Former visitors guide publisher launches new effort
Tarik Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Officials with the city’s Conference & Visitors
Bureau say an effort by businessman Jeff Laird to produce a rival city
guide could have a detrimental effect on the finances of the official
visitors booklet that has been distributed annually for years.
“It’s just complete confusion right now,” said Diane Baker, executive
director of the bureau. “I think it’s such a shame to fragment the
industry like this, and confuse the advertisers.”
Laird did not return phone calls Tuesday or Wednesday on the matter.
Last month, the bureau’s board of directors went over bids from six
different publishers vying for the chance to publish the guide,
ultimately choosing the Newport Beach-based Axis Marketing Group because
the firm’s president, Tacha Leider, promised a January release date.
“We are publishing the only official guide,” Leider said. “It’s a free
country, and Laird can pursue another guide if he chooses, but I think
some of the information he’s sending out is concerning.”
In a Nov. 26 letter signed by Laird and sent to potential advertisers,
the businessman claimed that the upcoming visitors guide is “the biggest
and best it has ever been” and enclosed a copy of the most recent
edition, the official 2000 Visitor’s Guide published by his company.
John Gilbert, chairman of the bureau’s board of directors and an
advertiser in the guide, said the inclusion of the prior guide is the
main source of confusion, where advertisers not involved in the
publication’s development think they’re buying space in the official
document.
Baker said there are a number of alternatives available for
publications about the city, such as a restaurant guide or something
along the lines of a 100 things to do list, but all it needs is a little
creativity.
Laird was among the bidders for the publishing rights to the official
guide, though his company, bureau officials said, is part of former guide
publisher Coatings Resources Corp., whose contract was canceled in
September at the urging of the City Council and City Atty. Gail Hutton.
Both Hutton and the visitors board were concerned about a possible
conflict of interest on the behalf of Councilman Dave Garofalo, who
published the guide for several years, and may have profited from the
contract, before selling the business to Ed Laird, Jeff Laird’s father,
in 1998.
The business was later turned over to Jeff Laird.
During the bidding process, Laird said he believed the canceled
contract was still valid because he did not have any affiliation with any
city or bureau officials, adding that the visitors guide was a main
project for his company and only 90 days from completion in November.
Leider, however, said she promised a January release, which bureau
officials found more attractive, and things are on track to reach that
goal.
While the guide is distributed through the city-run bureau, publishers
generate their revenues through advertising. Traditionally, the visitors
guide contains 21 pages of advertisements promoting about 60 businesses
to interested travelers.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.