Marla Royne Stafford In The News

Canada.com
During this year’s Super Bowl in Las Vegas, fans were stunned to see hotel rates skyrocket, with budget properties charging ultra-luxury prices. The following month, I received my own surprise: A night at some of the same lodgings on the Strip cost less than a stadium beer and pretzel.
Washington Post
During this year’s Super Bowl in Las Vegas, fans were stunned to see hotel rates skyrocket, with budget properties charging ultraluxury prices. The following month, I received my own surprise: A night at some of the same lodgings on the Strip cost less than a stadium beer and pretzel.
Las Vegas Sun
Turn on the TV or take a look online, and you might already be seeing new ads from companies like Apple and Doritos.
San Francisco Business Times
Super Bowl Sunday caps a messy, months-long process of piecing together scripts, signing on camera-fronting talent and lining up sign-offs from agents, lawyers and National Football League officials for the spots that cost about $7 million for 30 seconds of air alone. But the aim is to have a long-lasting impact.
Street & Smith's Sports Business Journal
UNLV marketing professor Marla Royne Stafford said that the Strip is an “ideal place for advertising during the Super Bowl because many have large scale visibility for a campaign without paying the price of a 30-second Super Bowl ad,” averaging $7M this year.
Las Vegas Review Journal
If the Super Bowl is the advertising event of the year, the Strip’s iconic skyline makes a memorable billboard.
Gazeta Bankowa
Advertising on billboards can cost millions of dollars, have the area of ​​20 tennis courts or weigh two tons. Experts argue that even such amounts are paid off very quickly, because many such advertisements later conquer the Internet. In Poland, billboards are also experiencing a "renaissance of form". Although companies do not spend as much as in the USA or Dubai, they spend more on this advertising segment from year to year.
K.L.A.S. T.V. 8 News Now
While American tipping culture may ‘tip’ some off, international tipping expectations are leaving some Las Vegas service employees contemplating the value of working during the very pricey Formula One racing week.