boys and girls compelled to remain part of
- urban populations in this country than the
- institution in their cities of playgrounds.
50- The provision of leisure for its own sake still
lacks political clout. It has to show other, more
tangible returns, such as jobs, urban
regeneration, alleviating delinquency or
whatever, to be worth fundingOn its own it
sounds too flippant It carries real political
conviction only if advocated for other,
instrumental, reasons too. - Sue Glyptis Leisure and Unemployment
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52The Voluntary Exchange Conceptualization of
Marketing
Fees
53The Community Benefits Paradigm
54The Tax Support Downward Spiral
Increased Priorities Given to Revenue Objectives
Reduction in Priority Given to Communitywide
Objectives
Reduced Tax Support
Less Justification for Public Subsidies
55The Tax Support Upward Spiral
Lower Priorities Given to Revenue Objectives
Increase in Priority Given to Communitywide
Objectives
Financial Pressure Eased
More Justification for Public Subsidies
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57Present Position
- Recreation and park provision is perceived to be
a relatively discretionary, non-essential
government service. It is nice to have if it can
be afforded.
58Reposition
- Position recreation and park services so that
they are perceived to be a central contribution
to alleviating the major problems in a community
identified by tax payers and decision makers.
59- We are not identified with major problems which
confront our total American Society which is a
deep concern and disappointmentThe field
should focus park and recreation services on the
great social problems of our time and develop
programs designed to contribute to the
amelioration of those problems. - Gray and Greben, 1974
60Benefits Related to Economic Prosperity
- Attracting tourists
- Attracting businesses
- Attracting retirees
- Enhancing real estate values
- Reducing taxes
- Stimulation of equipment sales
61Benefits Related to Environmental Sustainability
- Cleaning water
- Controlling flooding
- Cleaning air
- Reducing traffic congestion
- Reducing energy costs
- Preserving biological diversity
62Benefits Related to Alleviating Social Problems
- Reducing environmental stress
- Community regeneration
- Cultural and historical preservation
- Facilitating healthy lifestyles
- Alleviating deviant behavior among youth
- Raising levels of educational attainment
- Alleviating unemployment distress
63Credibility of the Evidence
- we have come a long way in essentially less
than a half-century and have much to be proud
ofIn fact, few areas of scientific inquiry have
realized such advancements in so short a time. - Driver, 1999
64- Critics who argue there is inadequate evidence to
support the potential contributions of these
benefits are wrong. There is strong enough
empirical support for all of the benefits listed
to justify their advocacy in formulating policy.
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66- The big idea associated with repositioning is
that funds are invested in solutions to a
communitys most pressing problems. The term
investing suggests a positive, forward-looking
agenda with a return on the investments. Elected
officials usually have no mandate to fund
programs their mandate is to invest resources
into solutions.
67Positioning Implications
- Legislators political platforms represent
residents concerns - The challenge is not financial, it is political
- Some services will be discretionary Strategic
importance
68Public Recreation Challenges
- Emergence of non-profits
- Mega-church facilities
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70Public Recreation Challenges
- Emergence of non-profits
- Mega-church facilities
- Emergence of commercial sector involvement
71Public Recreation Challenges
- Emergence of non-profits
- Mega-church facilities
- Emergence of commercial sector involvement
- Home-based electronic entertainment
72Four Positioning Axioms
- Axiom 1 Formulate a position statement
- How the agency wants to be identified in the
publics eyes. What business are we in? - The Benefits are Endless
- Discover the Benefits
- The Fun Experts
- Providers of the Good Things in Life
73- Economic Prosperity
- Lifelong Learning
- Investing in Youth Our Greatest Asset
- Step Up to Health Healthy Communities Start in
Parks - Healthy by Nature
- Greener, Cleaner, Safer, Stronger
- Healthy Lifestyles, Liveable Communities It
Starts in Parks
74Healthy Parks, Healthy People
- The position communicates two principal health
themes - The role of Parks Victoria in keeping the
environment healthy by addressing such core
public concerns as enhancing air quality,
enhancing water quality, and alleviating
flooding. - The physical and mental health benefits accruing
to state residents using the parks.
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77Four Positioning Axioms
- Axiom 1 Formulate a position statement
- Axiom 2 - Agencies do not position services,
stakeholders do - Bilingual connecting with their priorities
78Connecting with Business Stakeholders
- Investment in parks and recreation, not tax
subsidy - Not greenways or trails, but green
infrastructure - Amenities that are attractive to knowledge
workers, not park and recreation facilities - Not natural areas, but low maintenance areas
79- Midnight Basketball?
- Youth Enrichment Program
- Department of Recreation, Park, and Tourism
Sciences
80Four Positioning Axioms
- Axiom 1 - Formulate a position statement
- Axiom 2 - Agencies do not position services,
stakeholders do - Axiom 3 Positioning is a relative rather than
an absolute concept
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82Four Positioning Axioms
- Axiom 1 - Formulate a position statement
- Axiom 2 - Agencies do not position services,
stakeholders do - Axiom 3 - Positioning is a relative rather than
an absolute concept - Axiom 4 - Focus
- Only a small number of positions should be used
- Communicate with messages that are consistent,
persistent, and tightly focused
83- Unfortunately, even as late as the 1970s
recreation and parks professionals attempt to
remain all things to all people. - Gray and Greben, 1974
84- In the ages of the sound bite, focus is
everything. The message has to be pervasive and
insistent.
85- Consider
- Positioning reflects peoples beliefs and value
systems which are hard to change - Agencies are not very agile
- Thus
- The time frame for accomplishing repositioning is
likely to be relatively long (i.e., 10 years not
1 year)
86Four Repositioning StrategiesHow to get from
Position A to Position B
87Real Repositioning
- Development of new services or restructuring
existing services so they better contribute to
addressing the issue expressed in the desired
position.
88Four Repositioning StrategiesHow to get from
Position A to Position B
89Associative Repositioning
- Aligning with other organizations that already
possess the desired position, and acquiring some
of this position from the association.
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91How to get from Position A to Position B
Four Repositioning Strategies
92Psychological Repositioning
- Changing stakeholders beliefs about the outcomes
which emanate from the services an agency offers,
so they better align with the desired position.
93The Process of Psychological Repositioning
94Testimonial Evidence
- Opinion leaders within the community
- Leaders from other communities (direct or
vicarious) - Independent experts
95The Process of Psychological Repositioning
96Change Value Perceptions
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99Psychologically Repositioning a Bond Proposal for
a New Natatorium
The median home value in the community
is 150,000 Construction cost of the
natatorium 2 million Annual property tax
payment by an average home owner 12 Annual
operation and maintenance cost 100,000 Annual
property tax payment by an average home
owner 6 Total annual property tax payment by
an average home owner 18 which is 1.50 per
month In most years, there are heartbreaking
stories in the local news media of children from
this community who have drowned in area lakes.
An agreement with the ISD means that every fourth
grader in the community will be taught to swim,
so lives will be saved. Invest 1.50 per month
and save a childs life!
100Decline in the NYC Parks and Recreation Budget
Relative to Budget Changes in other Departments
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107The Process of Psychological Repositioning
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109Aligning with the Prevailing Schemata and
Nomenclature
- The council rejected a proposal to commit 1.5
million to purchase 150 acres of land for a youth
athletic field complex. They recognized the need,
but it was not a high enough priority. - Recently an indoor special events center was
constructed by the local university. - The athletic complex was repositioned and
represented to the council as an outdoor special
events center. Data were presented showing the
economic impact of tournaments attracting
300-1,000 participants each weekend, year round.
It was supported by - Hotel/Motel Association
- Restaurant Association
- Convention and Visitors Bureau
- Chamber of Commerce
- The council approved purchase of the site, in
part using bed tax funds
110Effective Vocabulary in Psychological
Repositioning for Parks and Conservation
- Water clean water, preserving water quality
- Protect wildlife habitat not endangered
species, which is more polarizing - Natural areas avoid open space cf. empty
space of no benefit to people urban space cf.
an abandoned lot or bench among big buildings - Hiking, biking and walking trails not trails
attaching uses to it makes it more resonant - Creating parks and other places where children
can play safely not neighborhood parks or
playgrounds - Protecting quality of life and carefully planned
areas not sprawl, unplanned growth, or
reducing sprawl - Our and We imply ownership and inclusion e.g.,
WE need to protect OUR beaches, lakes, and
natural areas - Protect natural areas for future generations
- Talk about ourselves as conservationists not
environmentalists
111Four Repositioning StrategiesHow to get from
Position A to Position B
112Competitive Repositioning
- Altering stakeholders beliefs about what an
agencys competitors do. - Opportunity cost of investments made to others.
- Deposition challenge the authenticity and
legitimacy of another agencys claims trying to
demote them. - Danger of backlash, sensitivity third party.
- Likely to engage in associative repositioning
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114Competitive Repositioning
Can Police Solve the Juvenile Crime Problem?
Clearance rate of juvenile crimes 20 But
one-third are not reported, so effective
clearance rate 14 One-third of those
charged are acquitted or dismissed, so percentage
convicted 9-10 Approximately one-half of
those convicted are not incarcerated, so those
incarcerated 5
115- Part of the problem of doing a cost-benefit
evaluation analysis of the program is that you
cannot measure what didnt happen. We save
lives, but how can you measure a shooting that
didnt occur because the kid was in this program? - Reco Bembry, Seattle PRD
116Change in the Number of Serious Gang-Related
Offenses Committed in Fort Worth in One Year
117Change in the Number of Serious Gang-Related
Offenses Committed in Fort Worth in One Year
118Return on Fort Worths Investment
- Assume the 152 fewer major crimes would have been
committed by 100 young people - Cost of incarceration for one year at
43,000/year 4.3M - Assume they would have been incarcerated for 10
years 43M - Cost of program to Fort Worth taxpayers was
677,699 - Return on every dollar invested by the city was
64 (43M / 677,699)
119Results of an Experiment Showing the Impact of
Repositioning Strategies
120What Have We Gained?
- Better understanding and appreciation of the
significance of parks and recreation by
stakeholders and professionals - Stronger justification for the allocation of
public funds to parks and recreation - Clearer guidelines for service prioritizations
- Enhanced pride in the profession
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123If you do what youve always done, youll get
124Presentation available at
- http//www.rpts.tamu.edu/faculty/crompton/crompton
-recent-presentations.shtml