Tag: Jr.; Danica Patrick; Nationwide Insurance

  • NASCAR Champion Tony Stewart Kicks Off 2012 Sprint Cup Media Tour

    NASCAR Champion Tony Stewart Kicks Off 2012 Sprint Cup Media Tour

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    It was just 65 days ago when Tony Stewart secured his third Sprint Cup Championship with a walk off victory at Miami Homestead Speedway.

    Starting with the season opening Daytona 500, defense of that championship begins in just three short weeks.

    Sandwiched in between those two events is the Sprint Cup Media Tour presented by Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    Strolling to the stage with “How You Like Me Now” playing over the public address system, Tony Stewart kicked off the 2012 Media Tour. He was joined by Ryan Newman, Matt Borland, Tony Gibson, and new comers Danica Patrick, Steve Addington, and Greg Zipadelli.

    The biggest news coming from SHR is the 10 race deal with Patrick and Go Daddy as the primary sponsor.

    During the media break out sessions, Stewart talked about the growth of his young company.

    “I am really proud of the success we have had. It’s amazing how far we have come in such a short amount of time.”

    Missing from the SHR superstar lineup was former crew chief Darian Grubb. Stewart stated he was happy Grubb quickly landed somewhere successful. He also made it clear his decision to part ways with Grubb, and hire Steve Addington, was made long before the season ending championship.

    It was revealed that during the chase, Stewart kept in touch with Addington via text messaging, including sending an encouraging text to Addington after the final race of the season.

    When asked about his new driver, Danica Patrick, Stewart continued his praise and offered a bold prediction.

    “Danica is talented and very confident. It is quite possible she could win the Daytona 500. A rookie won it last year, why can’t it happen again?”
    Fielding questions from media members on the other side of the room, Patrick echoed some of Stewart’s thoughts.

    “My inexperience at Daytona should not be a factor,” said Patrick. “The only thing I really had to work on is the bump drafting. There wasn’t bump drafting in Indy racing, so it took me some time to get used to it in Sprint Cup.”

    Stewart and Patrick worked on bump drafting during a recent testing session at Daytona International Speedway. During the three days of testing, both drivers ran multiple laps in single car formations and nose-to-tail formation; taking turns pushing each other around the speedway.

    Along with her 10 race deal at Stewart-Haas Racing, Patrick is also running a full Nationwide schedule in 2012 for JR Motorsports.

    She reflected on her exit from Indy car racing, and hinted at a possible return in the future.
    “I am relieved I can now focus on just NASCAR,” said Patrick. “I will miss Indy, but I am not going to rule out a return in the future.”

    Patrick said she doesn’t expect instant success in NASCAR’s top level and would be happy with mediocre results as long as she’s learning something along the way.
    “If I finish five laps down, it’s ok. As long as I learn something, improve, or get something from the race, its ok.”

    Danica Patrick’s first race of the season will be the Nationwide race at Daytona in February. Tony Stewart, last year’s winner, is also entered in the same race.

  • ‘You and Me Both Junior’ Garners Nationwide Insurance Top Honors

    ‘You and Me Both Junior’ Garners Nationwide Insurance Top Honors

    In some of the most recognized commercials, including NASCAR’s most popular driver Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and family, Nationwide Insurance is featured not only as the insurance of choice for many of NASCAR’s premier families but also as the title sponsor of the No. 2 national touring series in the sport.

    [media-credit name=”Barry Albert” align=”alignleft” width=”300″][/media-credit]But Nationwide Insurance’s highest honor came when the company received the 2010 NASCAR Marketing Achievement Award at the NMPA Myers Brothers Awards Ceremony during the championship week celebrations.

    “It’s an incredible honor,” Jim McCoy, Director of Strategic Sponsorships for Nationwide Insurance, said.

    “The brands that were up for it and have won it previously, the Coke’s and the Home Depot’s and numerous others, it’s great to be in that company.”

    McCoy, who admits that he is a “huge fan”, has been involved in the Nationwide sponsorship in NASCAR since its inception three years ago. The company’s contract is for seven years, so Nationwide is almost half way through its sponsorship deal with the sport.

    “We are ahead of projections of where we thought we’d be,” McCoy said. “Insurance is a fairly boring category and people think about it once or twice a year, so we wanted to create a dialog with the NASCAR fans so that when the time does come for them to think about it, they think of Nationwide.”

    Nationwide has tried multiple ways to introduce NASCAR fans to who they are and what they do. Some examples include using the NASCAR bar marks in everything that the company does, the “Dash 4 Cash” and “Driver of the Week” programs in the Series, and of course, using NASCAR’s most popular driver Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in their advertising campaign.

    “Dale Junior’s family has a very authentic relationship with Nationwide for over thirty years,” McCoy said. “He’s an owner in our Series and a driver in our Series so it’s great to have him out in front.”

    Interestingly, Nationwide Insurance did not discover this important relationship until the second year of the sponsorship deal.

    “We knew a lot of the sport was insured by Nationwide but to be perfectly honest that came to light after we signed the deal,” McCoy said of the Earnhardt connection. “This was just a second layer that we could add to the relationship and we have seen incredible results in not only driving phone call volume but awareness out there. Dale being out in front has helped that substantially.”

    Nationwide, with the deep dive into the sport with the Series sponsorship, has undoubtedly encouraged other insurance companies, even those that are competitors, to take a look at NASCAR as an important marketing venue.

    “There are a lot of folks especially at the tail end of this last year that are jumping back in” McCoy said. “Everybody’s advertising whether in Cup or in our Series. But we think we are differentiated in the breadth of what we can do and we have a wider way to talk to the NASCAR fan than what our competitors do.”

    In order to keep ahead of the competition nipping at their heels, Nationwide Insurance has great plans for the 2011 season, most of which will be finalized and announced after the first of the year.

    “We’ve got some big announcements in January,” McCoy said. “We’re going to continue with Dale and we’ve got another piece to that to freshen it up. We have a bunch of new spots that we’ve shot and in the can that will run later in January.”

    Nationwide also plans to take full advantage of the new car in their Series and are working on other programs with competition that will enhance the company’s brand awareness. When asked if Nationwide had any plans for utilizing another Junior Motorsports driver, Danica Patrick, McCoy would only say that “Danica is a great addition to the Series.”

    “We love the fact that she was a huge story and brought a lot of new eyeballs to the sport,” McCoy continued. “We’re trying to find creative ways to use all of our drivers, especially Danica. She is a magnet.”

    McCoy also acknowledged that other changes, from the addition of Travis Pastrana, who will race for Michael Waltrip Racing in the Nationwide Series, to tweaks of the Series itself will have an impact on the company’s sponsorship plans. Nationwide executives has been consulted in many of those changes, however, McCoy and the Nationwide executives know that NASCAR has the final say.

    “It’s going to have effects on the properties we purchased,” McCoy said. “We feel that we have a voice but ultimately NASCAR has the final decision and will do what’s best for the sport.”

    Until then, Nationwide Insurance will continue to focus on how they can grow their brand, as well as how they can connect with that coveted target audience, the avid NASCAR fan. And they will continue to correct those who still refer to the Series as Busch instead of Nationwide.

    “We’re all about accident forgiveness,” McCoy said with a chuckle. “But we definitely call folks on it when it happens.”

    “The biggest challenge is that there are so many moving parts,” McCoy said of the Nationwide and NASCAR partnership. “It has forced us to be nimble and do things that the company has never done before.”

    “We win every week with our sponsorship,” McCoy said. “There was some skepticism when we signed the deal. But we have so many people that want to be involved now. Just seeing people want to build it into their plan as they are planning for the 2011 season is pretty exciting.”