holland heineken house BRAND-BUILDER I N AUSTRALIA Bull's eye Jff ■mirn t mmm "I lm' SUMMER OLYMPICS In September 2000, during the Summer Olympics, the Holland Heineken House in Sydney attracted six to eight thousand people every day for two weeks. Together, they consumed 350,000 glasses of beer: an Olympic party with a green tint. Sydney was the third city where the Holland Heineken House had been built during the summer Olympic Games. The first time was in Barcelona in 1992, the second time in Atlanta in the US in 1996. Darling Harbour is the entertainment district of Sydney, and that is where the two-storey Heineken Holland House was built. It soon became "the place to be" for athletes, officials, the media and very many (mainly Dutch) guests. Hans Erik Tuijt, Area Export Manager and responsible for Heineken Australia, is delighted about the pos itive image that the Holland Heineken House created amongst the Australian population. "The press wrote a great many positive things about it. We were on TV five times, and the message was always: the Holland Heineken House was the place to be in Sydney." But it was not only the image that was given a big boost: sales also rocketed, thanks to the Holland Heineken House and the sales activities that had been organised by Heineken Australia. The promotion by Heineken Australia prior to the start of the Olympics, proved to be a shot in the bull's eye. Many pubs in Darling Harbour took part in the promotion, in which the enormous bottle played a role. Consumers, who were spotted with a small bottle of Heineken Beer, had a chance of winning the special three-litre bottle of Heineken. Tuijt explains: "Sydney has been a difficult, but challenging market for Heineken. Thanks to this promotion we were able to profile ourselves for the first time." The sales figures for September 2000 were really something. In Sydney, sales of Heineken doubled, in the entertainment centre of Darling Harbour turnover climbed spectacularly. "Normally speaking, we used to sell around thirty cases a week in those outlets. During the Olympic Games, that rocketed up to six hundred cases, not counting the beer that was sold in the Holland Heineken House," says Hans Erik Tuijt, who celebrated the first anniversary of Heineken Australia on the Batavia. This rebuilt V.O.C. ship, specially brought to Australia by Heineken, was part of the Holland Heineken House and was open for the public during the day. Emil i -p «Sbl nil! THE V.O.C. BATAVIA, DARLING HARBOUR I LPJ— -

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World of Heineken | 2001 | | pagina 35