i dont want to sit in the family zone , i want atmosphere , banter , the complete package .... There is no excuse why a standard £18 ticket around the stadium cannot be implemented , its merely greed.Not if you get a JSB memberships and sit in the family zone. With no early bird prices and no finance offers we're all having to find ways around it. 0% credit card, instalments. Jobs a good one.
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Do players earn significantly less in Germany?
I 18
i dont want to sit in the family zone , i want atmosphere , banter , the complete package .... There is no excuse why a standard £18 ticket around the stadium cannot be implemented , its merely greed.
And are these prices not marginally higher than our last season at the ricoh
I was playing devils advocate, but as I said earlier on his Sixfields prices were cheap to subsidise the extra traveling costs of a 70 mile round trip. We wouldn't be getting 20k at £14 a pop, we averaged less than 11k in our last league one season at the Ricoh.
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Bundesliga (sp?) spent around 50% income on players wages so can only presume they do
According to this, the PL pay 50% more than the Bundeliga, and that obviously filters down into the championship and league one.
http://www.tsmplug.com/richlist/footballers-salaries-after-tax/
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Of course they would. Top 6 team would attract 20k easy. Sign of success the fans would flood back in. Look at the average attendance in 2007 before sisu came. We were averaging 17k. Those fans would return at the smell of success at a reasonable price. That's a fact
The average price then was £11 a ticket and in the last season of the Ricoh was £8
For a season ticket is £230 for league 1 football unreasonable? That's £10 a game and emirates people to pay up front and we have a 32k stadium to take advantage of.
Coventry is in the West Midlands not in London or down on the south coast.
The highest price ticket of £27 on match day in the premium zone is a joke to watch Coventry city v yeovil town in league 1.
Next season £10 a game season tickets so £230 for a season ticket. And scrap on the day charge and a flat £17 all stadium round. (Family zone excluded)
Still encourages a ST as save £7 a game x23 games and priority on all away and cup games. Don't see the issue really.
For a season ticket is £230 for league 1 football unreasonable? That's £10 a game and emirates people to pay up front and we have a 32k stadium to take advantage of.
Coventry is in the West Midlands not in London or down on the south coast.
The highest price ticket of £27 on match day in the premium zone is a joke to watch Coventry city v yeovil town in league 1.
Next season £10 a game season tickets so £230 for a season ticket. And scrap on the day charge and a flat £17 all stadium round. (Family zone excluded)
Still encourages a ST as save £7 a game x23 games and priority on all away and cup games. Don't see the issue really.
Are you pissed? Tickets for a league match have never been that low especially at the Ricoh.
So we have to be cheaper then every other club in the league with our premier league ground?
That's the average prices dividing total annual revenue against total number number of supporters.
Question on that: what's dragging that average down? Could we achieve the same average with lower adult prices and less freebies/higher concessions?
That's the average prices dividing total annual revenue against total number number of supporters.
Question on that: what's dragging that average down? Could we achieve the same average with lower adult prices and less freebies/higher concessions?
The club always offered a lot of promotions - free tickets to schools etc and the under 16 and concession prices are very competitive.
Save yourself £200 get a 0% credit card and buy a season ticket, pay it off in instalments. Man up
Every club's season tickets are a lot cheaper than buying matchday tickets.
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The club always offered a lot of promotions - free tickets to schools etc and the under 16 and concession prices are very competitive.
What if you take the free tickets to schools etc out of the equation? At the end of the day we're talking about what people are actually paying in hard cash and adding free tickets into the equation distorts the figures.
I never worked in marketing Stupot, but I've spent a lot of years working in banking, and particularly credit. Getting a 0% credit card to buy something that you couldn't otherwise afford isn't always a good idea. It is though, better than wonga.
I never worked in marketing Stupot, but I've spent a lot of years working in banking, and particularly credit. Getting a 0% credit card to buy something that you couldn't otherwise afford isn't always a good idea. It is though, better than wonga.
It was a response to a question regarding the fact the club no longer do a monthly payment scheme. Mbna do a 13 month deal which is better than any offer anyway.
Indeed, assuming you meet their credit rating, and are disciplined enough to set up and maintain an adequate repayment schedule, and that you don't get the urge to splurge on something else on the card too. Not everyone is, of course, which is how the banks make their money.
Do players earn significantly less in Germany?
As for the, it costs x amount elsewhere to watch L1 football so our prices are OK, argument - it's missing the point. It's not just about maximising revenue, it's about getting people through the door too. If you're losing fans because a significant number find it's too expensive for them, then it's probably worth considering whether or not it's too expensive.
I can only talk for myself - at these prices I'll pick and choose the games I go to, others will of course differ.
Any business seeks to maximise revenue. On that basis jaguar could sell its cars for £10,000 each and have a 10 year order bank but ultimately it would be bust long before that. It's also significant the only two clubs that charge £18 or less for a seat are two of the poorest supported clubs in the league.
Despite that analogy there is little evidence cheap tickets would attract more fans anyway - very little evidence over a sustained period actually.
The demographic poverty is also a misleading argument. Let's say Coventry managed an f a cup final and prices were £75 a pop. Would we sell our allocation? I believe we would,
Any business seeks to maximise revenue. On that basis jaguar could sell its cars for £10,000 each and have a 10 year order bank but ultimately it would be bust long before that. It's also significant the only two clubs that charge £18 or less for a seat are two of the poorest supported clubs in the league.
Despite that analogy there is little evidence cheap tickets would attract more fans anyway - very little evidence over a sustained period actually.
The demographic poverty is also a misleading argument. Let's say Coventry managed an f a cup final and prices were £75 a pop. Would we sell our allocation? I believe we would,
Erm.. all other things being equal, if cheaper tickets didn't attract more fans then it would break pretty much every rule of economics I've ever learnt. Clearly even here there's enough evidence that some fans won't go to some games because of the cost of the tickets.
Whether it would make the club more money is a different point. You could probably argue that you'd make more money by having a fuller ground with cheaper tickets, on the basis that the additional support might help the team to more success. More success, more fans, more demand, more money. But I'm not even making that point - clearly a fuller ground has a value to the business of a football club beyond just money.
And we're talking about L1 football here, not an FA Cup final, so that analysis doesn't really make much sense in this regard.
Sheffield United have still managed to maintain attendances of close to 20k despite being in this division for longer than us
Maybe charging so little is why they've been in this division longer than us?
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