kokomO wrote: ↑Mon Mar 28, 2022 9:23 am
Petrov788 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 28, 2022 7:20 am
kokomO wrote: ↑Sun Mar 27, 2022 6:07 pm
Eh? The club sold every £5 ticket they could, it was a sell out (apart from the away section)
The empty seats were season ticket holders who didn’t attend. Can’t knock the club for selling every single seat they were able to. It could’ve been 50p a ticket and they wouldn’t have been able to sell another ticket. The price of the ticket is irrelevant, ALL tickets were sold.
Tickets sold for game including season tickets 7,500
Actual people who attended 6,000
If that's true then a hell of a lot of season ticket holders didn't turn up, lots. There were tons of empty seats in every stand. Which is odd, for a home game in the sun, team in form, retro kit day
The whole point of football for a fiver is to entice new fans. I just wonder how successful they are at doing it.
Sorry think you're missing my point. As at Friday afternoon ALL tickets for the ground apart from the away section were sold out. I couldn't get a ticket , online all seats were taken, club tweeted that all tickets for the game were sold out. As mentioned above it was 1,500 season tickets that didn't turn up on the day. The game for a fiver day was a complete success. The club cannot sell seats that belong to season ticket holders. There being 6,000 actually there on the day is NOT the number of tickets sold. I know a number of season ticket holders that don't go to every game. I never used to go to every game when I had one (did about 16/17 games)
Christ on a bike.
1500 season ticket holders not turning up all deciding to miss this particular game when we're playing well, the sun it out, we're scoring goals and the feel good factor is back - is an issue. The club needs to look into why that happens. Yes could be any number of things, covid, rail cancellations, people going to BBQ's instead. But 1500 is a massive chunk of our home capacity. Put the season ticket no-shows to one-side and return to my original point:
Thinking out loud more than anything, I don't know how good the club is at collating and analysing various stats and patterns in ticket sales - is
how many of the tickets sold were to NEW fans, people that have never been before, turn up for a game, see two goals, see a win, hear a decent atmosphere, eat some donuts, have the kids take selfies with Theo - and decide they will come back. Do they know of how many turn up for this game and show up at the next home game. Are those tickets being bought by locals, or traditional fans out in Essex.
Is football for a fiver achieving what it is set out primarily to do. They take a financial hit after all, is it worth it to the club in the long run? I'm not criticising the scheme, but as a fan interested in the strategy for growing the club's future. I'd like to know how well it meets its aims. Orient's fan base is aging and could drop further still when it has to compete with large premier league clubs in the area. Lower league football might be trendy in certain age bands at the moment, but it certainly isn't with younger fans.