Carnival gets bigger in Texas

By Jerry Limone
Carnival FreedomCarnival Cruise Lines will have three ships based in Galveston when the Carnival Freedom joins the Magic and Triumph at the Texas port next February.

Carnival said no other cruise line has deployed three year-round ships in Texas.

“In partnership with the Port of Galveston and the local community, we have been able to increase our passenger counts fivefold since we first launched service from Galveston in 2000,” Carnival Cruise Lines CEO Gerry Cahill said. “Additionally, we are extremely grateful for the support of our travel agent partners who have played a key role in the growth of our Texas cruise program.”

Before arriving in Galveston, the 3,000-passenger Freedom will undergo a previously announced makeover that will add Fun Ship 2.0 product enhancements, including Guy’s Burger Joint, BlueIguana Cantina, RedFrog Pub and the Camp Ocean kids’ club.

Carnival Freedom will sail a 12-day repositioning cruise departing Fort Lauderdale on Feb. 2, arriving in Galveston on Feb. 14. The cruise will call in St. Kitts, St. Lucia, Curacao, Aruba and Grand Cayman.

The Freedom will kick off its new schedule from Galveston with a six-day Caribbean voyage to Costa Maya, Mexico; Belize; and Cozumel. Following the six-day voyage, the Freedom will sail seven-day Caribbean cruises year-round.

Carnival to roll out revamped kids program

By Tom Stieghorst
Camp Ocean logoCarnival Cruise Lines took a step to secure its base of family cruisers, announcing it will launch a new program for young children called Camp Ocean, starting in May on the Carnival Freedom.

Camp Ocean will be more themed than the current Camp Carnival, which it replaces. It will feature 200 marine-related activities for kids, ranging from assembling ocean artifact trays to creating aquariums.

The program was developed with input from a panel comprising experts in child development, toys, play and children’s media, as well as a mom who is a frequent Carnival guest.

“While our current children’s program consistently gets very high marks, we’ve challenged ourselves to exceed expectations with a truly dynamic and diverse program for our youngest guests,” said Mark Tamis, senior vice president of guest operations. He added that Club Ocean will give travel agents “an exceptionally family-friendly feature” to market.

The camp is designed for children ages 2 to 11 and is divided into three age categories, with kids 2 to 5 called Penguins, those in the 6-to-8 range dubbed Stingrays and 9- to 11-year-olds designated as Sharks.

Each group will have its own blue-and-white colored play area with custom-tailored features and activities. Penguins, for example, will be able to play in miniature igloo structures.

There will also be a new “badge challenge” program in which kids get to enjoy adventures and gain a sense of accomplishment. After completing tasks such as trying a new food or making a towel animal, kids can earn a Camp Ocean badge.

Camp Ocean is one of a steady strCamp Ocean play areaeam of product changes designed in part to redirect the conversation about Carnival after the fire on the Carnival Triumph last year.

In other changes, it has redesigned the main dining room, added a series of live concerts with widely known acts and licensed Dr. Seuss characters specifically targeting families and children.

With its 24 ships, Carnival carries more than 700,000 children annually, a greater number than any other cruise line.

Carnival said that on two ships, the Freedom and the Vista, due in 2016, there will be a common play area for all children ages 2 to 11 called Party Reef, along with Creative Cove, a breakout room for arts and crafts.

Camp Ocean will be expanded to the Carnival Magic, Carnival Breeze and Carnival Triumph later this year, with the balance of the fleet getting the program by 2016.

Cruise lines back on the tube with new advertising efforts

By Tom Stieghorst
Cruise lines are returning to TV advertising for the first time since the Great Recession in 2008, giving agents hope that pent-up demand will be stimulated by the media blitz. Within the past six months, Carnival Cruise Lines, Princess Cruises and Celebrity Cruises have in total pledged more than $60 million to new marketing campaigns that rely mainly on TV. The latest is Celebrity, which last week launched its $16 million “Remember Everything” campaign on the Bravo channel.

Celebrity Cruise New Advert

A void created by the near absence of the cruise brands on the airwaves has left the industry’s image to news programs and let it slip from consumer consciousness, said Bob Dickinson, a marketing expert and former president of Carnival Cruise Lines. “The first stake in the ground is: any advertising is better than none,” said Dickinson, who remains a consultant to Carnival Corp.’s four North American brands. Cruise lines have shied away from the biggest mass-market ad channel for a number of reasons. After the 2008 economic meltdown, many consumers were hard-pressed by job losses and mortgage woes, making a big spend on TV unproductive. Some cruise lines, Carnival Cruise Lines in particular, developed an alternate media strategy that leaned more toward online and social media as those channels attracted younger and growing audiences. Finally, the climate for brand advertising was soured by the 2012 Costa Concordia sinking and the 2013 Carnival Triumph fire, which called for a more subdued and policy-oriented marketing response. The result, according to Dickinson, is that cruises have not been a top-of-mind vacation choice. “We were not stimulating the demand in a positive sense, and yet CNN and the news [coverage] was very negative,” he said. Even in an ideal climate, the expense of TV makes it a big risk for all but the largest lines. Magazines, billboards, radio and online are all more affordable, although none connect with a mass audience as well as television, media experts say. In 2012, Carnival Cruise Lines spent $2.6 million on outdoor advertising, $1.5 million on newspapers, $732,000 on radio and $321,000 on magazines, according to Kantar Media, a media monitoring company in New York. Only its Internet spend of $10.7 million came close to the $10.8 million it spent on television. But in 2013 the company decided that after the worst of the reaction to the Triumph fire had passed, it needed to come back in a big way to rebuild brand connection. So it created “Moments That Matter,” a $25 million campaign that featured emotional stories about standout memories provided by past guests and narrated from their point of view.

Carnival Cruise new advert

The ads were somewhat of a departure from the high-energy, Fun Ship themes of the past, a change that Carnival executives said was appropriate to the mood following the Triumph uproar. Emotional response For varied reasons, all of the new campaigns, including “Remember Everything” and Princess Cruises’ $20 million “Come Back New” theme, are designed to evoke emotion and include the passenger point of view. “It seems to be the new trend,“ said Bill Pedlar, a former vice president of marketing at Holland America Line who now runs Knightly Tours, which packages vacations in Alaska and the Canadian Rockies. “It is much more dealing with how you feel, what’s your experience.” Pedlar said he liked a Carnival ad in which a daughter learns that “work mom” and “vacation mom” are different. “To my mind, that was a good target because it talked to the multigenerational thing,” he said. Carnival’s ads appeared on national network TV, as do many of those from Royal Caribbean International, which never really stopped advertising during the recession and whose $45 million annual TV budget is the largest by far in the cruise industry. Smaller lines tend to take a more selective approach. Norwegian Cruise Line ran TV ads in New York and Miami to promote its Norwegian Breakaway and Getaway ships. MSC Cruises advertised on cable channels for the first time in November when it brought its MSC Divina to Miami year-round. This year, Holland America Line has targeted six cities for an eight-week run of TV spots, said Mark Kammerer, senior vice president of marketing and sales. While Pedlar said the new, more emotional ads from Celebrity and Princess could draw noncruisers from upscale resorts, Dickinson said it is important to keep hammering home the basics of a cruise and cast as wide a net as possible to get more cruisers. “I‘m not sure beyond ‘fun’ we want to get too emotional until we know what [a cruise] is,” he said.