Haunted House Association - Information About the Haunted House Industry



Haunted Fast Facts
 

Hauntworld.com is the best website on the web to find haunted houses, haunted attractions, Halloween haunted houses, real haunted houses, haunted hayrides, corn mazes and more across America with our haunted house directory.  Additionally Hauntworld publishes information about the haunted house industry including a printed magazine (www.HauntedHouseMagazine.com).  Are you looking for information about the haunted house industry, from economic impact on our economy or how the haunted house industry got started and or got as big as it is today?  Haunted Houses and Haunted Attractions are now a one billion dollar industry and Hauntworld will help you learn all the details here on this page.  If you need more information about the haunted house industry contact us today.

HAUNTED HOUSE INDUSTRY IS OVER A ONE BILLION DOLLAR INDUSTRY and a 100% AMERICAN EXPORT!! 

Listed below you will find fast facts about the haunted house industry that you may need for featured articles about our industry. If you have additional questions please contact our media representative Larry, 314 504 3970  or at darkrides@sbcglobal.net.
 

NUMBER OF HAUNTED ATTRACTIONS IN AMERICA 2016

 

We estimate there are over 4,000 HALLOWEEN attractions charging admission fees to their events. We additionally estimate that there are over 300 amusement facilities producing some sort of Halloween or Haunted House event such as an amusement park or family fun center.  A Halloween Attraction could be a pumpkin patch, corn maze, hayride to a haunted house.  Hauntworld.com features nearly 5000 listings ranging from ghost tours to charity haunts to professional attractions.   www.Hauntworld.com. 


HAUNTWORLD TOP RATED HAUNTED HOUSES 2017 CLICK HERE 

 

ATTENDANCE ESTIMATES 2016

The typical haunted attraction averages around 8,000 paid guests. This figure depends on the market and the size of the attraction. About 80% of the professional attractions in America attendance attract less than 10,000 paid guests or more than 7,500 paid guests. Less than 10% of haunted attractions have attendance figures over 35,000 paid guests. Less than 5% of all haunted attractions gross between 40,000 to 100,000 guests. About 15% of all attractions in America average between 12,000 and 20,000 paid guests. A major amusement park such as Universal Studios and or Knott’s Scary Farm can gross $250 million by themselves.  On a busy night the major haunted  attraction can attract over 10,000 guests in one night while a mega amusement park like Universal might do over 40,000.

 

AVERAGE COST FOR HAUNTED ATTRACTIONS 

 Back in the early 90’s the average ticket price for a haunted house ranged between $4 and $6.00 dollars.  By the mid 90’s to late 90’s the average ticket price had soared to around  $10 to $13.00.  Most attractions choosing $13.00 because of its themed number.  Today some haunted houses charge as much as $25.00 while some reach up to $50.00 with add on attractions.  Most haunted house today cost around $20.00 per person.  Major amusement park haunts charge as much as $100.00 for entry into their events.  Over 50% of haunted attractions in America charge less than $15.00 per person, while only 20% charge more than $20.00 per ticket.  

MEDIA 2016


 The Haunted Attraction industry has been featured prominently on the national media scene.  Back in the mid 90’s Tiny Tim got married on the Tonight Show in Boston called Spookyworld.  Within the past few years many major media outlets have featured MAJOR stories about the haunted house industry such as USA Today, Wall Street Journal, AOL.com, Time Magazine, Washington Post, Associated Press, NFL Films, and many more.  Last year YAHOO.com listed sites such as www.HauntWorld.com best places to find haunted houses.  The story was produced due to the overwhelming popularity of searching for them on Yahoo’s search engine.  The Travel Channel has produced countless shows about the haunted house industry.  The National Geographic Channel produced a documentary for 2007 entitled “Celebrating Halloween” which featured The Darkness, St. Louis, Missouri.   Additionally in 2006 America’s TWO biggest morning shows did major pieces on the haunted attraction industry; Good Morning America ran a 5 minute piece on the industry as did the Today Show.

Many television shows have appeared at the national haunted house convention in St Louis each March.  The two most popular haunted houses which the media has used to film for TV specials is The Darkness in St Louis and Netherworld in Atlanta because both attractions feature a lot of massive animations, special fx, and photogenic scenic.  The Darkness is
www.TheDarkness.com and Netherworld is www.fearworld.com 
 

For Example The Darkness has been featured on Today Show, National Geographic Channel, Myth Busters, Travel Channel, Shipping Wars, Modern Marvels and many others.  The most viewed video about the haunted house industry on youtube was about Netherworld featured on Good Mourning America.  


USA Today Featured Look into the haunted house industry.  Link below.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/lifestyle/2006-10-11-haunted-house-main_x.htm

USA Today’s listed the top 13 Haunted House Story.  Link below.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/lifestyle/2006-10-11-haunted-house-sidebar_x.htm

Industry Financials


The haunted and Halloween attraction industry generates OVER ONE BILLION dollars in ticket sales.  This figure would include most major theme parks that operate a haunted event.  The industry of haunting supports hundreds of other businesses across America from VENDORS that supply haunted house effects, props, costumes, masks, animations and more.  Additionally haunted houses spend tens of millions of dollars on building supplies, advertisement, insurance and much more.  We believe the haunted house industry solely drives the popularity of Halloween and Halloween retail through the spending of more than 250 million dollars on advertisement. Halloween retail spends nearly zero dollars on marketing instead rely on locations and signs. 

Additionally all sorts of new scary attractions have opened or branched off the Haunted Attractions tree such as:  Zombie Runs, Zombie Laser Tag, Zombie Paintball Hayrides, Escape Rooms, Ghost Tours, Extreme Torture Haunts, and even year around haunted attractions. 
 

Frightening Facts About Halloween and Haunted Houses: 
  • Halloween is the second largest commercial holiday in the United States.
  • Approximately 100 countries operate haunted houses 
  • Over 10 billion dollars is spent yearly on candy, costumes and Halloween attraction activities in the United States alone.
  • Approximately 90% of all households with children will participate in a Halloween activity.  The most common demographics for this season are teens and young adults 18-34.
  • Research shows that people enjoy being scared while in a safe environment such as attending a movie, on a thrill ride or at a haunted house, and they are willing to pay for the experience. Haunted Attractions dominate thrill seekers during September and October.
  • Halloween as an industry will generate more revenue in 60 days than Hollywood will generate the entire year from January to October.  Hollywood will need November through December to catch up and pass the Halloween Industry.  What does that tell you about America and Halloween? 
 

Haunted House Safety 

Haunted Houses and attractions are EXTREMELY safe due to tough safety and fire codes they must all now live by.  Most haunted houses inside a building are required to have a sprinkler system, early warning smoke or heat detectors which will alert the fire department, emergency lights, fire proofing of all materials inside the attractions, industrial electric applications, easy access doors throughout the attraction, panic hardware exit doors, multiple fire extinguishers, panic systems, and much more.  Most haunts now must also be ADA compliant and have no trap doors or items on the floor that could cause trips and falls.  Our association takes safety as a serious concern and creates and publishes many safety articles.  Transworld Haunted House show produces seminars for safety and Hauntworld Magazine produced an entire magazine devoted to safety in a haunted house.  The industry as a whole takes safety serious and works together to solve common problems.  Listed on this site are a handful of safety articles in our safety section.  Please be our guest and read them.

 


Charity

Over 80% of all haunted attractions across America are operated by a charity or help to benefit a charity of some kind.  The haunted house industry helps to raise tens of millions of dollars for charities nationwide.  Many fire departments or church groups, produce haunted attractions nationwide.  Haunts have worked with major charities like Boys and Girls Club, Children’s Miracle Network, to everything in between. The Haunted House industry raise over 250 million dollars annually to support local and national charity.
 

 

Corporate America

Corporate America has embraced the haunted house industry with sponsorships in the tens of millions of dollars.  Most major haunted events have major sponsorship deals with Pepsi, Coke, energy drink companies, fast food industry, cellular phone companies, Halloween retail outlets, to even The Truth (against smoking).  A major haunted attraction could attract $50,000 to $250,000.00 in sponsorships from major corporations who want to display their brand, product or service to the haunted attraction demographic of 18-34.  Haunted Houses have become a very inexpensive way for corporate America to reach the 18-34 demographic, due to the popularity of our industry. 

 

 

Haunted Industry

The haunted house industry much like other industries has their own tradeshows, experts, consultants, suppliers, magazines, associations, education seminars, gatherings and events.  Haunted attraction owners spend annually over 250 million dollars with specific haunted house vendors for supplies like fog machines, to scary animatronic monsters, lighting equipment or masks and costumes to assist them in scaring America.  There are some major vendors in the industry who have even supplied haunted houses to the Playboy Mansion, or Universal Studios to Six Flags to even Madison Square Garden.   The biggest growth for the vendors to the haunted industry is now overseas, where haunted houses are opening at a record pace.  People just love to be scared it’s not just an American thing anymore.  The Haunted House Industry is an American product that is now being exported WORLD WIDE! We estimate that over 25 million dollars worth of haunted house equipment, services and supplies where shipped to other countries mostly in Asia and Europe. Over 100 Million dollars of Halloween Attraction products are shipped overseas.  

Many of the more popular haunted house vendors at one time or still work in the Hollywood movie FX industry.  

Listed below are some of the major vendors in our industry.


 

SOME MAJOR HAUNTED ATTRACTION VENDORS 
www.HauntedHouseMagazine.com

www.hauntedhousesupplies.com
www.Unit70.com
www.HalloweenProductions.com
www.GhostRide.com

www.FrightProps.com
www.Goregalore.com 
www.nyfs.com

www.brainstormstudios.com
www.hauntedhousesupplies.com
www.BlacklightAttractions.com
www.immortalmasks.com 
http://www.shatteredfx.com


MAJOR HAUNTED WEBSITES TO FIND HAUNTS

www.Hauntworld.com
www.hauntedhouseonline.com
www.HalloweenAttractions.com


MAJOR TRADESHOWS

www.HAASHOW.com  (Largest Haunted House Tradeshow in our Industry) 
www.midwesthauntersconvention.com


Haunted Resources

www.HauntedHouseMagazine.com
www.Hauntworld.com
www.HauntedHouseSupplies.com 

Note:  Much of the data provided above was supplied to the Haunted House Attraction Association by Hauntworld.com.  Hauntworld.com is the largest website on the net for providing haunted house information.

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12 Things That Shaped Our Industry
By Larry Kirchner

TO FIND HAUNTED HOUSES CLICK HERE ... http://www.hauntworld.com
 


I remember when our industry wasn't even an industry, when it was mainly a few small charity haunts that set up in perhaps an old vacant building for a one night or one weekend event.  I also remember when marketing was mainly just flyers on car windows. 

The first professional haunted house I worked on was back in 1989, and the first time I owned my own haunted house was in 1994.  1994 happens to also be the first year I attended the Transworld Halloween retail show.  One of ours sponsors was a small local Halloween retail store, and when they mentioned something about a Halloween show in Chicago, I jumped in my 1985 IROC Z28 with no hotel room and no real idea what the show was about.  I just went.

I remember walking through the show with Jim Kelly and being amazed to find a place where we could buy body parts, skulls and some other haunt related props.  Looking back, I can honestly say there was really nothing there that we could or would use today to create a great haunted house, but at the time we thought we had found the Holy Grail!  

I had some cash on me, and I basically bought everything I could carry out the door, products from Cinema Secrets, Gag Studios and a few others.  I'll never forget that.  I wish I had a camera, because we loaded that IROC till the seams were bursting.  The hatch was open the whole drive home with props sticking out.  Jim even had to sit on props.  Heck, I had props down near my feet while driving.  And in case you didn’t know, it’s about a 4 hour drive back to St. Louis from Chicago.  

1994 was a big year for me personally and for our company, Halloween Productions, Inc.  We built The Darkness Haunted House and began a journey that has taken us through more twists and turns and ups and downs than I could ever explain in one article.

In 1995, our company created one of the first ever how-to videos called, "How to Create Your Own Haunted House”.  We bought a booth at the Halloween show that year and sold several thousands of videos.  We sold more than 20,000 copies over the next few years.  The next thing I knew, our company was being hired to build attractions for amusement venues like Six Flags, Cedar Point, Madison Square Garden and more. 

Our company was also the first to exhibit at Transworld with animations powered by control systems with air pressure.  A couple years later, Unit 70 emerged as did an entire fleet of companies building and supplying haunted houses with every sort of prop, animation, effect and more.  Each helped our industry become what it is today.

These days, the haunted house industry is frequently featured on national television, radio and newspaper like Fox News, USA TODAY, The Today Show, Good Morning America, MTV and more.  In fact, some haunted houses have been the set for a few major motion pictures. 

It’s been interesting to watch through the years as haunted houses evolved from black plastic and some bloody walls to today's highly sophisticated attractions that rival even a multi-billion dollar amusement park attraction found in Florida, California and more.  I remember being that novice 24-year-old selling our first video at Transworld wondering if people might think “who’s this kid and what does he know”, to today feeling quite old but also feeling good, because I was there from day one and all the way through.  And, I’m especially proud to have been instrumental and helped in many of the positive things that have shaped this into a true industry. 

Haunted attractions mainly grew in the late 80's and truly became an industry over the last 20 years.  How did this happen?  What are the events that helped our industry grow into a billion dollar thriving industry?  The best way to plan the next decade is to look back on the last three and understand how it started and what shaped it.  I present to you the top 13 things that shaped the haunted house industry over the last three decades:


 

 

 

When we look back at the last three decades, there have been many haunts that stand out as best, providing haunted house quality that we aspire to be like or look to for guidance.  Among those are Netherworld, 13th Gate, The Darkness, the now closed Rocky Point Haunted House and more.  There are many examples of haunts over the last 20 years that have successfully created their own urban legend.  Such is the case with Edge of Hell.  But a couple haunts REALLY come to mind as two haunts that simply inspired me as well as our entire industry.  These haunts really put us on the map, paving the way for haunts to be noticed as amazing attractions.  These haunts have since closed, but will always remain forefront in my mind, and they are Terror on Church Street (owned and operated by David Clevenger) and Spookyworld (owned and operated by David Bertolino). 

Terror on Church Street was a haunted house in downtown Orlando where adults previously came to party (prior to Disney and Universal building their own adult night life playgrounds).  Terror on Church Street was the PREMIER haunt in the country with breathtaking detail, over the top actors and realistic costumes and makeup, but of even greater impact was how it inspired haunted house owners nationwide.  In fact, I’m quite certain it was Terror on Church Street that inspired the multi-billion dollar theme parks to build haunted attractions inside their own parks.  This haunt was quite simply the perfect template for how to build a professional indoor haunted house.  As Universal and Disney built nightlife segments of their own, the nightlife of Church Street Station diminished, and eventually Terror on Church Street sadly closed too.  How many “Terror on Somethings” are the names of haunts today?  Terror on the Wharf, Terror on the Fox, Terror on the Ridge, Terror on Rural Street, Terror on 23rd, 36th, 20th, 12 and more.  Were these names derived from Terror on Church Street?  Maybe, maybe not, or maybe not directly, but either way the name certainly set a precedent in our industry. 

Spookyworld in my opinion had the biggest impact of all as the owner, David Bertolino, accomplished things that didn't even seem possible at the time.  He had lines that stretched for miles.  They had all sorts of celebs like Tiny Tim, Bobby Boris Picket, Linda Blair, Elvira, Mickey Rooney, WWF wrestlers, and more.  Spookyworld wasn't just a haunted house.  Spookyworld was the first ever haunted amusement park equipped with stage shows to entertain people while they waited in line for hours, and it was the first haunted house to create a national spotlight on our industry when Tiny Tim got married on the Jay Leno show LIVE at Spookyworld!  Additionally, Spookyworld sold hundreds of thousands of dollars in sponsorships and even eventually partnered with the New England Patriots!  Spookyworld was the very first haunted house I ever visited outside of St. Louis, and it left a mark on me and everyone who ever attended.  From the marketing to the sheer size of the event, it gave me the realization of just HOW BIG a haunt can go.  There are NO limits to what can be done if you have the drive and passion to do it.  I believe the combination of Terror on Church Street and the national fame of Spookyworld inspired hundreds of attractions to open all around the country including some of the biggest still in operation today!


 

Contrary to what many thought, Haunted Attraction Magazine was not the first haunt magazine ever created.  In fact, the first that I'm aware of was one created by Trisha Drain who at the time worked for Transworld.  Transworld had an idea of keeping the haunts in the loop, so they created a pamphlet size magazine which featured articles written by haunt owners.  Included in one magazine was an article written by Leonard Pickel.  Shortly thereafter, Leonard Pickel and Oliver Holler began Haunted Attraction Magazine (HAM).  HAM was a very important piece of our haunted heritage.  It was the first organized media publication that had us all realizing, ‘we are part of something NATIONAL'.  HAM featured articles about haunted attractions including one that featured Disney’s Haunted Mansion.  Later, John Denley began Fright Times Magazine.  Then, Jim O'Rear started Underground Entertainment.  Finally, Scared Stiff emerged which focused strictly on actors.  At one point, all of these magazines coexisted, but as time went by most faded away.  With its main fleet of writers being the same group that produced popular haunt videos, Fright Times grew in popularity.  Writers like John Denley, Rich Hanf, Larry Kirchner, Kevin McCurdy and more, allowed Fright Times to have a fighting chance, but it too faded away.  All the while, Haunted Attraction Magazine continued to produce one magazine after another. 

Then, Hauntworld.com announced we would produce a magazine.  Hauntworld Magazine launched with a new format, to focus strictly on the business side of haunting appealing only to those who owned and operated haunted houses (or those who aspired to).  Hauntworld Magazine went on to claim thousands of subscribers and be featured in thousands of news articles, TV shows, and more.  It became the more popular magazine.  However, it was always Haunted Attraction Magazine that was really the first media outlet for those who loved haunted houses and Halloween.  HAM became a defacto haunted house association in a sense, because anything that was happening in the haunt industry was passed along through the magazine.  HAM was also the first to bring buyers and vendors together for the first time creating a spot in our industry’s history that cannot be denied.  The magazine sought out relevant advertisers which in and of itself helped create the awareness that we are in fact an industry.  Oliver would sell his shares of the magazine to Leonard, and Leonard eventually sold the entire magazine and website to John Kennedy.   

 

 

Technology has changed the haunted house industry over the years.  I can remember the days when audio was only in the form of cassette tapes and you recorded the same thing over and over again.  You played it and when it stopped, you’d flip the tape and play it again.  Later, we found endless loop tapes.  Then came CD's on repeat mode, and today we all use digital audio.  Even digital audio has changed.  At first digital audio repeaters still needed amps and wires.  Then, they came pre-amped, and now you can place your repeater right next to the speaker.

More technology emerged such as video audio repeaters and control systems which allowed haunters to control everything inside their haunted house.  Plus, computer animation allowed us to create ghosts, high quality TV commercials and much more.  Most all technology we use today has rolled downhill from Universal, Disney or Hollywood movies.  As that technology became cheaper to produce, it became affordable for haunted houses.  Much of the technology originally developed to create 100 million dollar rides 10 years ago is now affordably priced for haunted house use.  Much of the high dollar special effects can be reproduced for pennies on the dollar today.  The quality in many haunted houses has caught up to Disney and Universal parks as well as Hollywood movie sets, leaving them always in search for the next big thing.  Meanwhile, haunted houses lurk in the shadows waiting for the day the new technologies become available to the mass markets, so we too can capitalize on those new effects.  It’s a never ending cycle of possibility! 

Technology has changed so much about the haunted house industry.  High speed internet, the creation of promotional videos, audio advancements, control systems and more have all advanced our industry.  In some ways, haunted houses are even more advanced than many rides you’d find in a major theme park as most of those rides where built in the 30 years ago.  Today haunted houses have access to technology which at one time or another seemed impossible.  Flame effects, multi-motion animation, digital sound and video, advanced lighting, computer animation and so much more is available now.  Even their locations have changed.  In days past, haunted houses were typically located inside an old abandoned house.  Today many haunts are fabricated inside massive buildings and complexes fully equipped with effects, control rooms and more. 

The original haunted houses consisted of had black walls and dark corridors with actors roaming around in bloody t-shirts chasing you with chainsaws.  Today’s haunts create new ways to use technology to WOW their customers into believing they’re the victims of a live action Hollywood movie.  Are haunted houses still haunted houses or have they developed into live interactive big budget Hollywood movies?  Which is better to the paying public?...Watching an explosion on the big screen or  FEELING, HEARING and SEEING that same explosion just 15 feet away at a live, interactive attraction?  Knowing how hard it is to compete for press and dollars during the HAUNT season, Hollywood seldom opens horror movies in October.  Haunted houses have surpassed horror movies in terms of value and experience for the dollar.  Horror movies are on a screen, and no matter how many special effects they throw out there, it’s still just a screen.  A haunted house has live, in-your-face interaction around every turn. 
Technology has transformed what vendors can produce for a haunted attraction owner.  Each year we visit the Haunt Show and we wonder, “What crazy prop, effect or animation will someone present this year?”  We watch message boards on Hauntworld.com and we see just one more modern marvel after another being created.  We see the results on YouTube, at tradeshows/conventions and more.  We keep wondering, “Is there a limit to what can be done in a haunted house?”  Not as long as technology continues to advance our society.  Chainsaws, masks, blood, vampires and ghouls will always have their place in the modern day haunt, but technology has sunk its teeth into this haunt industry bringing limitless possibilities.

 

 

The history of tradeshows is a long one, and I'd rather not bore you to death.  However, ours have transformed many times over the years, and with each transformation, the haunted house industry benefited.  Way back when Transworld first introduced the Halloween and Party Show, it was all retail.  There was no haunt section.  In fact, the word HAUNT was never spoken and nowhere to be found.  But haunters eventually began to come, and like a bad rash, we multiplied and spread until the point of taking over the entire show. 

Retailers started to notice just how many of their FORMER haunt owner customers were in attendance as we now bought costumes direct at the show.  The retail vendors started to despise the catalog collectors among us.  Many of those vendors started pushing Transworld to boot the haunt industry out of the show.  In fact, one year Transworld came up with all these new rules for haunt attendees.  Well that didn't set well with Hauntworld.  After all, the haunt vendors and the retail vendors had to pay the exact same booth price, and no one was restricting the retail vendors’ customers from attending the show or certain parts of the show.  But new rules were passed anyway.  A feeling of being an outcast, a second class citizen, and not good enough, all rang throughout the industry.  Many buyers declared they would boycott the show altogether, which would really only hurt our new and growing industry.  

During the first year of the new MHC convention, several vendors and haunt leaders came together for a private meeting in Columbus, Ohio, and it was determined that haunt vendors and buyers alike would stand firm to send a unified message to Transworld that this would NOT FLY.  Transworld did drop the new rules but instead utilized stickers and colored wristbands, so retail vendors could easily identify you as a HAUNTER and refuse service.  This compromise did not satisfy the retail industry.  Nor did it satisfy us, because again their message we heard loud and clear, “we don’t sell to your kind.”  With Rubies at the forefront, these issues climaxed until everything came to a head.  The retail industry (backed by Rubies) would start a new show in Houston, and the haunt industry would take a course that would forever shape our industry. 

Clearly a separation was inevitable, because the haunted house industry could not possibly thrive under the rule of the retailers.  Plus, the haunt industry needed its own focus so more potential buyers could be found and more relevant companies could be brought in to sell to us.  This was a vision I personally backed.  If we could break off from the retail side with a tradeshow promoted just for haunt attractions, many would discover our industry is bigger than ANYONE realized.  I was told over and over again, ‘you can't make a show out of that small haunt section at the retail show’.  To that I would point out the number of retail exhibitors who DO sell to both sides already.  Plus, I would drive home the fact that if companies from IAAPA knew it was an ATTRACTIONS show and not a RETAIL show, they would exhibit.  After all, a show for ATTRACTIONS would draw a lot more relevant vendors that haunted houses need. 

After Rubies set up a new show in Houston in direct competition of the Transworld show, the writing was on the wall.  The division inside the retail industry had created a sinking ship that our haunt industry was still aboard.  To avoid going down in the wreckage, we flew into action.  With Hauntworld at the forefront, we convinced Transworld to develop and promote a new show strictly focused on the ATTRACTIONS of Halloween.  Against their initial judgment, Transworld agreed.  And with the right focus and dedicated marketing efforts, Transworld has now realized the true potential of our industry.  To Transworld's credit, they risked everything in 2008-2009 to produce our first tradeshow, and today Jenny Thaler works on haunts ALL YEAR LONG.  She’s created seminar series, haunt tours, events, and more even outside the March show.  I’m sure at first Jenny felt like a victim being dragged to her slaughter, but I believe she’s now proud to have “haunting in her blood”. 

The job is not done, but Transworld continues their focused effort towards ever finding new buyers, new vendors, new seminar topics and more.  Now that Transworld understands the difference between an attraction and a retail store, the potential is limitless and exciting.  THE MAJOR SHOW IS www.HAASHOW.com and happens each March in St Louis Missouri.   The show has doubled and tripled in size over the past couple years.  The first year this show was about 50,000 square feet and today its nearly 250,000 square feet drawing over 10,00 buyers from nearly 80 countries. 


 

Prior to the age of Photoshop, much of our marketing materials consisted of clip art, typeset flyers or coupons and hand drawn logos.  Looking back now, how horrid were the old t-shirts you wore at your attraction?  A haunted attraction today that hasn’t created its own unique, digital artwork is like a long lost tribe still living in the middle of the Amazon.  I can remember one year going to the Transworld Show and exhibiting were two guys who looked like they just got back from Woodstock selling logos.  I remember taking their business card reading Brainstorm Studios, but at the time I just couldn't see the value in spending that kind of money for a logo.  Several months later, I called.  These guys changed our industry to a degree that I think most of us can't even remember what we had used prior.  A first impression is everything and the artwork that Brainstorm Studios created took our industry from the clip art realm into the WORLD of Hollywood style movie posters, artwork, custom designs, and so much more.

I remember some haunts telling me that their Brainstorm Studios artwork was so good that some customers complained of false advertisement.  After haunt shoppers saw the artwork and the realistically scary environment Brainstorm created, they attended the haunts, and as customers they expected the attractions to match the level of the logos, posters, etc. only to find that the haunt didn’t deliver and in some cases were still stuck in the 80's.  How did this artwork really impact our industry?  Complaints from customers about not seeing the logo monster from the artwork in the haunt itself led haunt owners to create ICON characters creating costumes to match their logos.  Complaints that the theme of the artwork wasn't actually the design of the haunt itself led haunt owners to more creatively design and develop their haunted house into more elaborate set designs developed around a theme and even a STORYLINE in many cases.  Today, haunted house marketing is ramped up from television commercials, YouTube videos and websites to the professional photography taken of our attractions.  Everything seems to mimic just how Hollywood would promote a new movie.  I know prior to Brainstorm Studios no one put much effort into their image but now they do.  In fact, Brainstorm Studios was even hired by Spookyworld to redesign their classic logo.  Brainstorm Studios continues to put forth amazing artwork specialized to the haunt industry.  Today, there are many designers out there, but it all started with Brainstorm Studios.  Every web designer and graphic designer selling to the haunt industry has Brainstorm Studios to thank for creating that initial demand in the industry.  As haunt owners, we have Brainstorm Studios to thank for re-creating our haunts’ image and the image of our entire industry and for playing a huge role in the new age of record attendance we now enjoy.

 

 

Back in 1994 when I first visited the Transworld Halloween Show, there was only a handful of vendors selling to the haunts:  Distortions, Cinema Secrets, Gag Studios, Don Post, Morris Costumes, and a few others, but the biggest was Distortions.  Distortions mainly created products for Morris Costumes including masks, body parts and props.  Distortions was the only company outside of Cinema Secrets which seemed to focus more on horror related products for haunts.  (Back then, Cinema Secrets was mainly a haunted house vendor too, but later transformed into more of a costume vendor.)  Distortions never abandoned their haunted house roots, and instead expanded it, took risks, and even perhaps gambled everything on the hopes that more haunts would become buyers at the Transworld Halloween retail show.  Distortions created an over-the-top, never-see-before, never-attempted-before animated prop.  It was something so expensive they themselves weren't’t sure if it would draw a single order.  This motorized Distortions prop was called "The Electric Chair" and its price tag was about $4500 which was quite hefty especially in those days.  Not only did Distortions write more than one or two orders, but they blew the roof off the building selling HUNDREDS of them.  I remember installing an attraction in Denmark and visiting a wax museum while there, and low and behold there was The Electric Chair.  Another time I was visiting an attraction in Orlando and BAM another one.  It was like every haunt from coast to coast had The Electric Chair.  Haunted houses like my own made it the staple exhibit in our queue lines and even invited the media to come out to film the electrocution. 

Why is The Electric Chair so significant in our industry’s history?  It single-handedly elevated haunted houses to new heights, and it brought the realization that haunted house owners were willing to spend a lot of money on high tech items.  The idea that there were so many haunts out there willing to dole out tens of thousands of dollars to buy props, animations, and special effects inspired a revolution of new vendors to our industry.  The Distortions Electric Chair basically created the entire haunt vendor industry.  The credit truly goes to Distortions for this ONE prop.  The year following, our company showed up selling the first air-driven scare products including the first air cannon for under $500 and an Attacking Werewolf which we sold nearly a hundred of.  From there, even more companies emerged including Hollywood artists and effects people with all sorts of animations and props.  Many haunt owners who had been making props for themselves began buying booths to market their props at the show too.  Hence, the haunt vendor industry was born! 


 

 May 11, 1984, a fire broke out at Six Flags Great Adventure and killed 8 teenagers forever changing the haunted house industry.  In lawsuits filed, it was argued Six Flags should have had sprinkler systems, smoke alarms, and other safety devices, and had these devices been installed, those teenagers could be alive today.  The aattractions was a Haunted Castle style haunted house constructed originally from four semi-trailers joined together, then later expanded to 17 trailers.  It was determined the fire was started by a customer trying to find their way with a cigarette lighter.   Fire inspectors testified that they had never inspected the attraction since it had been deemed a temporary event.  The castle structure lacked a building permit, sprinkler system, alarms and other items.  A fire broke out around 6:35pm and was fanned by outside air conditioners causing it to spread quickly to the many flammable materials and props (including foam) inside the attraction.  In the aftermath of the fire, several haunted houses across New Jersey and across the country were closed pending inspections.  States across America passed new laws for dark rides and haunted houses including sprinkler systems and other safety features along with the requirements for annual inspections.  Safety in haunted houses today can thank the sacrifice of Joseph Beyroutey, Nicola Caiazza, Jose Carrion, Tina Genovese, Christopher Harrison, Eric Rodriguez, Lenny Ruiz, and Samuel Valentin Jr.  Hauntworld pays tribute to you. 

The next time you start to complain about how tough your inspector is or additional safety requirements needed, remember those eight teenagers who died in 1984.  Lives were lost to save countless others.  The haunted house industry was barely started in 1984 and if ever a lesson was going to be learned about safety, better for it to happen before haunts became so popular.  Hundreds if not thousands could’ve been affected.  The haunt industry not only survived but evolved as a result.  Since then, there have been no fire deaths inside an indoor haunted house.

 

 

Hauntworld.com began in the mid-nineties as an online location where haunters from around the WORLD could come for camaraderie, friendship and fellowship.   Through Hauntworld.com’s chat rooms and message boards, haunters could share ideas and help each other find and locate products for upcoming projects.  Hauntworld was started by me (aka DRFRIGHTNER) and most importantly my cousin, Danny Bennett (aka FRIGHTMASTER).  Danny died a few short years later at the early age of 33 of heart attack.  After Danny’s death, I dedicated myself to developing Hauntworld.com into something which would honor his dream.  Looking back on the day I bought the URL Hauntworld.com, I can honestly say I never imagined the magnitude and impact it would have on the entire haunted house industry.

Hauntworld.com quickly became a place where thousands of people came to chat, share information and debate topics.  Hauntworld.com provided information that haunts used to make their attractions bigger, better and more efficient.  Many haunt vendor companies got their start on Hauntworld.com by utilizing the message boards to promote their products and services through uploading pictures of products for sale on the Hauntworld Fright Forum.  In fact, many of the conventions, events, and gatherings started with using the forums as a place to find haunters to promote their events.  Other popular websites like those promoting podcasts, magazines and more used the forums to find listeners and customers.

Hauntworld.com eventually created a wealth of information for the media and used its position in the industry to launch one effort after another all intended to promote the haunted house industry on a national level in a positive light with one goal in mind ... SPREAD THE FUN OF FEAR! 
Hauntworld has also created entire series of videos showcasing haunts from all over the nation.  Years ago, many haunts were skeptical about letting other haunt owners view their attraction and potentially steal their secrets, but the greatest of all haunts knew that the sharing of ideas is good not bad for the industry and so Hauntworld showcased every major haunt you could think of.  Spookyworld, Terror on Church Street, Rocky Point Haunted House, Lance Pope’s 'Verdun Manor' and more all created videos for the Hauntworld video series.  In fact, we showcased over 200 haunted houses over a 10 year period.  Helping haunts learn from each other...that was the goal!  ??Today Hauntworld.com has continued to promote new events, new tradeshows, new vendors, new haunts and the entire industry as a whole.  Many people probably don't realize the impact that Hauntworld has had on this industry or how much helpful information you've picked up and/or shared via Hauntworld.com through the years.  For us to produce those first Hauntworld videos really opened the doors to sharing of information which has opened this entire industry wide open.  The impact is without question, and the credit goes to you all.  The mark was created by YOU the haunts who shared, learned and traded ideas, information, video, photos and more.  In essence, Hauntworld.com was the Facebook of haunting long before Facebook ever existed.

Hauntworld.com continues today with its popular magazine, haunt directory, videos and of course the WORLD famous FRIGHT FORUM Message Board.  We’re proud to be doing the same thing that Danny Bennett set out to do back in the 90's, to communicate with other haunts!  “Danny, if you are looking down…Mission accomplished and THANK YOU!  Thank you for the day you walked into my house and showed me that silly website you made called 'Haunted Houses of America', inspiring me to take this journey with you.”  Danny deserves ALL the credit for everything and I hope when you are ever in St. Louis just maybe you'll stop by his gravesite which has the inscription 'FRIGHTMASTER'.

 

 

Before the internet ever came along, or should I say before high speed internet came along, haunted houses relied strictly on local advertisement, most specifically radio stations.  Additionally, all haunts relied heavily on answering phone calls from potential customers needing directions or ticket costs or other information.  Today, no phones are needed.  Instead, haunted house marketing has shifted from traditional media to more of a web-based program.  The internet has changed everything for small business owners because we now can reach out to more customers, not only in our local area, but our entire state and even across America.  The internet has created all sorts of media attention for our industry.  Anyone can start or create a news website, a blog, a review platform etc., and they are hungry for content.  The web has allowed our attractions to find new customers, educate customers, and provide readily available photos and promo videos.  We can upload video to sites like YouTube where even more people can find, watch and learn about our attractions.  Websites like MySpace, Facebook and even HauntWorld allow you to create pages for your haunt that can be updated daily all year round about your attraction.  Additionally, you can create another page to stay in touch with your actors and other staff too.  The web has nearly replaced old habits like direct mailings to customers with direct emails to customers.  The timeliness of direct emails combined with the cost savings makes this switch a huge plus. 

Internet has also helped our industry learn and educate ourselves by visiting other haunts’ websites.  Seeing other website layouts, watching their videos, viewing their photos and more is invaluable.  Plus, having access to these examples and ideas anytime day or night is even more of a benefit.  Internet allows us to communicate on a daily basis through haunt forums like the Hauntworld Fright Forum helping us to share ideas and information.  We can find used equipment for sale, learn how to utilize new technology better, and bounce ideas off each other all to better our attractions.  The web was and is simply a game changer, and creative people continue to find new ways to use the web to promote their business in ways such as creating app programs  and utilizing Twitter to promote on a minute by minute basis. 

It’s no mystery why haunted houses over the last 5 years have experienced a massive and somewhat overwhelming boost in ticket sales, attendance and media attention.  The internet could be considered the biggest evolution for the haunt industry.  It enables customers to rate, review, comment, blog and spread the word about products, services and YES our attractions, good or bad.  In days past, disgruntled customers could threaten to tell everyone they know not to patronize a business, and one could assume 10 friends could get that message.  With today’s Facebook, Twitter, and more, someone could reach 100’s of friends and wreak havoc on your attraction in seconds.   Essentially, today it’s all the more important to make your customers scream with fear.  The days of fly-by-night, overhyped attractions is coming to an end.  Technology of the web has enabled and empowered everyday people with the power to really sack your attraction if you overhype.  Today, we are seeing the bigger haunts get even bigger and the up-and-coming attractions growing faster than they could ever imagine.  Why?  Because if you build it they will blog about it, they will tweet about it, they will tell their Facebook friends and your legend will grow rapidly!

If you set out to build a good attraction today and if you strive to be the best at what you do, your business will GROW by leaps and bounds.  You can tweet that all the way to the bank!  Internet has changed everything about the haunt industry from how we operate, build and design to how we market our haunted houses.   Websites like Hauntworld.com continue to send tens of thousands of qualified customers to haunts each year, just as Google, Yahoo, Bing, Facebook, and so many more.  The list is endless.  Today a good haunt owner should be spending as much money on his web presence as he does on his haunt.  The internet is simply the best tool ever to have helped our small industry grow into a powerhouse of the amusement world.

 

 

Back in 2000, I suggested to the then president of IAHA that if any haunted house association was to hang its hat on something, it should be the start of a national public relations program geared towards the promotion of haunted houses everywhere.  At the time it seemed haunted houses receive nothing but bad publicity.  I pleaded that any negative stereotypes about haunted houses needed to be cleaned up with a national publicity program.  No one on the board disagreed with my arguments, but no one wanted to foot the bill for such a program either, nor did anyone really know how to go about putting an idea like this into action, so I decided to run for IAHA presidency myself.  Becoming president of IAHA in 2005 drove me into action on this PR program idea.  I started planning it and building support from others in our industry.  The first thing was finding a public relations company that would tackle the job at a budget the haunters could afford.  I found such a company and began to call haunted house owners from across the country who shared my concerns about how the national media doesn't understand our industry or the massive improvements that haunts have underwent over the last several years.  The first person to jump on the bandwagon and help support the program was Ben Armstrong of Netherworld, and it spiraled from there.  Ben convinced IAHA to donate just under half the money for the program.  Several major haunts jumped on board donating money for hiring a national public relations firm.  Among the haunt owners involved were Randy Bates, Brett Bertolino, Ed Terebus, Peter Karlowicz, Tony Wohlgemuth and many more.  Each haunted house placed their faith in me and Ben to properly manage the national PR program and put the money to good use, and a national public relations program was born.

In some ways this program was the turning point for the haunted house industry, because there was an outright EXPLOSION of media, so much so that two people, three people, ten people could not answer all the media requests for interviews including USA TODAY, Wall Street Journal, Good Morning America, The Today Show, CBS and more.  Speaking of which, the most viewed haunted house video on YOUTUBE is CBS High-Tech Haunted Houses, www.youtube.com/watch?v=ig9dhC06nwU, with almost ONE MILLION views!  This video came as a result of our national public relations firm pitching CBS and Good Morning America, and later someone thought to upload it to YouTube.  What an impact!  What a positive message about how far haunts have come! 

When pitched the story about haunted houses, there wasn’t a single newspaper, magazine or TV station that turned it down.  They all jumped on the bandwagon of educating America about the Haunted House Industry.  Next thing we knew, our efforts spiraled into TV shows on Modern Marvels, National Geographic Channel, Travel Channel and Food Network, all wanting to air episodes featuring the haunted house industry.  Hauntworld.com was the first website to ever produce a top 13 haunts list, but due to this PR program, suddenly websites across the country wanted to publish one too, because now they know…haunted houses are big news!  ??The goal of the national PR PROGRAM was to educate America as a whole that haunted houses have changed and now appeal to adults of ALL ages and that haunts across America are doing amazing things with effects, technology, architecture, set design and more.  We drove home the message that Americans who haven’t been to a haunt in several years are missing out and should get in on the SCREAMS.  Most would agree the haunted house EXPLOSION started around 2005-2006, and you can credit the first ever national public relations program!  Haunted houses became known for something more than fly-by-night mazes which open for Halloween weekend.  Now they’re credited as the major amusement attractions they truly are, offering sophisticated entertainment appealing to masses of people.  As a result, haunted houses over the last 5 years have seen their attendance climb.  Ticket prices were able to increase and ticket sales have soared.  This flux has filtered across the entire industry too, because now haunt owners have more money to spend on props, masks, animations and more.  Vendors now create bigger props with more technology and on a greater scale.  Even a full blown tradeshow specialized for just the haunted house industry was able to emerge and be successful for the first time.  In the past, even Transworld doubted whether our HAUNT could support its own show, but today Transworld’s eyes are open to our expanding revenues, expanding attendance and expanding credibility as a legitimate industry.

There was a master plan, and it was explained to everyone industry wide (from vendors to haunts and anyone in between) that this haunted house PR program would benefit all.  David Fauchman of ScareFactory agreed and offered to donate funds to the program.  As a vendor he understood that if haunted house owners create additional revenue from rapid growth that prosperity would trickle down to the vendors. 

I was told by a hundred different people this idea would fail or that it wasn't fair.  Many tried to discourage me from doing it at all.  Naysayers will always exist no matter what, but after the PR program was over and haunts across the country felt the results, few can deny the enormous impact and benefits of a successful national program like this.  Additionally, it should be noted that I actually received a phone call from another industry’s association asking to hire me to help launch a similar PR program for them.  It’s obvious the overwhelming success was noticed around the world!  
The following year, another public relations program was launched again by Larry Kirchner and Ben Armstrong, and although it was very successful, it was not nearly as successful as the first.  Since then, many other groups, associations and more from America Haunts to IAHA all launched their own version of the same, but none even came close to matching the success of the very first one. 

It’s because of the effectiveness of the very first program that PR campaigns today have limited success.  National media outlets feel they’ve already done that; they’ve already covered the haunted house topic.  But that doesn’t change the fact that haunted houses are still feeling the positive benefits through a MUCH higher awareness within both our local media circles and on a national level too but on a lesser degree.  Had the first program back in 2005 not been as well received, annual programs would be necessary to continue the message, but the utter saturation of stories over the past couple years has left us in a very fortunate position.  We don’t necessarily need to spend those kinds of dollars, not annually anyway.  The media is no longer clueless about the advancements in our industry.  Haunted house have finally been given the recognition they deserve!

Haunted houses received more attention in the past 3-4 years than in the previous 20 years combined.    Now it’s YOUR turn.  I implore you.  Go out and hire a good PR firm in your market and take the ownership of haunt stories circulating to Good Morning  America, Travel Channel,  USA Today, Wall Street Journal, CBS, FOX and more.  Inside that message, showcase YOUR haunt’s successes and turn them into stories about your haunt where it counts most to you…your town, your city and your state as well as nationally!  Doing so will not only impact your haunt business, it will positively impact our industry as a whole!

 

 

Where did haunted houses start?  Who opened the first ever haunted house?  How did this industry find its first roots?  Some will say it started with ghost shows, but I disagree.  The reality is that the haunted house industry got its start as cheap attractions in small family owned and operated amusement parks, amusement piers and such.  Way back when, there were no roller coaster or ride companies to buy an attraction from, so many of these amusement piers simply built their own attractions locally and some built haunted houses, haunted dark rides, and haunted funhouses.  Typically, these attractions were cheaply created, very dark, with buzzers and loud noises going off around every turn.  Some of these older style haunted dark rides still exists today.  One example is located in Knoebels Amusement Park called 'The Haunted Mansion' which opened in 1973. This is what is called a 'pretzel dark ride'.  While many would call it outdated, cheesy and in desperate need of a modernization, the folks at DAFE (Dark Ride and Funhouse Enthusiasts) continue to rate this dark ride as their favorite, because it’s a throwback to the past.  There are few examples of these old dark rides, because many have been removed, destroyed or renovated.  Disney also built a haunted mansion themed dark ride.  After all, a haunted dark ride or funhouse was one of the main attractions in most amusement parks throughout the early years, and they continue to be a staple for many. 

Haunted houses are clearly rooted in the older dark rides and funhouses, which inside most amusement parks was either a 'pretzel dark ride' or it was a 'walk thru'.  Several years later, charities latched onto the idea building the same or similar attractions in their local towns and cities to raise money for their cause.  Back in those days, there were really no means to communicate on a national level for promotion of the idea other than conventions.  In 1975, one such convention for the annual Jaycees was held in Miami, and it just might have been the start of the haunted house industry as we know it today.  In February of 1975, two men of the local Jaycees chapter in Bloomington, Illinois got together to discuss the creation of a haunted house book.  Those men were Jim Gould and Tom Hilligoss.  Tom's book was well received by the Jaycees printing over 20,000 copies.  From there, he decided to purchase a booth at their national convention setting up a miniature haunted house display.  Tom's display went over so well he decided to form the first ever haunted house company called 'The Haunted House Company'. 

The Haunted House Company went on to hire a staff and due to continued growth hired even more staff to coordinate all activities of the company.  Later, The Haunted House Company went on to introduce a line of custom monster masks from Don Post.  They became a hit so much so that they had orders from 700 Jaycee chapters in 40 different states.  Hilligoss became the first ever HAUNTED HOUSE EXPERT in America helping the Jaycee organization to set up haunted houses claiming revenues of $500.00 for small markets and up to $50,000.00 for larger markets.  The first ever haunted house seminars occurred as Tom began traveling to cities across the country to different chapters offering up to 30 different seminar options and workshops.  The Haunted House Company even hired a cinematographer and took the first ever HAUNTED HOUSE TOUR of 35 haunts in Colorado, Missouri, Michigan, Ohio, and more gathering information and photos for their seminars and presentations.

In 1976, The Haunted House Company expanded to include services to sell four-colored t-shirts, sweatshirts, jackets, bumper stickers and artwork for billboards, as well as complete lines of costumes, makeup, spiders, sound equipment, lighting equipment, and lighted signs for promotion.  Tom's company, books and seminars showed the Jaycees how to build a haunted house from which scenes were best to marketing a haunted house.  He even gave them clip art, coupons, tickets and everything between.  The Haunted House Company was so successful that Tom made the following claim...If Jaycees continued to increase and improve their involvement in the haunted house program, someday Jaycees would OWN Halloween!  His goal was for people to automatically identify with a Jaycee Haunted House when thinking about Halloween.  Tom had the foresight and the vision to realize that haunted houses truly could “own” Halloween. 

The Haunted House company would go on to introduce the idea of taking Polaroid pictures to increase revenue, and they even coined the phrase, “We'll Scare the Yell Out of You!”  The Haunted House Company had everything going their way.  They started it all with books, seminars and tours of haunts across the country.  They were the first to bring back information from haunts all over the nation.  The Haunted House Company even went on to develop a Christmas attraction called 'Santa's Workshop' and much more. 

While most Jaycees lacked the entrepreneur haunt spirit needed for success in today’s market, still Tom Hilligoss promoted the opening of haunted houses across the country even way back when.  Eventually, young business minded people in the mid 1980’s picked up and started to open haunted houses of their own.  They acquired better locations, relied on a paid staff of actors rather than volunteers, purchased tons of radio ads, spent months not days creating their haunts and literally overnight the Jaycees format was on its heels.  No longer would radio stations give out free advertisement for the Jaycee cause, not when other haunts would pay for it.  Another dagger in the Jaycees plans was the Six Flags fire, because it nearly wiped out the idea finding an old abandoned house for setting up a haunt.  Fire departments started inspecting and requiring costly safety features.  These new ad and safety costs had most Jaycees abandoning their haunts and looking for new ways to raise money, but some still survive today putting forth a new quality of event to compete against any stiff competition that crept their way, most inside smaller rural areas, and they still scare people every Halloween.  One such survivor is the Huntington Indiana Jaycees who put on a quality haunt event year after year known as The Huntington Jaycees Haunted Hotel, www.hauntedhuntington.com. 

I believe the number one most important event in the creation of the haunted house industry as we know it started with a haunted house coloring book created by Tom Hilligoss and Jim Gould over a coffee table in Bloomington, Illinois.  A plan was laid out to help create an entire industry of fear that did indeed go onto scare the “YELL” out of Americans. 

 

 

Yes YOU!  You played the most important role in bringing the haunt industry full circle, because it was you who risked your life savings taking leaps of faith and probably quit a very valuable, full-time job to work on your haunted house everyday of the every week.  You believed in your passion creating an undeniable artistic expression of entertainment which makes people in your town SCREAM with delight.  You signed up for the seminars, attended the haunt tours, bought the videos and magazines, shared ideas with other haunters through the Fright Forums, and simply dove in head first.  You made the commitment to improve your haunt and to invest amounts of money against the advice of others’ better judgment, but YOU BELIEVED!  No matter what drama filled non-sense might have happened within the industry, you still believed in the haunt industry as a whole.  You knew its potential.  You stood by the right people.  You watched it all grow and become a true haunt industry with a clear path for the next generation of our industry.  

When the haunt industry was at its lowest, you stood tall and fought through.  When your local fire marshal or building inspector told you “no”, you found a way to turn it into a “yes”.  When your family or friends expressed skepticism, your determination grew and you showed how wrong they were.  You have taken your haunted house from one level to the next new level and beyond.  You've invested, upgraded, listened and learned!  Without YOU there would be no industry.  No matter if you are the smallest haunted house in the country or the largest haunt vendor in the world, no matter if you are a home haunt, a charity haunt or a professional haunt, we all promote Halloween, and we ALL promote haunted houses in a positive light.  We promote the idea that being scared can be more fun than anything you’ve ever experienced.  Haunted houses are fun, intriguing, exciting, sophisticated and the rush is just as good as anything you might find inside those multi-billion dollar theme parks.  

You did it, and without YOU, we wouldn't be here today with our very own tradeshow, plus conventions, national media attention, TV shows, and more.  We own a have a business that we enjoy, a business of scaring people.  And we continue to build a local tradition that your children's children can carry on for generations to come!  

Thank you for believe in every hair brain scheme I ever pitched!  Thank you for your support of HauntWorld and HauntWorld.com.  Thank you for supporting our very own tradeshow.  When so many said we are too small, we all banned together in attendance

TO FIND MORE HAUNTED HOUSES NATIONWIDE CLICK HERE: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_houses.cfm

I think I've said this many times over the years…“What we do must evolve.”  Otherwise, we'll be left behind.  I've been around this industry long enough to know and understand how it started, how it grew in popularity and why it's so popular now.  The haunt industry has single-handedly grown the entire industry of Halloween through millions upon millions of dollars in marketing over the last 20 years.  The audience grew with us.  Haunted houses are NO LONGER simply an 18-34 target business.  It's now beloved by Halloween fans into their late 40's-50’s as well as preteens & teens of all ages.  As the audience for Halloween entertainment has grown in age, so have the diversity of the different types of attractions.  Are we finally starting to see a real challenge to the haunted house supremacy?



I would say YES… The haunted attraction we know will start to fade in popularity as other forms of Halloween entertainment emerge and grow.  Ten or twenty years ago our biggest competition was the horror movies released in October and the competing haunted houses that opened each year.  Now, we see fewer new haunts opening in the big cities due to the start-up expense of building and marketing a competing haunted house that meets today's high standards.  Haunts that try to open without spending the necessary dollars to truly compete, fall victim to the social media World we live in now.  You simply cannot buy some radio spots making false claims that you’re the scariest and it hold up.  Today, people attend haunted houses, movies, events, whatever, and then flock to Facebook and Twitter to write about it.  If your haunt isn’t up to the highest standards, they’ll proceed to level your place in minutes!  Before you know it, your new haunted house is being torn apart and everyone knows your event is horrid... game over!  It’s impossible to stay ahead of the social Tweets and posts on Facebook.  The only solution… We MUST produce a great product! 

Have we run out of ways to scare people?  Are our customers looking for something new to spend their Halloween dollar on?  Possibly YES, and if our industry doesn't evolve again, we may be the second choice of those looking for Halloween entertainment.

If you ask me, many haunted houses have become homogenized, buying the same stuff from the same vendors, year after year, and even much of the hand-crafted pieces are just knock-offs of something else.  Are we looking for the next best thing?  Do we spend our time and energy being creative and original?  Visiting a Halloween show known in the industry as being original and newly creative is good.  Attending these haunts looking for direction and inspiration is good.  Buying from haunted house vendors is good.  But don’t just buy equipment and items that compliment what you already created.  Revamp, recreate, and reinvent! 

For The Darkness Haunted House, we don’t purchase straight from the tradeshow floors.  Rather, we come up with our plans for the following season and then contact vendors to ask about creating custom pieces.  You'd be surprised how many vendors are now producing made-to-order products for their clients.  Don't get me wrong, each year we go to the Halloween shows and find amazing new products from some of the most creative people in the World.  However, we can't all buy the same items and have the same animations, scares, costumes & masks.  I will go one further…Some of you follow the paths of other haunts in your market, thereby creating an entire city of the same style haunted houses.  In the days of social media, business owners can create quick word of mouth about something new and exciting which preys on the public’s thirst for Halloween entertainment.

Hollywood no longer launches their tent pole horror movies in October, probably because they know the competition is too fierce for PR during October.  Additionally, they’ve realized that the public wants zombies, horror & monsters more than just one seasonal time per year, so they now feed that horror entertainment need year round!  Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3D will be released in January. I Frankenstein will release in February. Carrie (re-make) releases in March, Evil Dead (re-make) releases in April, and the list goes on.  Television has jumped on the Horror bandwagon too with shows like Walking Dead, American Horror Story, Vampire Dairies and the very gory True Blood.  What does any of this have to do with the haunted house industry?  Shows like True Blood helped create a Vampire craze, and shows like Walking Dead helped to create an entire Zombie craze.  With any craze, there are people around every corner thinking of creative ways to capitalize, thereby creating additional Halloween entertainment which can and does compete with our haunt industry for the entertainment dollar.

Today, major amusement parks are working closer with Hollywood to promote brands like Walking Dead and Saw.  Universal Studios is the proudest example of this diversification towards staying with what’s HOT rather than doing the same thing every year.  Right now Zombies are the hot thing, so Universal responds by making a deal with Walking Dead to capitalize on the success of the brand.  Trust me when I tell you… Other amusement parks as well as private business owners have taken notice.  If a buck can be made, they will jump on it in a major way! 

Haunt & Halloween attractions have come FULL circle.  What is this form of entertainment really?  I'm going to go on record to say it's no longer the Haunted House Industry.  With half of every dollar made for entertainment now going to the mega Halloween pumpkin patch attractions, Halloween Attraction Industry sounds better to consider.  But let's continue to think about this for a second... With all new entertainment emerging like Zombie Runs which attract as many as 15,000 paying customers, what about the Horror Attraction Industry?  It’s mind-boggling with Halloween themed entertainment coming from every direction including massive corn mazes, zip lines, fall festivals, hayrides, even blacklight mini golf attractions with monster themes have emerged.  And no longer are the pumpkin patches simply just pumpkins.  They now offer full blown attractions and events, spending tons of money on marketing, picking up tons of publicity and drawing in tens of thousands of customers.

Zombie Runs like Run for Your Life, are setting up Zombie obstacle courses all over America and drawing up to 15,000 customers at $85.00 per person, and get this… they even charge the Zombies to be Zombies!  I recently attended one of these events and it was very interesting to see the wide range of ages and the sheer number of customers.  People lined up for miles to run through a Zombie infested obstacle course, slide through mud, climb up slides, be chased and more!  I never thought in a million years that 7000 people would pay high dollar to run around and be chased while major companies lined up to pay for sponsorship of these events.  These Zombie Runs are now so popular that I can't imagine any haunted house in the country having the same level of success for a single day’s event.  They steal away interest, and they create a new expectation by our guests.  The public wants something new and something different.  They want the next best thing…End of story!

Will you cut the cake simply with buying some animations and putting your customers through the same paces as last year?  Will it be enough to continue sending groups into your attraction with actors jumping out trying to dish out the scares?  Will this cut the mustard for the next 10 years?  How about the next 18 months?  Big businesses with deep pockets are all over Zombie mania, Horror entertainment & Halloween attractions.  You can expect to see more and more different types of entertainment being offered each Halloween.  I will also add the Scream Park style attractions are trumping the single standing haunted houses left and right.  Customers now want more variety, they want the bigger and the better, and they want something new and different.  These new types of Halloween & Horror events and attractions are thriving and getting bigger.  They offer YOUR clientele a variety that didn't exist before.  Your new biggest competition isn't from other haunted houses anymore.  Your competition is EVERYTHING that profits from this year round craze for horror.  Now is the time to visit a Halloween attraction, a Zombie Run, Universal Studios, a region mega Scream Park and any event or attraction or production cashing in on the zombie & monster craze.  Now is the time to evolve, change, adapt & think outside the box.

I don't believe you will continue to enjoy tons of publicity, large crowds, and continued success without putting a spin on your event.  Find a way to separate yourself from the status quo haunted house.  Find a way to reinvent what you offer.  This year, one of my haunted attractions will introduce Zombie Paint Ball to our hayride.  I realize now more than ever it's not just about making people scream or chasing them around a maze.  It’s about entertaining guests.  Your guests want you to take their minds into new realms of horror entertainment.  They want more interaction and they want something new and different and exciting.  The Zombie Paint Ball was VERY expensive to launch, but I believe it’s something I had no choice but to do if I expect to keep my Scream Park fresh.  And it’s a way to capitalize on the new zombie craze at the same time!

Is a Zombie Paint Ball Hayride the answer?  For this year it is, but honestly it’s just another stepping stone, another layer of the cake.  If I stop reinventing or stop trying to add that next new thing, I could find myself on the outside looking in.  The same goes for you.  There are more haunts falling into the 10,000 guests range and fewer heading towards the 50,000 plus range.  Netherworld is a perfect example of an attraction which continues to find new ways to reinvent.  By taking their haunted house out into the parking lot, Netherworld created a new environment.  They might have more actors roaming their parking lot than you have in your entire haunted house, and Netherworld is doing more attendance than probably any stand-alone haunt in America.  I see fewer new haunts opening, and more haunted houses closing over the coming years as people discover opening a haunt is NOT a huge money maker, and still others will close because they fail to adapt.


 

There are many things you can do to grow your business and differentiate yourself from your competition.  For example, use a different web designer, get different graphics, use new vendors, try getting custom props made, or find that spin to make your event more interactive than ever before.  Not only is it time for our attractions to evolve towards entertaining the masses, but also to differentiate from other haunted houses.  Do you have similar themes, websites, graphics, props, or costumes?  Dare to be different. 

My haunted friends, Halloween & horror entertainment is now a multibillion dollar industry and we are no longer alone!  As all of these new forms of entertainment gain momentum and popularity, we as an industry must continue to evolve towards something new and exciting, which might not just be about making someone SCREAM!

Good luck this Halloween, and do yourself a favor… Be one step ahead rather than 10 steps behind.  Your friends at Hauntworld are merely trying to provoke a debate, a discussion, a thought process about the future of this great industry!  The time is now to look around and see what your consumers are being offered and what options are available to them for that same fall entertainment dollar that you once monopolized. Reinvent, recreate and discover what will keep our industry in the driver seat!

Happy Hauntings

 
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