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42,000 Square Feet of Confidence and Power In Fargo
A critical mass is defined as the smallest amount of fissile
material needed for a sustained nuclear chain reaction. It makes
perfect sense then, that Jon Taffer uses the term quite often when
explaining why his newest project has exploded onto the scene in Fargo,
N. D. In this case, the smallest amount of material needed in fact
was quite a bit for a bar property. To detonate a blast heard all over
N orth Dakota, the critical mass required was 42,000 square feet packed
with enough concepts and ideas to set off a chain reaction of sustained
crowds and revenue.
Before Taffer and company dropped this giant party bomb on Fargo,
you night say the shell was already there. It just needed some
plutonium. Enter the marketing laboratory of Taffer Dynamics Inc.
Starting Over
The initial investor partners of what would become the on-premise
behemoth The Hub (unrelated to NCB’s weekly e-newsletter ofthe same
name) hired Taffer’s firm Taffer Dynamics as their consultant, to
determine the best use of the existing real estate — a failed nightclub
property called Playmakers in Fargo — and make it successful. “I didn’t
have a chance of making the building smaller,” Taffer says. “I was
stuck with the huge size that it is. I was stuck with the location.
Playmakers was a business that didn’t have a great reputation in town
and had failed for two years, losing 40,000 - 80,000 a month. “We came
in and put together all the concepts, the business model, the
financials into a business plan and pulled our people into it.” Those
people included Jones Baker Design from Dallas, Berg Architecture,
WyattMagnum and Magnum Music Group and Doug Black on tech matters. Jon
Taffer is co-owner of the property,along with unnamed partners, and
he’s president and CEO of StarMark Hospitality Inc., along with
StarMark co-owner and vice president Kerry Fernholz. StarMark manages
The Hub.
The Concepts
Cut to November 20. T he Hub opened anddid $1 million in business in
the first five weeks, Taffer says. “Two weeks ago we consumed 160
bottles of Malibu,” he says. “We’re selling between 400 and 600 Sake
Bombs a night; we’re drawing about 2,000 people each weekend night.” It
may be easiest to consider The Hub to be something of a self-contained
club city. Other markets are building entertainment districts with a
number of venues and shopping, but The Hub is a different breed. It’s
seven clubs under one roof, with one cover for the whole shebang. I t’s
not terribly uncommon to have multiple concepts in one package, but few
offer as much in one spot as does The Hub. It includes The Fan Club
(sports bar), Prime Steakhouse & Ultralounge, Cadillac Ranch Bar
& Dancehall (country), MonkeyBar (hard rock), Forbidden Asian Pub,
Vibe (dance club) — and The Venue (a 1,600-seatlive music hall). And
The Hub even has The Bottle Barn, a spirits shop. Each is distinct and
harbors a strong sense of individual identity. “You walk into Cadillac
Ranch, and you have all the cowboy hats and all that going on, with
high-energy dancing,” T affer says. “You go into Monkey Bar, and it’s
all stocking hats and tattoos and headbanging rock ‘n’ roll, and the
bartender’s walking up and down the bar pouring liquor into people’s
mouths like birds in a nest. You walk over to Forbidden Asian Pub, and
it’s all really well dressed girls, looking very sexy and beautiful.
You go downstairs to Vibe, and the dance floor is rocking. You go into
The FanClub, and everybody’s screaming and yelling at a sporting event.
The environments are totally different.” Demographically, The Hub
overall covers ages 21-45, Taffer says. Ten or 15 percentof the overall
crowd on a weekend night is over 35 years old, he estimates.Taffer
refers to the “predatory power” of targeting six different
psychographic groups with specific entertainment formats across common
demographics in this $3.5 million dollar property. “Demographics are
different than psychographics,” he says. “We have a country audience at
Cadillac Ranch, and when you walk in, you better be true to that
lifestyle. Every uniform, every song, every product and every promotion
we do is respectful to the country lifestyle. When you go into Monkey
Bar, you’ll never hear a Madonna song; it’s all about Metallica and
heavy metal. The waitresses are walking around in torn-upfishnets and
piercings. “Every room has a really deep conceptual integrity to it,
and that’s what makes it work. If it didn’t, it would become one big
building of sameness.” One thing is quite certain: The Hub is ideal for
those with short attention spans— in a good way. Put differently, it’s
barhoppingparadise, with a healthy amount ofcross-pollination among the
diverse groups of patrons. “At 11 o’clock, you can walk into Monkey
Bar, and there’s about 10 cowboy hats in there, and they’re listening
to headbanger rock ‘n’ roll and partying out,” Taffer says.“Sometimes
you walk into Cadillac Ranch,and the rockers are in there. We’re at a
point now where we’re running sub-lines, with lines to get into
Cadillac Ranch and lines to get in Monkey Bar some nights.”
A Funeral and a Rebirth
The concepts within The Hub themselves, one might assume, would
captivate enough local attention to market themselves. But Taffer
Dynamics has been at the game far too long to just open the doors of
The Hub without creating a lot more excitement. Using a number of
proven techniques the firm has used in other markets for other
concepts, it drove an unparalleled buzz of pre-opening word-of-mouth
all over Fargo. While promotions and marketing for the several concepts
at The Hub are handled individually, with concept-specific elements and
tactics, garnering excitement locally in anticipation of the opening of
The Hub did require a few ideas that applied to the entire facility as
a whole. It didn’t begin with a grand opening. It didn’t even begin
with a soft opening. “We closed Playmakers by having a funeral,” T
affer says. “We had radio jocks giving eulogies. As people walked out,
within minutes, ‘TOP SECRET ’ was put on the doors.” Taffer is
referring to a classic Taffer Dynamics attention-getter that’s worked
with other concepts the firm has done in other markets — wrapping the
entire facility in a cover, printed on which in huge letters were the
words “TOP SECRET .” This viral marketing approach drove curiosity and
worked the local media’s interest. “The media started calling, saying,
‘What are you guys doing?’” T affer says. “Our posture was, ‘We can’t
tell you. It’s top secret.’” The next buzz-driving element pre-opening
was a Preview Party at Prime that was invitation-only, the Thursday
night before the Friday opening night. “This was a very swanky,
high-class party,” Director of Marketing and Public Relations Tiffany
Olsen says. “We had a party with 5,000 tickets given out. We never said
what it was for. We just gave the date and the time and said it was
going to be the newest entertainment destination in the upper Midwest.
“There were lines out the door, and people were begging to get the
tickets.” Olsen and company also invited local media into the building
that Thursday afternoon, so that reports hit on local TV news that
night. And then, of course, there was Kid Commando (see sidebar). All
this viral marketing has been augmented by a smart radio schedule. “The
way we have marketed this building is really unique,” Taffer says.
“Most people who would open a destination like this would spend $50,000
on radio; we spent about $8,000. It only launched a week before we
opened, and the radio spots never mentioned the grand opening. It
targeted (nightly promotions) right from day one.” “That’s very unique
for a multi-milliondollar project like this,” Taffer says. “Most people
are inclined to chase it with a lot of money and marketing. We had the
confidence not to do that. We had the money and could have spent it if
we wanted to. We didn’t do that.”
Maintaining the Energy
Since opening, key promo nights have included a Ladies Night
facility-wide on Thursdays, working with local sponsors and radio
stations, “making it a haven for all the females in town and all the
males as well,” Olsen says. Regarding the sponsors, Vibe has a major
video system with sponsor images and audio running. Friday Night Live
at The Venue brings live music, with a D J mixing during intermissions
to keep the energy high. Every Saturday night brings live music to
Monkey Bar as well. One of Taffer’s tried-and-true tools used at the
opening of the property was “negative cover.” For a $3 cover at the
door, each guest gets a $5 drink ticket. “It’s not negative to us, from
a cost standpoint,” Taffer says. “After a couple of weeks, we pushed
the hours back. Now you only get that coupon before 10 p.m.; afterward
you pay (normal cover).” Of course, The Hub has to get those people to
the door first. “The building has such critical mass,” Taffer says.
“We’re on six radio stations. We’re on a country station, two rock
stations, a dance station, a sports station — constantly, 52 weeks a
year. Our market reach is so predatory by nature. We’re in every demo.
At midnight on a Friday night, when you walk into Vibe, there are
people 45 years old dancing next to people 21, and it works.” One
example Taffer offers to illustrate that “critical mass” of the
facility is its Weekend Wednesdays promotion. “We had no promotions on
Wednesday night,” Taffer says. “It wasn’t a very good night for us; our
big nights were Thursday, Friday and Saturday. I drove by a competitor
down the street called Buck’s. There was a line around the building.
The next morning, I woke up and said, ‘We’re going to empty that
building.’ We called Vacation Adventures, bought 200 trips to Jamaica,
switched to low drink prices, $5 at the door and put together a series
of radio spots on six stations that said ‘The Hub is giving away 16
trips to Jamaica every Wednesday night.’” Management spread those 16
trips out, with four apiece given away in Monkey Bar, Cadillac Ranch,
The Fan Club and Vibe every hour at 10, 11, 12 and 1 a.m. “In two
weeks, we’re doing over $20,000 on Wednesday nights, and the competitor
is empty. That’s the power of a facility like this. The critical mass
is overwhelming.” Most of The Hub’s competitors are independent bars
and clubs. “It’s not a conceptually deep market,” Taffer says. StarMark
Hospitality also owns the Hooters North Dakota franchise (soon opening
Hooters at The Hub at the end of the month) as well as the Avalon E
vents Center, a historic 4-floor downtown catering and events center,
doing upscale weddings and social and corporate events, and Renelli’s
Pizza, a freestanding delivery pizza operation. Its other newest
concept is NYPD (New York Pizza Delivery). “We’ve got a strong footing
in town, and it’s all based around The Hub,” Taffer says.
Managing the Mass
Within The Hub, StarMark has established each concept as a separate
operating entity. “We’ve set up a very specific financial model,”
Taffer explains. “The budgets are departmental; each concept has its
own departmental P & L. I t has a general manager, a staff, labor
and product costs that are budgeted and promotions for that room that
are set up. We run each as an individual business. Different rooms open
at different times during the week. “We have accountability, and that’s
the magic word. There’s accountability for the numbers within Monkey
Bar, for example, at a general manager level, for his average check,
sales, service quality and profit margin. Then we have the corporate
staff at StarMark.” Included in that corporate staff is Olsen, whose
department runs all the promotions in all the rooms — which, of course,
brings us inevitably back to marketing and promotions, one of the
strongest suits of The Hub. The conceptual integrity of the individual
concepts carries over also into its promotions, right down to even the
finest detail. “There’s certain fonts for certain rooms, and there are
certain looks,” Olsen explains. “When we do promotions, we only do it
with people who fit that room. E very poster is individual for that
specific room; there’s not one mass promotion for the whole bar.” The
Hub holds one liquor license across the board, which is essential for
the interconnectivity of the several concepts. A guest may buy a drink
in Cadillac Ranch, for example, and walk right into Monkey Bar with it.
The pricing for drinks and the liquid offerings is largely the same in
all the concepts, with a few exceptions. Prime offers some upscale
Martinis and wines that the other rooms don’t have. Forbidden’s
hallmark is its Sake Bombs, which are unique to it within The Hub. One
fun and distinguishing factor for each bar is glassware. The Fan Club
uses football-themed glasses, and Monkey Bar has monkey-themed glasses,
for instance. Tooters and neon-lined trays, as well as waitstaff
serving beer on foot, help round out the beverage offerings. The Hub’s
rooms feature no drink menus, except at Prime. “It’s too much of a
madhouse,” Taffer says. “Prime is different. “You’re sitting in Prime,
sipping wine or Martinis, and there’s jazz playing, and you’re looking
out the window into The Fan Club, and people are screaming and yelling
and their arms are moving.” To be sure, The Hub is a paradox — a study
in contrasts that is at the same time totally cohesive. Party on,
Fargo.
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