Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority

Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority
Headquarters Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Website Official website

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA) is a public-private partnership that owns and operates the Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC), Cashman Center, and Cashman Field and is responsible for the advertising campaigns for the Clark County, Nevada, area.

The fourteen-member board is appointed by various elected governing bodies in the County. Funding is provided by a room tax on all hotels in the county and through building revenue from the Las Vegas Convention Center and Cashman Center. The Authority is responsible for "attracting visitors by promoting Las Vegas as the world's most desirable destination for leisure and business travel."[1]

Branding

One of the primary tasks for the LVCVA is the promotion and branding of Las Vegas. Since 2007, the Las Vegas brand is the second-most recognized brand in the U.S. following Google.[2]

The authority is also responsible for the advertising campaigns for Las Vegas and Southern Nevada. Working with the advertising company R&R Partners since 1982, they have developed advertising campaigns including:

"What Happens here, stays here"

After the $1 sale of the "What Happens here, stays here" trademark to R&R Partners on November 9, 2004, the LVCVA paid $321,000 in attorney's fees because of an investigation into the legality of the controversial sale.[3] The sale was later overturned by a federal judge who claimed that the sale was made without the knowledge of the board.[4]

According to internal LVCVA documents, the advertising campaign "What happens here, stays here" has had little impact as most people, about 70%, stated to R&R (the advertising firm who created the ad and conducted the market research) that the slogan had no impact on their decision to visit Las Vegas.[5] A recent study by Applied Analysis shows that the advertising efforts of the LVCVA return $26 for every $1 spent.

VegasMeansBusiness.com

In March 2009, the LVCVA launched VegasMeansBusiness.com,[6] a resource for the business community to keep up-to-date on the latest news and events in Las Vegas and the meetings and conventions industry. The website also promotes Las Vegas' attributes as a leading destination for meetings and conventions, including the 140,000 rooms and nearly 10,000,000 square feet (930,000 m2) of meeting space available and proximity to McCarran International Airport.[7] The LVCVA created VegasMeansBusiness.com to increase awareness of Las Vegas as the premier location to foster innovation, new ideas and creativity.

Las Vegas Global Business District

The authority has announced plans to expand the direction of the LVCC by creating a Las Vegas Global Business District. Those plans resulted in the announcement for a planned acquisition of the Riviera in February 2015 for $182.5 million.[8]

Activities

The authority works to bring events to the Las Vegas area, sometimes by providing funds to subsidize events. These events include:

Visitor profile study

Since the mid-1970s, the LVCVA has published a visitor profile study, based on thousands of personal interviews with visitors. The latest study (covering the year to December 31, 2007) showed that:

The LVCVA posts research publications about Las Vegas visitors at LVCVA.com.[10]

Board of directors

The authority is governed by a 14-member board. Of those eight are required to be elected officials and the other six are appointed by the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce and Nevada Resort Association.[11]

Awards

The organization recently won the Psychologically Healthy Workplace Award sponsored by the American Psychological Association.

Controversy

The Nevada Policy Research Institute uncovered fiscal mismanagement with the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, a public agency in Las Vegas which is funded by visitor-paid room tax dollars.[14] According to NPRI's investigation the LVCVA entered into a ten-year no-bid contract with R&R, a marketing firm, where R&R overcharged the LVCVA and despite the LVCVA uncovering the over-billing management refused to seek repayment. The LVCVA also allowed R&R to approve its own expenses, and failed to question or oversee most of the expenses being billed to them. The contract with R&R is worth $87 million, including a $40 million advertising contract, which includes a commission for R&R, where the LVCVA cannot identify R&R's expenses.[15] Public records show that Rossi Ralenkotter approved approximately $30,000 in spending that included multiple dinners with bottles of wine, veal, fillets, chocolate mousse dessert and a $25,000 donation to the National Jewish Medical and Research Center, a Denver-based hospital which was giving Ralenkotter an award that year. The documents also show that Ralenkotter used tax dollars to pay for limousine services and a tuxedo.[16][17]

According to NPRI, the LVCVA is funded by the room tax ($220 million in revenue), taking in more money than the Clark County School District, and is also a state agency subject to state laws regarding employees, benefits, and travel expenses.[18] According to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, the problems uncovered by NPRI's reports were already documented by an internal auditor and the problems have been addressed by management.[19]

References

External links

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