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Take Me Out to the Ball Game, Take Me Out of Work

Atomic PR in behalf of its client email Vertical Release, a leading provider of self-service email, published the following study and published it in apress release, drawing the attention, among others of CNBC.Baseball’s Opening Day Sparks Increase in Employee Absenteeism and Inattention

VerticalResponse Survey Finds Nearly Half of Offices Feel the Crack of the Bat on Opening Day

San Francisco, CA – Mar. 31, 2006 – Baseball’s opening day is just around the corner and many of our nationÕs employees would rather take part in the pastime than focus entirely on work. VerticalResponse, the leading provider of self-service email and direct mail marketing solutions, recently surveyed customer companies in cities with professional baseball teams and found nearly half (46%) of respondents see an increase in absenteeism and inattention on opening day, as many employees either miss work entirely or tune eyes and ears toward the game through their browsers and/or radios.

The survey also revealed one-quarter of companies use baseball for business-related purposes, such as schmoozing clients at the ballpark, purchasing tickets in luxury boxes, and employee outings. Another notable aspect of the responses is the trends from different regions of the country, for example:

  • New England companies lead the way in baseball-related absenteeism and inattention, as 39% of the areaÕs respondents say opening day affects their productivity and many of the region’s companies leverage Red Sox mania in marketing efforts:
    • Half of the responding area companies incorporate baseball in their direct email campaigns.
    • Half also experience a change in email response rate on opening day.
  • 43% of total respondents across the country make a family affair out of game day, taking their spouse and kids to the ballpark. Midwesterners skewed even more strongly towards family-orientation, with more than half stating they usually attend a game with their family.
  • The West Coast shows a more romantic trend, as 38% responded they attend a game hoping to sneak a kiss from a date on the Jumbotron.

“Many companies tie their promotional efforts to local and seasonal themes, and with new offices overlooking AT&T Park, we understand the appeal of baseball as a marketing tool,” said VerticalResponse CEO Janine Popick. “Targeted campaigns crafted around special themes, or devised with regional differences in mind Ð such as the kind revealed in the survey Ð yield greater results, underscoring the need for campaigns tailored to particular audiences.”

The unscientific survey was conducted via email in March 2006 and queried VerticalResponse customers in markets with professional baseball teams on topics relating to baseball and direct marketing.

As long time baseball fans, these statistics hardly surprise Corra. What better reason to ditch work than to celebrate the advent of baseball season by taking in a game. It seems it is at least one tradition that the blue states and red states have in common, and that is to take their spouses and children out to the ballpark. It may not be as cheap as it once was, but there is no better way to celebrate the end of winter and the beginning of spring.

Of course, we realize that when the employee bags work and takes his family out to the ball game he or she is allowing their children to play hooky for the day. This too is not the worst tradition, since we are now so career minded it is most satisfying every now and then to let that remaining streak of rebellion take hold and go out and live in the moment. After all, anymore there are so few moments families get to share, let them share one that honors a grand tradition.

So the workforce skips work, the kids skip school, and productivity allegedly slows down for Baseball’s opening day. So what? We will all endure; the country will still thrive, and our families will have a moment to remember. If that doesn’t beat working, we don’t know what does.

By Gordon Basichis

Gordon Basichis is the Co-Founder of Corra Group, specializing in pre-employment background checks and corporate research. He has been a marketing and media executive and has worked in the entertainment industry, the financial, health care and technology sectors. He is the author of the best selling Beautiful Bad Girl, The Vicki Morgan Story, a non-fiction novel that helped define exotic sexuality in the late twentieth century. He is the author of the Constant Travellers and has recently completed a new book, The Guys Who Spied for China, dealing with Chinese Espionage in the United States. He has been a journalist for several newspapers and is a screenwriter and producer.