Newport Beach has become her destination
Travel has been part of Marta Hayden’s life since she was a child.
She has traveled the world, taken classes upon the sea and worked in
travel-related industries her entire career. So it’s no wonder she
accepted the job as the new executive director of the Newport Beach
Conference and Visitors Bureau.
Hayden is filling the spot left by John Cassady, who abruptly
resigned in May. The bureau has about 250 businesses as members, a
board of directors and an annual budget of about $1.5 million. Its mission is to promote Newport Beach as a vacation and business
destination.
Hayden took a moment last week to discuss her background and her
plans for the future of Newport tourism with Features Editor Jennifer
K Mahal.
What got you interested in travel?
Probably with my father’s occupation. He ran an import-export
company, so we traveled as young people, very early on. My father
came from Spain -- he’s Spanish and French -- and had relatives still
in Europe, and so, he’d go back there. But mostly it was his
business. We would go and buy various things and meet all these
people and go to wonderful cultures.
Tell me a little about your background in the travel industry and
how you came to be where you are today, as executive director.
This is going to be a kind of a fun story too. We also had a home
in Hawaii, where my father lived. And so, of course, tourism is a big
part there. And as a 16-year-old, as soon as you could go to work, I
was working in a restaurant as a hostess, working in a hotel, doing
all these things. I went to school at various places, and I ended
graduating from the University of Hawaii in the hotel school, so I
worked two years in the industry there.
And even though chronologically I wasn’t that old, I had a lot of
experience for it. So I got a wonderful management position with
American Airlines, who ran Sky Chefs, the airline catering people.
They also had a hotel division, and as part of it, when they were in
a growth position, I went out to interview people to come to work at
our hotels.
[After a job in Cincinnati and one in San Francisco] I worked in
Monterey. You’re going to see a strong family connection, because I
am very connected to family. You’re going to also think my father is
a gypsy, with all the homes we’ve lived in.
He lived in Pebble Beach, also. And he happened -- I had already
been working for [Airport Plaza Inn] for some time and he happened to
see the job advertised for the Monterey Conference Center.
Monterey is a very upscale community, similar to Newport Beach.
There’s so many parallels here. So, he saw the job in Monterey and he
circled.
So I went through the interview process, got the job, which was at
the time a risk to hire a woman. So back to Newport Beach, again a
friend saw this advertised and there were so many parallels with
Monterey and my work experience and an affluent, beautiful community.
I researched it pretty thoroughly before I came. I knew some of the
people that worked here.... I knew several of the people in the
hospitality community and they gave me a background. I thought my
skill sets matched it very nicely, just being active in the group
market whereas Bridget [Lindquist, deputy director] is very active in
the travel industry, it would be a wonderful complement to join the
team.
Not everyone knows what the executive director of the conference
and visitor’s bureau does. What does your new job entail?
In a small bureau like this, everyone has to sell. So this is a
heavy marketing and sales background. My role is to do more of the
administration and interface with the board, volunteers who are
representatives of the community and get consensus from them. Also, I
serve at their direction as to where we’re going to be going with the
product and enable sales people to be out, interfacing with our
clients.
At the same time I working at the sales aspect, I’m working with
Gail [Ossipoff] in communications that we’re getting our message out
to the media and getting the most we can. So we have so many people
doing various tasks, the sales, the communications and media, the
administration portion of it, working with the local community. And
this particular position is very community involved, where we’re in
things that I’m evaluating the programs and saying is this the right
use of our resources.
And it’s really looking at , having almost the bracelet that says
“Does this make revenue?” If it’s political, I can justify going too,
I mean obviously. But looking at our mission statement and saying,
does this match our mission statement? Is it budgeted? Can we afford
it? Third thing, is it ethical? Then, we’re involved in it.
I think in the most successful organizations, one of the most ones
was the turnaround in the Girl Scouts, and they stayed so focused on
their mission statement. If it didn’t match their mission statement,
they didn’t do it.
Is there a particular city in which you have seen the conference
and visitors bureau really make a difference and would like to
emulate in Newport Beach?
Monterey is a reference, of course. We have our own associations
of the bureaus -- the International Assn. of Convention and Visitors
Bureaus and the Western Conference of Convention and Visitors Bureaus
-- where we get a lot of resources, as far as salary surveys, job
descriptions, the right marketing plans, a lot of how to’s. But
there’s very good things as far as looking to emulate what would be
best practices at other bureaus.
I can’t say there’s an ideal bureau because of difference in size
and budget, but we’d all have to take our hats off to New York after
9-11. They came in, they got the message out, worked with their
members, they came back under really difficult situations. As far as
disaster preparedness, I think they’ve done an excellent job. And
there’s some best practices we can take from there and say “do we
have a plan?” I don’t think we have a plan for disaster preparedness.
I’m still a new person here. There’s different parts and that’s what
I’d like to glean. To look at that and say is that applicable here,
can we improve?
There’s lots of things we’re doing excellent. But people don’t
know it. We’re not our best promoters. That’s part of what I’d say
from knowing the staff. I’ve got a chance to interview all of them
and get to know them.
What are some of the things the bureau does excellently, but
people don’t know about?
I can cite Laura [Van Winkle], for example. I think she does a
great job. She’s been working on our corporate market, which has been
hit very hard at this particular time. And she’s taken the initiative
and really done some very creative marketing. I mean with e-mails and
working with our partners putting together something that was asked
for by the partners and she took the initiative. We’re going to
Philadelphia on an outreach for clients. We have to be proactive, we
can’t wait for the clients.... She’s done just marvelous things.
Another aspect is Gail and communications. We get so much in print
by her cultivating the media, that she does a great job. And that, I
think the average citizen may not see that, if they’re not traveling
and getting the New York Times and seeing that something is getting a
pick up.
And the satisfaction of our industry partners, our hospitality
people are just -- I’m out there talking . The same time I’m talking
to staff, I’m talking hospitality people and the same time I’m
meeting them, I’m also talking to the board. It looks like we’re on
very harmonious tracks, which is exciting.
What I’ve been asking the board is: Why are you on the board?
What’s your expectations of us? And if we were the perfect bureau,
what would we look like three years or five years from now? And not
focusing here, what do you want to see us look like if we’re doing
everything right?
Some of the responses have been: be more proactive and get out
there, get out and start working on the next quarter. Be more with
the technology, so we’re going more electronic. But always being
sensitive to those members who have no e-mail and such.
We’re changing the look to be more contemporary. Challenging us to
say you’ve been doing these things the same way and yes they’ve been
successful, but let’s take a risk. Let’s go in a magazine that’s
nontraditional or let’s try a new program.
It’s a very exciting time. The momentum is fabulous, I have to
say.... I met with the city. Our city partners, who are just
unbelievable. I mean they understand the business, they understand
the value of it, they want to cooperate. I see us doing more
partnerships with them.
One of the things, not maybe in the first year, would be the
start-up of an event. But you can’t do that without resources and
without a great relationship with the city.
What do you see as some of the biggest challenges that the bureau
faces in marketing Newport Beach?
Let me use Monterey as an example. In Monterey, we dealt with a
certain niche in the market -- because there are so many parallels --
we could take larger groups because of the conference center. What we
didn’t have in Monterey was an airport. We had an airport, but no one
knew we had an airport because in the code sharing they all knew
about LA and San Francisco.
Here, just a for-instance challenge, is maybe not having a large
convention center for bringing in larger groups where we have multi
housing and hotels. We have a wonderful airport that connects
everywhere, which is a plus side.
Having said that, that means that market is not probably going to
be available. We have an option, and that is to think creatively. To
partner with the Dunes and to get a certain segment of the industry
that will meet in a tent, which are not [like] camp at all. You have
to be creative. If you don’t have a large assembly hall, then we have
to provide other ones and look for the market. But there is a big
enough one that we can look for groups of maybe 300 to 500 that are
either self-contained or one and two hotels and know that the whole
world’s not there.
And then if that’s the group, what’s their income level and who’s
our competition. How are going to best target?
The other one is a perception problem. And that we have to dispel
through advertising. We don’t want to discount the image of Newport
Beach, but there’s the thought that we are too expensive for some
groups.
We’re not too expensive. We can be affordable with the right
circumstances. There is flexibility in winter, there’s flexibility
surrounding holidays in the group market.
So it’s getting that out, that we’re affordable. We have an
airport. We have a great infrastructure around us. Knowing who the
neighbors are and working with that community. We have a really big
business community out there. We have a favorable city council, low
crime. That’s a big issue now, that you’ll be safe here.
Why do people come, they want to go to beaches. We have great
beaches. Shopping is No. 2 or 3 on the list. We have Fashion Island.
And it’s really, who has time when we’re working [to go shopping]?
But when we’re at a conference, all of a sudden, we have some leisure
time and we can go out. I always get a kick when people say, “I
bought this on vacation.”
So it’s getting all of these wonderful mosaic pieces that make up
the jewel that we have, and making people aware of it.
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