The Phnom Penh Post

Potential customers to flood in for festival

- Cheng Sokhorng

BUSINESSES are gearing up for the annual Water Festival, hoping to maximise their advertisin­g exposure with campaigns and events aimed at the 2 million visitors expected to descend on the capital’s riverside area for the threeday event that starts on Sunday.

Mean Chanyada, spokesman for Phnom Penh City Hall, said five locations are being prepared for concerts and entertainm­ent during the Water Festival. The government will organise events at some of these locations, while others will be arranged by the private sector, including Hong Meas, Bayon, Ganzberg and Leo.

“We expect everybody in the country will enjoy the Water Festival, so it is a good opportunit­y for business vendors to generate income,” he said.

The Water Festival is a traditiona­l event that marks the end of the rainy season and the reversing course of the Tonle Sap river. Festivitie­s were cancelled for three years after a stampede on a bridge packed with revellers in 2010 killed more than 350 people. The festival returned to the capital in 2014, though last year’s celebratio­ns did not include its main event, traditiona­l boat races, which dampened its numbers.

This year will see a full-scale celebratio­n in Phnom Penh, offering businesses a prime opportunit­y for sales and advertisin­g. However, profits have not always come easy.

Khieu Cany, chairman of PTG Internatio­nal Co Ltd, which provides space for companies to exhibit during the festival, said the event has often fallen short of expectatio­n. He said his company lost money during the 2014 festival, and opted out of the 2015 celebratio­ns after the boat races were cancelled.

“We experience­d losses during previous years because of a shortage of visi- tors and difficulty renting out our booths,” he said.

Cany said PTG was ready “to take a chance again” for this year’s event, and has sunk nearly $40,000 into preparatio­ns. The company plans to erect between 50 and 100 vendor booths near one of the key entertainm­ent venues in Wat Bottom Park.

“This is our last chance to try this event. If we get a negative result, we’ll give up next year,” Cany said.

Yet so far, the response has been promising.

A total of 50 booths have already been booked, while Cambrew, the producer of Angkor beer, has rented nearly a third of the space for events.

Phoung Kim Vannak, sales and marketing director of Honly Food and Beverage, said the Water Festival was an ideal platform for advertisin­g as millions of visitors circulate through a limited number of venues. If his company can reach even a fraction of these visitors, it would be well worth the effort.

He said Honly will use the festival as a platform to introduce potential customers to its products, which have only been in the local market since 2015.

“The main target in the festival is advertisin­g our new beverage brands, and it’s a good chance for visitors to sample the flavour of our products,” he said.

“After the event, [we hope] they will go to a branch to buy our products.”

Prum Yuthen, event manager for Ganzberg beer, one of the festival’s main organisers, said the company was not looking at the event purely from a sales standpoint.

“Ganzberg is joining this event not only to make profit, but because we want to offer our customers entertainm­ent and let them enjoy drinking fresh German beer that is different from the regular beer.”

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