First Tracks
Who's in the driver's seat?
The way some in marketing think
these days, anyone over 25 isn’t
worth spending ad dollars on
unless the account is Gold Bond powder,
walk-in bathtubs or an Anne Murray remix CD.
Personally, my pants aren’t baggy enough to
use as an emergency shelter but on the other
hand, I also don’t set the waistband up to my
armpits like a few uncool (non-skier)
40-somethings I know.
I buy stuff. And I buy stuff for my kids.
People selling stuff also need to realize
that the bulk of skiers (60 per cent, according
to the Canadian Ski Council, which collects
numbers like this while the rest of us are out
skiing) are between 25 and 49 winters old,
but more importantly, a) the majority of them
think, act, play and buy like they’re in their
20s; and b) they have far more money and far
less debt than those under-25 guys in baggy
pants and girls with pierced belly buttons—
who, coincidentally, only make up 23 per cent
of skiers in Canada.
A typical lift line varies, of course, region
to region, day of the week, time of day, earlyseason
vs. mid-season, visitors or locals…but
the fact remains, around the world skiers (and
snowboarders, for that matter) are getting
older than even we like to think.
And then there’s the 50- to 64-year-old
crowd on skis. One with, say, a neck tattoo
might reason the over-50 lot looks for a resort
with “a green run off every lift.” Wrong. This
group has more experience than any; they’re
hardly beginners. Savvy marketing types in
the B.C. Interior know this already and are
busy selling them upscale heli and snowcat
weeks in paradise. They know who their
market is and it’s not the baggy-pants crowd.
This jet set is indeed influential, but not
recognized in the marketing world. You may
have noticed that it’s not only boomers who
love groomers, but their sheer numbers have
persuaded most ski areas to concentrate more
on preparing slopes. Some resorts even delay
opening groomed runs because corduroy is
often preferred, even after a big middleof-
the-night dump. There was a time when
expert terrain wasn’t groomed at all, but it’s
hard to imagine major ski areas today without
winchcats grooming black-diamond terrain.
As hairlines recede and helmet-hair thins, so
have gladed areas become more spacious.
It’s not the thousands of terrain park rats
across the country who are driving the ski
industry, they just help set trends among their own group. Meanwhile the
hundreds of thousands of skiers who buy
exponentially more stuff (including real
estate) and actually go on ski trips make
up the bread and butter. As exciting as
the terrain park is, because of the relative
participation it remains a niche along
with backcountry skiing or telemarking.
It's a bit like all the categories of skis
in racks at shops across the country. Race
pedigree at one time dictated what we all skied on.
When I was a kid at the end of the baby boom, I had posters
of Ingemar Stenmark, Franz “The Kaiser” Klammer and
the Crazy Canucks on my bedroom walls. And
I knew what they all skied on. There were
few magazine and ski-DVD pro-skiers sharing
the limelight. Snowboarding wasn’t carving
out a quarter of the pie. And video games
didn’t eat into what was left.
I was riding up on a quad the other day
with three buddies and while looking down
I noticed what was attached to our feet: fat
twintips, über-carvers, teles and a board.
How individual. But it doesn’t matter. The
long-running greying trend in our sport
controls more than half the market and they
prefer all-mountain skis—whether or not
they’re sexy in the eyes of the marketing
boardrooms.