You Can’t Manage What You Can’t Measure
Bonus Baccarat™: A Revolution in Baccarat Game Pricing – by applying an in-game price modification.
I Have a Dream (with Apologies to MLK)...
White Collar Criminals Beware
Slot Club? Cash Back?
Create A Refuge
Casino Branding in Macau – Key to Sustainability
The Allure and Loathing Of The Big Drawing
Nopromophobia
A LOOK AT TABLE GAME TRAINING & OPERATIONS IN EUROPE
Signs of a Well Marketed Casino
THE CASE FOR INTEGRATED RESORTS
The Gaming Village Must Deliver An Exceptional Guest Experience
The 10 Biggest Casino Marketing Sins
Locust Marketing
Table Games – Optimal Utilisation: A science and an art.
Little Known Innovations
De-market Corporate Macau to Remove the Bad
DEVELOPING ANALYTICAL TOOLS FOR CASINO MARKETING PROFESSIONALS
CRM in Casino Campaign Management: The Perils of Mass Customization
TABLE GAMES ARE NOT FUN ANYMORE!
How to Listen to Your Customers
Gambling on Conventions
Macau – Confidence or Crisis.
Deliver Winning Experience on a dime
The Concept Of Stalled Revenue Streams
The Southwest Airlines Casino
SIDE BETTING IN MACAU
Casino Innovation – Private Label Energy Drinks
Gaming as a commodity – thinking of gaming as an entertainment service.
ADAPTING TO THE CHINESE CULTURE IN MACAU
TABLE GAMES OPERATIONS: NEW GAMES AND OTHER LEASE FEE ITEMS
Marketing to the Macanese Employees
THE DEALER AS ENTERTAINER OR MORE ENTERTAINING DEALERS?
“Learn Casino Marketing Effectively and Efficiently”
Casino Design – The Last Frontier
Toward Information-Centric Casino Marketing
An Insight into Mr. Chinese VIP
“GOOD TO GREAT IN GAMING” – GAMING COMPANIES DOING WHAT THEY KNOW BEST BY KEEPING IT SIMPLE.
Asian Casino Marketing: I’m not Chinese, I’m Vietnamese
TABLE GAMES STAFFING 2007
Casino Marketing Innovation
“Knowledge Should Defeat Fear” – Understanding the high stakes game of Baccarat - Part II.
The Mystery behind Casino Mystery Shopping
A Sustainable Casino Business Model in Macau
Five Indomitable Trends for the Casino Industry – 2007 and Beyond.
Learning By Example: A Resort that Astounds It’s Guests and Turns Them Into Advocates
TECHNOLOGY AND TABLE GAMES!
"Knowledge Should Defeat Fear" – Understanding the high stakes game of Baccarat - Part I.
TABLE GAMES SUPERVISORS: A NEW ROLE
Casino Transportation – How to attract the out-of-towners.
What Makes A Casino Guest An Advocate?
Words of Wisdom from A Casino Veteran
GAME PROTECTION TRAINING FOR TABLE GAMES!
How Much Lipstick Will You Put On the Pig?
CASINO CUSTOMER SERVICE TRAINING FOR TABLE GAMES STAFF:
The Old Annual Casino Budget Dilemma
LASER: Developing a highly targeted and focused development approach.
Customer Service Buddy
Villa & Suite Controls to Maximize Profitability
Customer Service Training in Macau Casinos
What Made Harrah's An Innovation Leader
Physics, Psychology and the Casino Industry
Gaming opportunities in developing markets.
When, Why and How to “Fire” a Customer
Painting the right picture for gaming developments in international jurisdictions.
Optimize Room Occupancy to Maximize Casino Revenues
Is Your Casino Tracking for Success?
Marketing Casinos with Word-of-Mouth
SURVEILLANCE TRAINING&.
CRM Evolves from Synergy
Does Your Casino Need A CAT Scan?
Foxwoods Formula for Success
Accounting for Your Advertising
Thou Shall Not Steal
Another one for the boys…..or why some European casinos still don’t get it.
Delay Management in Casinos
Optimally Managing the Casino High-End Market
Measuring Customer Experience
Customer Profiling
The Foxwoods Value Project
CONVERGENCE TECHNOLOGY AND GAMING
WHAT CAN BE EXPECTED IN THE U.K. WITH THE NEW GAMING ACT?
Gambling Industry’s Hard Bargain with Academics
4P FRAMEWORK FOR CASINO SUCCESS
Using Comps the Right Way
CHINESE CULTURE AND CASINO CUSTOMER SERVICE
THE WHEEL DEAL
Deal Yourself a Good Hand!
On Creating and Supporting Effective E-Gaming Websites
CUSTOMER SERVICE: DIFFERENTIATION ON THE SUPPLEMENTARY ASPECTS
WANT YOUR ON-LINE GAMING VENTURE TO PROSPER? PUT ‘TRUST’ IN IT TO GROW!
CASINO MARKETING – PERCEPTION OR REALITY
REVISITING THE CUSTOMER LIFETIME VALUE CONCEPT
SPIRITUALITY IN GAMING? YOU BET!
THOU SHALT STEAL
The Main Course on Table Service
COMMUNICATING WITH ASIAN CUSTOMERS: IT’S A QUESTION OF CONTEXT
Lifetime Value of a Casino Customer
CASINO MARKETING AND THE COMPULSIVE GAMBLER
Business The AOL Way
Doing Good by Customers
Preparing a Marketing Plan
Aussie Companies Spin a Straight Up
Cash Back
Think About It
Match Plays, Single Plays, Free Plays, Comp Bets.
The Enduring Priciples of Casino Marketing
How to Attract and Service the Asian Player
Significant trends in Australian Gaming
Junkets for South Africa ???
The Marketing Function
My Gift to Table Game Operators
Casino Marketing
Target Guest Entertainment Experience Delivery System
The Casino Executive Helper
The Ultimate Party Pit
Looking to the Future
Contact Management Programs
A Casino Full of Raving Fans
 
Bright Ideas
A Sustainable Casino Business Model in Macau
by Desmond Lam


A Sustainable Casino Business Model in Macau

A sustainable business model in Macau requires sharing and it begins now. To operate well in this environment requires an understanding of your local community and catering to their needs. You may call it public or community relations. But it is really about loving and caring for the local community that you operate in.

When people talk about Macau, they still refer the tiny city as Asia’s Las Vegas. People need to understand that (1) it is not and, most importantly, (2) it does not intend to be. The impact of casinos on the local economy has been great. Gaming revenue from games of fortune makes up a major portion of the city’s domestic income. Still, the city’s rapid rise in wealth is not felt by everyone. There have been lots of complaints by the local community. This is a small city that is less than 30 square kilometers. Its population of half a million is making way for the roughly 20 million visitors that arrive every year. And there are now 25 casinos here. Grand Lisboa just opened. Soon it will be followed by Crown, Venetian Macau, MGM Grand Macau, Galaxy Mega Resort, City of Dreams and others.

Recently, I noticed a lot of ‘noise’ relating to the proliferation of casinos in the city. Cases of negative social externalities seem to have been picked up by the media. People that I know - close friends, shop owners, restaurant waitresses, car dealers, and even cleaners at my apartment have complained to me about the negative side-effects of burgeoning casinos. Media coverage on problem gambling and labor shortage affecting other businesses is relentless. There is a general feeling that the growth of casino gaming appears to bring much benefit to the government, casino operators and tourists but not so much to the local community.

I recently read an article that painted a grim picture of Macau’s future development. A city without doctors and policemen. A city where most of our ambitious young school leavers would join the exciting casino industry as dealers. They have chosen to join the industry at such early age in order to battle rising costs of living. They would do so at the expense of further intellectual development through tertiary education.

A sustainable casino business model will require a multi-dimensional approach. It requires you to pay attention to your customers, employees, investors, and other public stakeholders like the local community. It requires an active management of perceptions towards the casino. Simply having a responsible gaming program that caters to your own staff is insufficient- that is merely seen as a form of aesthetic business-oriented behavior by the local community and government. Moreover, problem gambling is just one issue that the local Macau community is currently facing. There are other key issues like inflation, general decreasing labor quality, and labor shortage. Casinos here are seen by some locals as the evil that causes these damages.

Hence, casino operators need to reach out to the local community and help the locals to improve their conditions. You will need to build a good community relation and be seen as a good corporate citizen. Up till now, this has not been the case – at least in perception. There is much to be done to carve Macau into a healthy gaming entertainment city. In an environment where businesses are growing so much faster than what the Macau government can cope with, casino operators need to take stronger initiatives than they are currently doing.

It is not just about giving, it is about sharing. Sharing of resources means not just giving money in the form of taxes and charity. Casinos have resources beyond that. It has teams of experienced employees that are perhaps among the best that Macau can offer. It has employees who are both international and brilliant in their business operational skills. Casino operators can share these resources with the local community like providing ad-hoc training or general education to the small local businesses. This can be done through collaboration with local universities, institutions or simply doing it yourself.

Love your dealers. Train them and treat them well. They are all Macau residents and they are your ambassadors to the local community. Give them room and prospect. Groom them and let them grow. Educate them in all areas, even beyond casino operations. Give them a chance to move to areas like hotel management and event planning. They are among the best assets in Macau and kind words from them help build a positive image of your casino.

Macau is growing but there are risks. This is a small place and the local community has as much stake in this city as the casino operators themselves. Everybody stands to lose if the battle for the hearts and minds of the local community fails. We are in this together and should work together like a big family. This would mean listening, caring and sharing. For hundreds of years in Macau, East has worked (well) with West. This is and should be the spirit of Macau.



Date Posted: 12-Apr-2007

Desmond Lam is an Assistant Professor at the University of Macau. He can be contacted at DesmondL@umac.mo.