Australia seals deals to woo Chinese tennis fans
The Australian Open has stepped up efforts to lure Chinese tennis fans to Melbourne Park by boosting broadcast and sponsorship deals.
More than 59 million people in China tuned into watch the Australian Open in 2017, up by more than 84 percent on the year before and organizers are banking on numbers rising again. The Asia-Pacific grand slam has expanded a long-term relationship with Chinese digital broadcaster iQIYI to 2021, and launched a five-year deal with premium mineral water supplier Ganten from this year. It has four Chinese broadcasters as partners and a year round social media team on WeChat and Weibo. Australia is hoping the country鈥檚 premier tennis event will turn viewers into visitors from what is soon to be its biggest tourism market.
鈥淓vents like the Australian Open... play a particularly important role in encouraging repeat visits,鈥 said Leo Seaton, General Manager of media at Tourism Australia. 鈥(They) also provide a great platform to showcase Australia internationally through the huge TV audience and the destination content that is woven into these broadcasts,鈥 he said.
As part of its plan to attract more visitors, organizers have tied up with online China travel agent Ctrip. Organizers attribute a similar deal in Japan, which allowed fans to book online in their own language, as helping to double Japanese visitors last year.
China has said that its sports industry should contribute 5 percent of gross domestic product by 2025, a fact not lost on organizers who plan to launch the first AO Academy in China this year, as well as a 鈥楾ennis for Schools鈥 program in Chengdu.
鈥淐learly the China Open does very well. The Wuhan event grew this year. Tianjin had some sell-out crowds. There is growth. There is still a lot of work that has to be done. We are very excited about the opportunity that Shenzhen brings,鈥 Steve Simon, WTA chairman and CEO said in Melbourne.
Australian Open first timers Cherry Leong, 40, and Terrence Leong, 54, waving a Chinese flag, were not too disappointed after China鈥檚 top player Zhang Shuai crashed out early despite travelling from Hong Kong. They were looking forward to watching other matches.
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