What J Sailors Can Do to Help!
(Sydney, Australia)- Yachting Australia released the findings of a
research report regarding the perceptions of sailing in Australia.
Developed over six months by leading sports and entertainment
consultancy firm gemba, the report will shape future Yachting Australia
and yacht club programs to increase membership and participation.
In releasing the report Yachting Australia CEO Phil Jones said that the
information will be used to shape a number of future programs and
initiatives. In working with industry partners, he said "we jointly
identified the lack of solid data and evidence into the levels of
participation in sailing, and what the drivers and barriers were to
increasing it," Jones said. "Whilst there are plenty of opinions in the
sailing community, we really needed solid and objective information
about
what club members and the Australian public think of our sport."
The top six insights in the Report Summary are:
- Australians generally have a low rate of both participation in, and
passion for, sailing (we rank 34th and 37th respectively amongst all
sports)
- Sailing is perceived as an 'exclusive' sport while not being seen as
very 'accessible'. Yacht Clubs are generally not welcoming, and are for
older people only
- On average, the starting age of sailing is much higher than other sports with established junior programs
- Primary and Secondary school age children, and young families have the
highest interest in participating in sailing in the future
- Relaxation is consistently the most important reason for participation
in sailing among both current sailors and those interested in sailing.
New participants are interested in a social, relaxed activity rather
than competition, the later tending to be more important to current club
members.
- The main barrier for future participation is the perceived cost of
sailing. Boat ownership, maintenance, storage costs, and annual
membership payment, are expensive, especially for a family.
From
the J/Boats perspective, we agree. And, having participated in
multiple such studies over the course of time with industry partners
like SAIL America, SAILING WORLD, SAIL magazine and others, the results
all have similar outcomes--- in short, highlighting a need to make the
sport and recreation of sailing more accessible to all. In fact, it's a
primary reason why "accessibility" was a specific requirement for the
design of the new J/70 Speedster-- it had to be accessible physically
(children, women and men alike) as well as logistically (ramp launch,
trailerable and easy to rig). It's also why J/70 is affordable and
designed to address the needs of yacht club, sailing club and public
sailing programs in terms of affordability and, most importantly,
durability. Plus, ensuring J/70 had the trademark all-around
performance in an exciting new package means it should attract both old
and new sailors alike to the brand over the course of time. To learn more about the J/70 speedster - the ultimate trailerable sailing machine. To learn more about the social and demographic drivers in sailing.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
The Future of Sailing Survey?
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