Drag Illustrated Issue 114, October 2016 | Page 42

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Promoting into the Future

Famed second-generation race promoter Jason Miller talks social media , web forums and drawing a crowd in 2016 By Josh Hachat
At first , Jason Miller resisted .
But as he sifts through a 22-page checklist – single-spaced , size-8 Arial font to boot – it ’ s clear he has carried on one of the biggest lessons his father , Maryland International Raceway owner Royce Miller , taught him at an early age .
The checklist is Miller ’ s Bible to a successful race , this one being for his flagship event , the 21st annual Halltech World Cup Finals , and includes every minute detail to ensure the weekend , which is annually one of the largest independent outlaw races in the sport , goes off without a hitch .
Miller joked he put off making his own checklist book as long as he could but these days he wouldn ’ t want to imagine a world , especially when it comes to drag racing , without one .
“ One of the things my father instilled in me early was making sure there was an attention to detail ,” Miller said . “ That ’ s probably one of our biggest attributes , making sure if we say we ’ re going to do something we do it , and not handling something or leaving something undone . That kind of attention to detail and good promotion is the way we ’ ve grown these events every year . When you have the same hiccups over and over again it turns people off .”
Miller will take down what he estimates is a “ couple hundred notes ” by the time the race is completed on November 6 , ensuring his document will add at least a couple more pages by the
time 2017 rolls around .
But it ’ s all part of a process Miller has learned over the years when it comes to being a successful race promoter . He has been hands-on since his family bought the track in 1990 , watching the ebbs and flows of the industry , and just how drastically different successful promotion is in this social media and digital age .
He ’ s now the promoter and event director for Miller Brothers Productions ( MBP ) – a company he started with his brother , Chris , this year – focusing on what has worked in the past to help
predict what will be necessary to promote drag races successfully in the future .
Miller has watched the art of promotion continue to evolve over the years , from simple radio ads to web forum-based promotion to now social media .
But it was Miller ’ s introduction to the web forums in the early 2000s that first let him know that there was a different way of doing things .
“ They ’ ve fallen off since then but in the early
2000s , you could go to any forum that targeted your genre that you were interested in ,” Miller said . “ That ’ s where everybody was and that ’ s where you made those relationships with the racers . When you said you were going to do something and you did it , you earned that respect from everybody pretty quickly .
“ A lot of people were not up to speed to being active on those forums . The ones that were active there , the racers really could connect with you . When you put on the events , you had a really good following that way . It was really important to be active and social on those , just like social media is now .”
Miller estimates he was a member of nearly 350 different web forums , a fact he jokingly didn ’ t know if he should be ashamed or proud of .
But as the art of promoting has shifted to social media , Miller ’ s approach hasn ’ t changed much . The importance of interaction and reliability still reigns supreme , but being able to understand the everchanging world of social media is something that has become vitally important .
“ You have to engage with people and not just be blasting when you ’ re event is and so on ,” Miller said . “ Anytime that you can interject humor , getting people engaged with rivalries or kind of stirring the pot and that kind of thing , you get people engaged who are happy to interact with what you ’ re doing .
“ That just creates more energy . The algorithms from Facebook tell you they want it to be an interactive ( place ). It ’ s not just a site to post information on if nobody ’ s interacting with it . You ’ re never going to be seen .”
Miller commends the job guys like Donald Long have done when it comes to creating remarkable buzz on social media and he is always
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