Las Vegas Casinos Can Restore Magic of Earlier Era by Reconnecting With Customers: Gaming Expert
Posted on: December 6, 2020, 01:05h.
Last updated on: June 30, 2021, 08:56h.
By getting back to “personalized attention,” Las Vegas casinos can recapture the magic that defined the famous Rat Pack era from decades ago, says a gaming historian.
David G. Schwartz told Casino.org the personal attention that smaller casinos like the now-demolished Sands provided on the Las Vegas Strip are harder for the larger resorts of today. The Sands began in the 1950s with 200 rooms before expanding to 777 rooms. Newer resorts have thousands of hotel rooms.
With technological advances, however, “It may be possible to reconnect with customers in a more accommodating way,” Schwartz said.
Schwartz is associate vice provost for faculty affairs at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Among his books is the recently published At the Sands: The Casino That Shaped Classic Las Vegas, Brought the Rat Pack Together, and Went Out With a Bang.
“I think that, for Las Vegas at least, the brand has overshadowed the experience,” Schwartz told Casino.org. “Casinos will tell you how awesome they are. But they don’t always do such a good job of communicating what will make the experience inside them unique and worthy of a trip.”
With tourism in a slump since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in March, casinos are seeking unique ways to attract customers. Two resorts in Las Vegas only allow patrons age 21 and over onto the main property. These adults-only properties?are Circa Resort in downtown’s Glitter Gulch and the Cromwell on the Strip. Also, Park MGM recently became the first smoke-free resort on the Strip.
The Rat Pack
Schwartz noted that “promotions and press relations” were important to the Sands. The property played up the entertainers who performed in its marquee Copa Room. These included Rat Pack members such Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., and Peter Lawford. Hollywood stars like Marilyn Monroe could be spotted at the Sands.
Schwartz said people are “entranced by this era mostly because of the personalities.”
Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis, Jr. were larger than life icons,” he said. “The Copa Room at the Sands let customers meet and mingle with the stars in an intimate setting.”
In 1996, the Sands was closed and demolished to make way for the Venetian and Palazzo on the east side of the Strip. A plaque and replica footprints are on display outside the Venetian where the Rat Pack’s well-known members once posed in front of the Sands’ iconic “A Place in the Sun” sign.
‘It’s Disneyland’
Nicholas Pileggi, who co-wrote the Las Vegas Mafia movie Casino with director Martin Scorsese, recently told Casino.org he liked the intimacy of the Sands. He stayed there while writing the nonfiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas. The book became the basis for the 1995 movie.
For decades, Las Vegas mainly was a town for gamblers, Pileggi said. Employees remembered customers. Walking into a casino was “like seeing a friend,” he said.
Beginning in the 1980s, corporations realized they could make more money with larger resorts that offer gambling as “an additional amenity,” Pileggi said.
While he misses the intimate appeal of the Sands era, Pileggi said the never version of the city has its upsides.
“It’s Disneyland,” he told Casino.org. “The climate is good. These hotel-casinos are spectacular. It’s just unbelievable.”
Last Comments ( 37 )
We can not wait to move back to Florida. Vegas sucks.
Get rid of resort and parking fees . Would be a start. Try not to make your clients feel like walking wallets. And as always customer service. Treat your clients better and inspire brand loayalty.
My grandma moved there in the mid 90s and even from then to now a trip to vegas is quadruple the price! Resorts have gone crazy with RESORT FEES I don't use any of that crap(pools, wifi, exercise equp.) Then to charge more to park the car than it cost to rent a car, ridiculous! No customer service in the "chain" resorts. MGM and Ceasars are who is RUINING Vegas We went out 2 weeks ago, rented a car, stayed downtown and only went to the strip once, sad nothing we wanted to didn't open till 4, it was Saturday afternoon so we went to Jimmy Buffets and had margaritas and crappy chips,salsa, and cheese dip. $85 for shitty food, service, and very weak drinks! Im over it! Foxwoods in Connecticut gives me great comps, personalized service and they still care about keeping the customers happy. Its a huge resort, more than 1 hotel, has an outlet mall attached and in the fall is the most gorgeous views of the multi colored tree tops pictures cant capture the beauty like in person. Its in the middle of nowhere and on tribal land. They still know hospitality is what will bring you back because your probably not gonna just be in the area! Las Vegas is a quick drive for so many that if your only 4-5 hrs away its a close weekend away if you can afford it. But the competition is all doing business wrong in raising prices for less service. I can gamble across the street at my local bar, its never been gambling that was the attraction in Vegas it was the hospitality of the people who worked these jobs. They no longer care, its a paycheck that pays the same no matter how they treat you. Even if your a big tipper, don't expect that to change because I have a habbit of over tipping, after20 years of bartending I know sometimes working with the public has its moments but if someone shows appreciation that will usually get them to at least smile or say Thank You! It doesn't change, the next day they won't even remember you! It's sad, so many people out of work but they keep these people as they are "cost effective" I'll stay home, wait on mysef, sleep in a clean comfortable bed and maybe concider a new place to vacation!!! On a side note:: The Stratosphere was actually very very good to me, its not a horrible place like some make it out to be, the neighborhood needs some work but if your renting a car and vallet park,its still free there, it is totally safe and I have Never had any issues with the staff and I did have a casino host untill the change, not sure now because they haven't called since the changes.
You voted for a governor that destroyed Vegas...hahahaha
Some casinos have really nice Shitters.Always clean and serviced and not backed up,or clogged..Hand soap always Filled up.
I like Vegas. Go there a few times a year but I see that dwindling. I like to gamble and the games that are offered on the strip are the absolute worst for players. Between the auto shufflers and lower blackjack payouts it's not a place any knowledgeable player will play. I tend to go off strip more and more. And I am starting to ask myself why make the trip when there are 'lesser' gambling areas closer to where I live that offer friendlier games for players. I had hoped that these hard times would lead casinos back to their base, but when I was there a few months ago it seems only to have lead them to raising all the table minimums and making all the blackjack tables a 6:5 payout.
:: If all casino owners could agree that in order to survive long term they need satisfied customers, they would all agree that they must change the way Las Vegas works. Right? Reverse the greed, demote the bean counters, man up and revolutionize the town with true client-driven strategies for the New World we're all heading into, like it or not. If that means reviving & imitating the good old days, fine. Personalized service staff assigned to all guests! Single-deck Blackjack! Whatever it takes. The secret is no more bullshit, no more concealing the greed with a bunch of worn-out shell games and hidden fees. Lower the prices! The customer is always right in the New Las Vegas. Step right this way, folks! Our stockholders are broke because we've cancelled big dividends, but we're gonna make damned sure your stay is fantastic ! Can you see the impossible, magical thinking in all this? That's because of one simple fact :: America herself is as ruined by Greed as Las Vegas is. Even if you could find one visionary casino owner who was passionate about making these changes, he couldn't do it unless all the other owners were on board, and that's impossible. In fact I doubt humans even make major strategic decisions such as this any longer. It's some clever artificial computer on Wall Street ! No one has the balls to challenge Wall Street ! So kiss your gambling ass goodbye and say farewell to the Las Vegas you loved, because until Green Aliens land & take over Vegas and bring back free cocktails for everybody, your pockets are gonna be empty forever and Las Vegas will be a sad, empty shell where Royal Flushes never hit again.
I began gambling in Vegas in 1971. Back then Nevada had a monopoly on gaming in the USA, but there were no resort fees, food and beverage was a bargain, and players were pampered. I used to go on junkets to the Sands and had unlimited RFB comps. I remember spending $650 for dinner one night and no one said anything. There was always a welcoming bowl of fruit in my room when I arrived. My casino host would call me when there were special events he knew I liked. He would personally invite me out to Vegas and set everything up for a carefree stay. At that time I was basically a 5K credit line gambler (probably 15K by today's standards). Thus, I was far from being a whale...but I always felt special in Vegas. Now when I go to Vegas, with an equivalent credit line...everything is done by "points" accumulated on a "player card"...and, except for mailers, contact between myself and the casino is basically nil. I agree with your other commentators: the greatest way to rejuvenate Vegas--and the "old" Vegas feeling--is to make the gambler/casino relationship more personal, don't try to make every activity in Vegas revenue generating (e.g., food can be a great loss-leader for generating more profits elsewhere--at the tables) and get rid of the worst idea to ever come out of Vegas: the HATED RESORT TAX!
Ive been going to vegas for 25+ years for usually a week or more at a time , i have seen the decline of vegas and im only there once or twice a year , these casino owners /ceo are there all the time and should take notice, their greed by charging fees for everything , parking , resort fees those are a joke , all these fees have discouraged people like me that enjoyed coming to vegas for the atmosphere and to gamble and enjoy shows and spend money , vegas now caters to the ghetto element with the music and DJs and atmosphere they project with the music choices , that ghetto element has become more apparent with the strip violence , vegas is driving out good people who spend money and enjoyed vegas , and caters to the ghetto which, see how much they do for vegas . Why would anyone choose to go there and spend their money with fees up the butt before you even walk in the door , violence , ghetto , there are plenty of other casinos and resorts now around the country that people can choose from , hopefully the author of this article reads these comments and can forward them to some of these casino ceos , maybe some of these comments will strike a cord and work to bring back an enjoyable safe vegas for all people to come and enjoy , not just ghetto gang element
So true. There must be a way to bring the "Las Vegas feel" back. The larger resorts make the Strip look like Wall Street banks. The personal aspect is obliterated. Bring back some of the personal feel, and I'll be back in a hurry!
I have been to L V 20 times since 1994. The enjoyment I used to have is gone - Sad to say. Greed has taken over beyond reason. The resort tax is nothing more than legal robbery - on a 4 night stay this can be $140.00 add that to the food & drink, cost of the trip etc Lv is a place that a lot of people just won’t go to anymore $12 - $16 fir a vodka lime and tonic is disgusting, none of my casino going friends will not visit there any longer. Seems a coincidence the resort tax came into being when the NHL team was coming and then the Nfl right behind. If Goodman wants these teams let her pay fir them. It’s a sin what she and her cronies have done to what was my favorite place on earth - bar none!
As a kid born in 1959 and going to my folks to Vegas but more to Reno I believe children should not be on the the floor where there's gambling they should be kept this side that's where I was kept...
When I was younger and broke you would find me in Vegas 4-5 times a year. I work at a college and have summers off, long Christmas breaks, and Spring Break off with my job. Now that I’m older and have quite a bit more money coming in you’d think I would be there just as much or more. However, I can’t bring myself to make that trip due to these resort fees that I am 110% offended by and pissed off about every time I’m making a reservation. I either decide to go somewhere tropical, or just stay and gamble in my home casino. I’m not going to do it, these fees are ridiculous and it makes Vegas seem like a rip off from the moment I make that reservation. I don’t spend money when I feel like I’m being ripped off.
I was born in Las Vegas in 1950.. Sadly or in reality my views of las vegas I know is totaly opposite from history some speak of. My mother was Wilbur Clark's secretary and I called him Uncle Wilbur for years. We lived on Tumbleweed Lane in the 1940's and 50's later known as Twain Avenue and a lady. At the then end of the street had a public swimming pool....so much fun until she sold out in 1958. I luv las vegas experts that litterly know nothing about Las Vegas..so sad .
There is only one 'Vegas'!...