Townie72
All American
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- Aug 29, 2011
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Townie, I'm not saying you are wrong, because I do see your point, but at the same time Carrier thought it was a good thing to have their name on the building when it was built. In the world you are describing that was wasted money because I do agree some subcontractor in St. Louis isn't saying "I want HVAC equipment from that company that is affiliated with that dome someplace."
But clearly, Carrier still saw value in it worth the investment. So it does stand to reason they would also see value in not being shown up by having a competitor furnish the HVAC for "their building."
Of course, Carrier may have only given money for the dome back in the day to keep favor with whatever local politicians were keeping them in tax breaks and environmental permits, etc and it never had a damn thing to do with advertising.
Houston, you are more right in your last paragraph. Local politicians can have a huge impact of a company like Carrier.
As someone who has done a fair amount of Corporate advertising, this was pretty clearly not an "investment". I'd love for some of the Advertising experts on here to show me the case for spending $4M in terms of incremental net profit in an industry with pretty slim net margins at the manufacturing level.
This was more of a "pay back" and a nod to the politicians and powers-that-be saying "We are all in this community together".
At that time, SU and Carrier had lots of connected points. Lots of the Carrier executives and managers had gone to SU as undergrads or they had taken graduate course there to advance their careers. Those Carrier employees at all levels who cared about college sports probably rooted for SU.
So when SU was looking for Dome money, they approached Carrier and they kicked in $4M they had for a number of reasons, some business and some personal. I'll bet $$$ to doughnuts the money did not come out of their Advertising budget.
At that time, you would have found the same inter-connectedness --- even inter-dependency --- between Xerox and Kodak with the University of Rochester and RIT.