R&R Partners is an
advertising, marketing, public
relations, and public affairs firm
with offices in Las
Vegas
, Phoenix
, Reno
, Salt Lake City
, and Washington D.C.
.
On June 23, 2008, R&R was one of 25 recipients of the Society
for Human Resource Management Best Small Companies to Work For in
America award. In June 2008, R&R and the Southern Nevada Water
Authority were awarded the Silver (second place)
EFFIE. R&R won a 2008 AdweekMedia BUZZ Award for
the “Best seamless integration of a brand into a reality show” for
an integration with ABC’s Carpoolers on behalf of
Valley Metro.
Valley
Metro provides public transportation alternatives for the
greater Phoenix metro area.
One of R&R's largest clients is the
Las Vegas Convention
and Visitors Authority.
"What Happens Here" ad campaign
R&R is responsible for the
Las Vegas Convention
and Visitors Authority's "What Happens Here, Stays Here"
campaign. The "What Happens Here, Stays Here" campaign was named
the "most effective" ad of 2003 by
USA
Today, and the trade publication Advertising Age termed it "a
cultural phenomenon." In 2004, the
Las Vegas Convention
and Visitors Authority and R&R Partners were named Grand
Marketers of the Year by
Brandweek for
their work on behalf of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors
Authority. A CNNMoney.com article on the report stated “Las Vegas
followed Google at No. 2 in the projected winners list. As a brand,
Vegas has benefited from the "what happens here, stays here"
advertising campaign wave”.
After the $1 sale of the "What Happens Here, Stays Here" copyright
to R&R Partners on November 9, 2004, the LVCVA paid $321,000 in
attorney's fees because of an investigation into the legality of
the controversial sale. The sale was later overturned by a federal
judge who claimed that the sale was made without the knowledge of
the board. The judge also ruled that R&R partners was never the
owner of the copyright and therefore could not collect damages or
profits from the copyright.
According to internal LVCVA documents the advertising campaign
"What happens here, stays here" has had little impact as most
people, about 70% stated to R&R (the advertising firm who
created the ad and conducted the market research) that the slogan
had no impact on their decision to visit Las Vegas.
In a Sept. 27, 2009, article in the Las Vegas Sun discussing the
rebirth of the "What Happens Here" campaign, Matt Scheckner,
executive director of nonprofit industry group Advertising Week,
said, “No city in America has marketed itself as well as Las Vegas.
The slogan transcends the recession. The Yankees are all about
winning championships and FedEx is all about trust. People go to
Las Vegas to have a good time. It’s on message.”
Controversy with the LVCVA
R&R has been scrutinized by the
Nevada Policy Research
Institute, who reported findings of a 2007 internal audit by
the LVCVA that discovered a subsidiary of R&R Partners
overbilled the
Las Vegas Convention
and Visitors Authority by as much as 43 percent. Through public
records request NPRI found that the LVCVA not only knew about these
irregularities but literally gave R&R the rubber stamp to
approve expenditures above $500 without any oversight from the
LVCVA. NPRI stated that R&R's contract with the LVCVA was worth
$87 million in 2008. Keith Smith, board member of the LVCVA and CEO
of Boyd Gaming, claimed in a letter to the editor that the
particular overpayment cited by the Las Vegas Review Journal
totaled about $2,000 and was already discovered by the LVCVA's
internal auditor.
William P. Weidner, President of the Las Vegas and critic of the
LVCVA is also a board member of
Nevada Policy Research
Institute. According to LasVegasNow.com Mr. Weidner can direct
policy for the group. NPRI officials have indicated that Las Vegas
Sands Corp. is also a donor to the organization. However on the
same website, Steven Miller, vice president of NPRI claims that
Weidner cannot direct policy because policy is directed by the
consensus of a 13 member board and that Mr. Weidner was not present
at any of the board meetings when it was decided to investigate the
LVCVA. Critics still question NPRI's motives because the Las Vegas
Sands Corporation competes with the tax-funded convention center
run by the LVCVA. Steven Miller of NPRI claims, in an opinion
column he wrote in the
Las Vegas Review Journal, that this
is a "red herring" to steer policy makers away from an external
audit into the LVCVA's relationship with R&R partners.
References
- " McMurry, R&R Partners make best-places-to-work
list" by Phoenix Business Journal, Phoenix Business
Journal
- " R&R Partners gets nod for water conservation spot"
by Henry Brean, Las Vegas Review Journal
- " 2008 Buzz Awards" by Adweek,
Adweek
- " Playing for Keeps" by Mike Beirne,
Brandweek
- " Hot in ’07: Google, Vegas. Not: Paris, Britney"
by Parija B. Kavilanz, CNNMoney.com
- " What Happens in Reno is a Victory for Vegas"
Casino City Times
- ” What happens here stays with LVCVA” Las Vegas
Sun
- " Destination Las Vegas Advertising
Awareness"
-
"[http://http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/sep/27/will-vegas-advertising-worked-work-again/"
- " LVCVA, ad agency defend deal" by AD Hopkins, Las
Vegas Review-Journal
- " Taxpayers make donation; LVCVA chief gets award" by
Benjamin Spillman, Las Vegas Review-Journal
- " NPRI's transparency project"
- " LETTERS: Authority a vital community partner" by Keith
Smith, Las Vegas Review Journal
- " I-Team: Policy Group Takes on LVCVA" by
Jonathan Humbert, LasVegasNow.com
- " Venetian calls for end to LVCVA" by Richard N.
Velotta, LasVegasSun.com
- "Authority trying to change subject" by Steven Miller, Las
Vegas Review-Journal.
http://www.lvrj.com/opinion/36219714.html