Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Aircell Betting In-Flight Internet Will Fly

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Within the next year or two, every major U.S. airline will routinely make wireless Internet available to its domestic passengers, says the industry's leading wireless vendor.

Fran Phillips, senior vice president for airlines at Chicago-based Aircell, says the company's broadband system enabling airlines with Wi-Fi enabled devices such as laptops and smart phones to access the Internet, email accounts and instant messaging will be routinely available by 2010.

"We are in various stages of negotiation with most of the major carriers and talking to all of them," Phillips says.

American(AMR - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) said Wednesday that it will offer the service on its 15 Boeing 767-200 aircraft, which primarily serve routes from New York's Kennedy Airport to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Miami. Two weeks earlier, Delta(DAL - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) said it would install Aircell systems on its entire domestic fleet by next summer.

Meanwhile, JetBlue(JBLU - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) and Continental(CAL - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) plan to offer LiveTV's Kiteline, a competing service owned by JetBlue that offers email connectivity. And Southwest(LUV - Cramer's Take - Stockpickr) is working with Westlake Village, Ca.-based Row 44 to offer satellite-based wireless service.

"It's going to be a carrier by carrier decision, but you can see clearly that onboard broadband access is the wave of the future," adds David Castelveter, spokesman for the Air Transport Association. "This takes onboard communication to a new level."

Airlines aren't yet certain how much revenue onboard wireless will produce. But passengers on both American and Delta will pay the same $12.95 rates on flights longer than three hours. Delta has also announced a $9.95 rate on shorter flights. Pricing was set in conjunction with Aircell, which has revenue-sharing deals with both carriers. Terms were not disclosed. Virgin America, also an Aircell partner, says it will charge for the service but has not yet set a price. In June, American took the system live for a day, testing it on a New York-Los Angeles round trip. Although the test was not announced in advance, about a third of the passengers carried wireless devices and used the service, says Doug Backelin, in-flight communications and technology manager for American. To gauge their willingness to pay, all passengers were given gift cards, usable for either a wireless hookup or another purchase.

At Delta, "We're rolling Internet out quickly and making access available to customers on about 75 Delta aircraft by the end of the year and expanding to the rest of our domestic mainline fleet, 330 aircraft, by next summer," says spokeswoman Betsy Talton. She maintains that the project is "a low capital investment and high revenue opportunity" for the carrier.

Given that it has deals with the two biggest U.S. carriers, as well as with start-up carrier Virgin America, Aircell appears well-positioned.

In 2006, Aircell won exclusive rights for an air-to-ground broadband spectrum in a Federal Communications Commission auction, paying $31.3 million. Subsequently, the company spent tens of millions of dollars to build antennas at 92 sites, Phillips says. The company, financed by investment banks and private equity firms, has not indicated it has any plans to go public.

Its system has the advantage of adding just 125 pounds of weight to each aircraft that carries it. Because most of the equipment is at the 92 ground sites, installation on the aircraft is quick and most of the system maintenance is performed on the ground, Phillips says.

Aircell's system also has a major shortcoming in that it does not work over water, making it unavailable on the longer, international flights when it would seem to be most desirable. So far, Southwest is the U.S. carrier that plans to test a satellite-based system, rather than a land-based system -- even though it has no international, over-water flights.

Phillips says satellite systems require more weight on the aircraft and more installation time. Still, she says, "we're following what's happening in satellite very closely -- if and when the technology becomes lighter and economical, we will be there."

Aircell Gogo inflight Internet service goes live on American Airlines


by Scott Carmichael Aug 20th 2008 @ 1:30PM

Several weeks ago, I reported that Delta Airlines was gearing up to offer the Aircell Gogo inflight Internet service, but it is American Airlines who beat them to the first operational service.

Aircell Gogo is now offered on select American Airlines Boeing 767-200 flights between New York and San Francisco, New York and Los Angeles and New York and Miami. This puts the total number of flights with the Gogo Internet service at 174 per week.

For just $12.95, passengers get unlimited access to the Internet, but Aircell points out that VOIP (Internet calling) and cell phone calls are not possible.

To use the service, you'll need a Wi-Fi capable laptop, PDA or smartphone, you can find a comprehensive list of supported devices on the Gogo site. If you plan to travel light, you'll be able to use your Wi-Fi enabled Blackberry, iPhone or iPod touch to get online, which should help keep you entertained for the duration of the flight.

Aircell is working on a very swift roll out of their service, in addition to American Airlines and the previously mentioned Delta rollout, they are also working to bring inflight Internet to Virgin America.

This service has all the key features of a successful product; it is affordable, it comes at a time where airlines are scrambling to generate some more revenue, and the market penetration of Wi-Fi enabled devices is larger than ever. My feeling is that it will be a huge success, and certainly more successful than previous attempts at airborne broadband.

Monday, June 2, 2008

Event Staffers Speak Out

Excerpts from www.Eventspeak.com blog

"I wanted to stop in and drop my two cents. As an account director for a smaller staffing agency...I have to say EPS is one of those companies that we hear nothing but good and positive things about. They set the bar in the industry and have always maintained a level of excellence and integrity.

I don't have any personal experiences working with them but I know a lot of staff who do and have nothing but good things to say. I see many resumes with EPS after EPS gigs and have to assume these people accept jobs because they have a good solid relationship.

It's a tough industry and keeping track of hundreds/thousands of Independent Contractors can be a challenge. Especially when you are growing so fast and maintaining clients (who may or may not pay you on time.)

I don't think anyone should have to care about their post but it certainly shows a company who truly cares about their reputation and their staff. In my opionion this is commendable. It's easy to be one of those horrible agencies who doesn't return phone calls and hides while waiting for clients to pay (we are not one of them)..."

Jessica

"It seems like we are at a point in this industry where we have several large players when it comes to staffing talent. For the most part these companies are all fantastic and above board. Where we run into problems are with these promo people who think, I know people... I can provide staff... How hard can it be? I can put ads on event speak, craigslist or whatever... Let's face it, just about anyone on this board could staff an event. I could get 20 people to you in any city you like with a little notice. It seems to me that is what drives these new comers. They get caught up in, "Can I provide the service?" not, "Can I complete the job at a profit and in a timely manner?" When I read your comment, "Keeping track of hundreds/thousands of independent contractors can be a challenge." I thought... Isn't that the business they are in? I mean you can't keep track of hundreds / thousands of contractors when you need them to work an event and then say it's a challenge to keep track of those same contractors when it's time to pay them?

I just went off on this rant because I want people to think about the big picture when they are doing something. Don't ask yourself if you can provide staff. Ask yourself if you can provide staff, pay them, keep track of them etc. Because ultimately getting 5 people to stand under my 10 by 10 pop up tent isn't the job. It's only about 20% of what an agency has to do. Planning your strategy, marketing your services, paying bills, reporting income and paying staff take just as many man hours as finding my 5 samplers in El Paso, TX. (Don't ask me why I said El Paso).

Disclaimer: The following remarks do no pertain to EPS or any specific agency. They are just general thoughts.

Benjamin Beksel

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Worker Bees- 25 tips for keeping your top event staffers happy and motivated.

It’s 110 degrees in the shade with four hours to go and your brand ambassadors are still working the footprint like their lives depended on it. They’re engaging attendees, they’re flashing their pearly whites and they’re making your brand look good. Real good. Is it the caffeine kicking in? The promise of a paycheck? The free branded polo?

We asked folks from every corner of the biz to tell us straight up, what’s the secret to keeping brand ambassadors happy? Money, of course, helps. But surprisingly, cash wasn’t No. 1 on the list. We believe it is disco diva Donna Summer who sums it up best (feel free to sing along): They work hard for the money, so you’d better treat ’em right!

Pay On Time. Waiting periods between the event and the paycheck are industry standard, but closing the gap can be an effective incentive. Joey Meyer, president of Chicago-based Across the Nation Promo Model and Staffing, offers to pay by PayPal, which can shorten the wait to about a week. “PayPal charges a fee which is nominal, but we give it as an option to say we’re going to try to get you paid more quickly.”

Feed and Water. Meyer says it’s one of the easiest things to do, but many brands still don’t feed their field staff. Meals, snacks and drinks are relatively small line items on the budget but for brand ambassadors, the gesture is invaluable. “Drinking energy drinks helps a lot,” says Jessica Torres, an ATN field staffer with four years of experience under her belt. “Especially during long shifts.”

Staff Up. Spread your staff too thin and you’re wasting money and giving a bad impression. Consider having extra staff on call. “When a client needs 10 people, we’ll send 12,” says Meyer. “They might not have anticipated the need but they’ll have the option.” (The brand ambassador should get paid either way.)

Have Their Back. Offering 24/7 access to someone at the brand who can help a field staffer on a moment’s notice offers emotional payoffs. “It helps a lot knowing that no matter what, the company you’re working with is there to help you out,” says Torres.

Set Low(er) Expectations. ATN tells its talent before they accept the work that the gig may be tough—even downright unpleasant. Staffers that know what they’re getting into go in feeling mentally prepared and in control.

Premiums Pay Off. Once the talent gets on site, give them first crack at the giveaway items. “Those are definitely motivating factors,” Meyer says.
Tie Performance To Pay. Atlanta-based Conventions Models and Talent works with spirits brands to incent its off-premise sampling ambassadors. Hit or exceed the quota, and get a chance at cash prizes and paid vacations. Miss the quota, and get paid half-rate. “Not all events, promos or trade shows are based directly on what they do,” says Shelly Justice, founder of the agency. “But when they are, it’s a huge incentive. And it works.”

Direct Feedback. Justice sends client feedback forms directly to the brand ambassadors. “When they’re criticized, it’s an immediate stab in the heart for them because they recognize that they didn’t get away with something,” Justice says. “Same if they did a great job, we make sure they know it.”

Year-round Work. Reward ambassadors who do great work with first chances at future, higher-paying projects. The possibility of ongoing or year-round work is often enough to get their juices flowing. “Some clients do 50 shows a year,” says Justice. “That talent knows, ‘If I do a good job I have a guaranteed number of shows and can make a certain amount this year.’”

Team Uniforms. Larry Hess, ceo of Redondo Beach, CA-based Encore Nationwide, says outfitting talent in matching uniforms creates an immediate sense of teamwork. “People are less likely to burn out if they feel like they’re part of something bigger,” he says. “It gives you that baseball team mentality: you’re working toward a common cause.”

Immediate Gratification. Quick, inexpensive gestures are often the pick-me-up staff needs. Hess sends out gift cards—his go to Starbucks—to lead staffers to reward the best performer of the day. “It recognizes somebody right on the spot, and that gives them motivation to go on to the next level,” says Hess.

Walk a Mile. Put yourself in their shoes, then adjust your program for maximum comfort, advises Justice. “If a client has them in black pants and it’s July 30 in Atlanta—that’s brutal,” says Justice. “So we might suggest black shorts.”

Cash Incentive. Offer an hourly rate but increase it if they do a rock star job, suggests Jessica Browder, founder and ceo of Phoenix-based Eventpro Strategies. “Incentive pay for talent that are on time, with great attitudes and that exceed expectations works wonders,” she says. “Everyone wins.”

Truth and Consequences. Ramifications for lackluster performance are good motivators. EventPro has a zero tolerance rule: Let them down once and get automatically inactivated from the database. CMT has a two-strikes-you’re-out policy. Tardiness can also result in an immediate pay deduction.

Send Upbeat Insiders. Ambassadors feed off the full-time staff’s energy, so send your best people out into the field. “You already go with good intentions to do a good job,” says Torres. “But the environment and the way everyone makes you feel, that gives you more energy. That’s the key.”

Get Personal. Talent agencies maintain expansive databases that include personal data to help them filter and align the talent’s interests, so take advantage of it. Or do it yourself. The American Legacy Foundation ran its own recruiting campaign by advertising for 14 summer tour ambassadors on its truth.com website. “The people we chose to bring out are clearly passionate about making a change in society,” says Mary Sullivan, brand manager-youth prevention at the American Legacy Foundation.

Mix It Up. Mobile teams spend a lot of time together, so pay attention to creating a balance of personalities. “Make sure it’s a good mix of leaders, but not all strong personalities,” suggests Sullivan.

Two-Way Training. Geico invites its ambassadors to participate in pre-, during- and post-show meetings and opens the floor to feedback, ideas and challenges. When people see that their opinion counts, says Mercedita Roxas-Murray, vp-client services at Alexandria, VA-based RedPeg Marketing, which handles, it makes a difference.

Team Building. The truth tour takes the pre-show lovefest one step further by inviting ambassadors to show their stuff in fun training exercises, like an American Idol-themed talent show. “They bring out the enthusiasm and the personalities of the people,” says Sullivan.

Empowerment and Creativity. Truth tour staffers this summer noticed that kids were digging stenciled tattoos, so they put a call into headquarters and quickly got the stuff to incorporate it into their program. Giving staffers creative freedom to develop on-the-fly marketing ideas and then providing the tools to make it happen is a definite morale booster.

Leverage Star Status. If your brand is on board as sponsor of a touring band or show, use the star appeal to motivate field staff performance. “They work twice as hard the rest of the day if they know they get to go watch their favorite band,” says Scotty Batson of Atlanta-based agency GTM.

Surprise Attack. Care packages full of socks and candy, and surprise visits from headquarters go a long way towards showing you care, especially during the dog days of an extended tour or long stint at a trade show. “Every once in awhile we send people from our in-house team who will show up and say, okay you have the day off,” says Roxas-Murray.

Work the Integration. Strong tie-ins to ad campaigns enhance face-to-face experiences and make the brand ambassador’s job even easier. Geico and truth use the Gecko and the powerful TV ads (respectively) to engage attendees walking by their footprint. “One of the icebreakers we use is, have you ever seen a truth commercial?” says Batson, who is also the truth tour field manager. “Ninety-nine percent say, ‘Of course!’.”

Get Dirty. Hess encourages clients to go out and work alongside the staff. “If they see the big boss getting involved, handing out samples or loading up boxes, it goes a long way,” he says.

R.E.S.P.E.C.T. Find out what it means to your brand ambassadors. “Treat brand ambassadors how you would like to be treated,” says Justice.
Finally, remember, word-of-mouth is just as powerful among the talent as it is among consumers. “If you say you’re going to do something, back it up and do it,” says Carlton Abernathy, a Houston-based promo model with 40 events to his name. “Those companies out there that honor their word, it goes a lot further than what they think. Your models, all of them, talk—and word spreads around about which company is better to work for than the others.”
—Jessica Heasley.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

EVENT STAFFING 2006 OVERVIEW


Friday, April 07, 2006 (Published in Event Marketer Magazine)

The feet on the street are now your eyes and ears as well.

When Continental Airlines talks to business fliers at events these days, it’s now through college-educated field staffers. Before Starbucks launched a fleet of street teams last month for its new Chantico beverage, crew members spent three days inside its stores. Apple Computer teaches trade show reps how to operate Macs, whether they’ll use them during the show or not. And if on-premise crews don’t drink Ketel One vodka, they can’t work for Ketel One.

If the growing number of marketers getting more involved in the selection, training, and execution of their event staffs is any indication, companies are indeed beginning to take their brand ambassadors more seriously. “First impressions are lasting impressions,” says Marcia Bauman, president of Framingham, MA-based staffing company The Bauman Group.

Some say the push to foster a higher-quality conversation with the target is driving the increased attention to staffing. “We can no longer successfully deliver our message through an $8-an-hour college student,” says Wes Reese, Continental’s director of sports marketing. “A quality interaction requires a quality interactor.”

Others argue that it’s a matter of brands protecting their event-marketing investments. “As event spends grow, involvement with the customer grows,” says Dennis Murray, president of Seattle-based agency Passage Events. “As involvement increases, marketers are realizing they have to ensure they are stepping up their brand ambassadors.”

Whatever the reason, some say the increased scrutiny is long overdue. “The importance of the brand ambassador isn’t growing,” says Brad Wirz, senior vp-experiential marketing with New York City-based event shop Euro RSCG. “Marketers are simply now realizing the importance.”

Quality Quotient

Brand marketers who are upgrading the quality of field staffs are replacing some of the typical eye candy with personable people who can “actually have a conversation,” says Shelly Justice, president of Atlanta-based Convention Models & Talent.

Not only are events now used to push a message in addition to a product, but the products associated with the messages are more sophisticated. When AOL launched 9.0 Optimized, they needed Web-savvy staffers who could talk up the service, Web surfing, and answer not only Internet questions (does it have a pop-up blocker?) but computer questions as well (will this run on XP?).

“It’s about more than a pretty face these days,” says Tim Ridgeway, a director of business development at Pepsi-Cola Co., who handles many of the soda giant’s trade show programs. “At the end of the day, we want people to walk away not knowing whether they just interacted with a PepsiCo employee or a contract worker.”

On street campaigns and mobile tours, trade shows and grassroots fan fests, and everything in between, field staffers have grown up. They are more intelligent—because staffing agencies are aggressively screening the piles of applicants who come in each week—more personable, and able to do more. “Staffers must now be able to understand our company and our phones, explain how to use picture messaging, and help with logistics,” says Lucie Pathmann, Alltel’s director of sponsorships and publicity. “They cannot be shy, and they have to be at ease going into a crowd and talking us up.”

Marketers in general are getting “more refined and specific about who represents them,” says Larry Hess, president of Redondo Beach, CA-based staffing agency Encore Nationwide. “They are putting less pressure on price and more pressure on having the right people.”

The reasoning? The more relevant a brand ambassador is to the target audience, the more authentic the interaction will be. The Home Depot’s credit card acquisition teams in San Francisco are primarily Asian; in Miami, they’re mostly Hispanic. Samplers on SoBe’s Love Bus don’t just look like the target—with tattoos, earrings in places you don’t tell gramma about, and iPods. “They are the target,” says Verna Cooper, director of marketing with St. Louis staffing house Market Partners.

Staff requests are getting more particular by the day as brands look to create armies of staffers their targets can’t help but engage. “One minute we can be sourcing motorcycle-licensed hotties for a p.r. event in New York City, the next we’re [sending] half-naked street teams of 20 male actors sporting body paint into several markets, and the next we’re finding females within a two-inch height requirement,” says Jessica Browder, president of EventPro Strategies, an Asheville, NC-based staffing agency. “Every single day is different.”

In addition to getting more specific about who their agencies hire, marketers are getting more involved in the actual selection process. Those who used to simply flip through headshots now are getting applicants in the door. When Snapple Beverage Group’s Nantucket Nectars was planning a pair of mobile tours, Stamford, CT-based J. Brown Events came up with the list of staffing contenders. “I then went myself to meet with the proposed hires,” says Nantucket director of marketing Jim Crook. “Only when I was satisfied with them were they accepted as brand ambassadors.”

And just as marketers are getting more involved with their event crews, crews are being asked to get more involved with the marketers. Brand ambassadors once signed out after they finished working an event; now, they’re being asked to provide insight about the programs they’re conducting. After hundreds or thousands of conversations at an event, they’re the perfect people to ask about whether the target is receptive to the message, what’s working, and what’s not. “The feedback from these people may be more valuable than anything else they do,” says Reese. “It’s that good.”

Carolyn Pollock, eBay’s senior manager of consumer marketing, agrees. “It gives us an interesting perspective because the staffers are not as close to the brand,” she says. “These brand ambassadors work for different companies all the time. They usually have an opinion worth listening to.”

Naturally, higher quality ambassadors cost more. Pay ranges for general staffers are $17 to $25 per hour, and $30 to $45 per for regional managers and touring crews, but many say it’s worth it. “We’ll pay more for someone who can have an intelligent conversation,” says Michael Hammer, senior manager in charge of Aquafina at Pepsi.

One other tidbit: The event staff has traditionally been comprised mostly of women, but it’s getting more male. Companies are making more of an effort to better match the target base’s gender split. (And quite honestly, as event programs become more labor-intensive the guys are typically more willing to sign on for heavy lifting during setup and breakdown.)

Ready for Action

A deeper involvement on the front lines requires more upfront preparation for field crews. Brand managers, as a result, are slowly beginning to embrace more staff training.

Some are treating event staffers as they would corporate employees, putting crews through immersion training to equip them with not only corporate and product information, but also a taste of the brand and corporate culture. Starbucks’ Chantico crews spent three days in stores watching customers, learning the menus, and helping baristas. “If the customer encounters our street team at an event, that conversation has to be consistent with what goes on in our stores,” says Brad Davis, the company’s vp-advertising and promotions. “We want our temporary staffers to be as knowledgeable as our employees.”

Other companies make training more social than educational, taking crews out for team dinners and playing brand games after dessert. On the final night of their seven-day training at Lego’s headquarters, for instance, mobile crews head over to event manager Vince Rubino’s house for a barbecue. In cases when bringing the staff to corporate isn’t an option, companies are bringing the training to the staff. Cadillac, for example, flew product specialists out to train field staffers in each market during its recent STS tour.

But much of today’s staff training is still not face to face. Phone training is getting somewhat better, with companies investing in multiple tele-education sessions, instead of just one. The Hain-Celestial Group’s Terra Chips, for example, used a combination of phone and email training to prep street teams for a 16-market tour rolling out now. “Not every event program requires immersion training,” reasons Marc Bessinger, president of New York City-based field shop YES, Inc.

Others are leaning on technology to help enhance and streamline training. Web-based programs can take users through a campaign and then administer a test they must pass to get hired. Famous Footwear recently mailed CD-ROM training kits to field staffers working a grand opening tour. The discs included instructions for setting up stores and talking to shoppers, then took recipients through a 75-question quiz. “We looked at the scores to determine who was ready for the program and who needed a follow-up phone call with more training,” says Heather Gaecke, director of QuickStrike, the New Berlin, WI staffing unit of Omnicom’s Radiate Group.

But training still has a long way to go, according to staffing companies. The process varies by brand, by program, by budget, and by the amount of time available. “It’s still the most overlooked piece of staffing. Nobody is putting a line item in the budget for training,” says Hess. “Many clients are content with quick phone training or a 15-minute on-site training session. They shouldn’t be.”

Mixed Bag

As temporary brand ambassadors have found more permanent assignments, more marketers are sending corporate employees to events as volunteer staffers. Crook says Nantucket Nectars will have employees, agency staff, and distributors’ staff work events this year. “We want to see which delivers the most in the end.”

And after years of being asked, marketers are finally starting to get out of the office and visit their events and staffs in person. In addition to scheduled, announced stops, they’re mystery shopping their own events in an effort to get unvarnished pictures of their brand presence.

Staffing companies have been quick to capitalize on the surge in business. Most have upgraded their databases and are screening more candidates. The smarter ones are investing in additional back-end systems and devising electronic reporting offerings, ROI tracking, and e-communications. The next trend? Look for field agencies to introduce Web-based sourcing software that will allow clients to request, screen, and book their staff at the click of a button. Once those systems are up and running, the evolution of today’s event staffer will march on. “As event marketing grows, marketers will look for more ways to get more our of their brand ambassadors,” says Dominique Bonavita, manager of strategic alliances and promotions at Royal Caribbean.

Experiential Marketing on the move.

From the Blog / Submitted by Elizabeth_Toledo on Thu, 01/17/2008 - 17:20.

Yesterday I wrote about how hard it is for women business owners to get a piece of the massive multi-billion dollar federal contracting work. Today I look at how non-profits can get a piece of the $1.4 billion corporate "cause" marketing industry fueled by the "Experiential Marketing" craze.

In a nutshell -- old-style advertising that simply encourages consumers to buy your product is on the decline. New marketing that promotes direct consumer engagement at events and online is on the rise. And tying in a cause to that new marketing significantly improves a campaign's success.

“Experiential Marketing” has been building in popularity among corporate advertisers; everyone from Weight Watchers to Hilton Hotels to Tampax has embraced the strategy. Some experts estimate that this approach has grown into a $50 billion industry, and that about $1.4 billion of those dollars are directed to “cause” marketing. In fact, most people in the United States (84%) are willing to switch brands to support a cause and the public support for cause marketing has measurably increased since September 11, 2001.

Co-branding with corporations is a dicey prospect for some non profits. But if it’s a strategic direction that works for you, here are some tips from marketing experts in the non-profit field:
- Understand the value of your non profit brand before negotiating (Kurt Aschermann, Boys & Girls Clubs of America)
- “Date” your prospective partners before marrying them. Let them see you in action, and get to know their operations. It creates more successful, long-term marketing relationships. (Darell Hammond, KaBOOM)
- Talk through obstacles honestly, which can include differences in language, culture, status, world views, and bottom lines. (Shirley Sagawa, National Service)

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Hair Today…Gone Tomorrow



ASHEVILLE, NC (May 2, 2008) – Ananda Hair Studio and EventPro Strategies join together to host a charity hair donation event Monday, June 2. The event will include live music, door prizes, beverages, appetizers and hors d’ oeuvres.

The event will benefit Locks of Love: a public non-profit organization that provides hairpieces to financially disadvantaged children suffering from long-term medical hair loss.
Three EventPro Strategies employees, including Emery Rosansky, have committed to donating their hair at the event. To date, 15 others have signed up to donate their hair in exchange for a free haircut at Ananda.

“We are so excited to partner with Ananda Hair Studio for such an important cause,” says Rosansky. She adds that while her event staffing employer does most of its business in large markets, EventPro Strategies prides itself on local community service initiatives and is committed to giving back to the Asheville community through charitable efforts.
Ananda Hair Studio will donate the space for the event. Ten Ananda stylists, including owner Larry Hopkins, have all agreed to volunteer their time and skills to provide all hair donors with a new haircut completely free of charge.

“Ananda is always looking for opportunities to give back to our community,” say’s Larry Hopkins, owner of Ananda Hair Studio. “Locks of Love is a great organization with a perfectly aligned cause that we are proud to support.”

If you are interested in participating in this event and/or donating your hair to Locks of Love, please contact Emery Rosansky at (828) 254-5261 ex. 314 or Erosansky@eventprostrategies.com. All donors must have at least 10 inches of hair measured tip to tip, and the hair must not be bleached. Colored or permed hair is acceptable.
The event is Monday, June 2 from 5:30pm – 8:30pm at Ananda Hair Studio, 22 Broadway in downtown Asheville. Parking is available along the street and also in adjacent parking decks and lots.

Ananda Hair Studio specializes in hair cuts, coloring and styling. It is located on 22 Broadway in downtown Asheville, near the BB&T bank building and the Mellow Mushroom Restaurant. Salon hours are Tuesday-Friday 9am to 6pm and Saturday from 10am to 6pm. For more information or to schedule an appointment call (828) 232-1017 or e-mail ananda@anandahair.com.

EventPro Strategies, founded in Asheville, NC in 1999, is a multi-million dollar national full-service staffing agency specializing in event marketing.