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Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland.

Why Tayto Park sees its future in luring the suit-and-tie brigade

The Meath attraction is aiming to bring in a million visitors per year.

TAYTO PARK IS drumming up extra business during quieter, ‘off-peak’ months by getting corporate types to shed their suits and let loose on its attractions and rides.

Speaking to Fora, the crisp-inspired park’s general manager, Charles Coyle, says corporate bookings have become a growing segment of the company’s annual takings.

“It is something that has been under-utilised by ourselves. It is a sector that is growing and we’d like if next year or the year after you’re looking at anywhere between 7.5% to 10% of our business, which is quite considerable considering the fact that it has come from a very low base,” he says.

Coyle says corporate types tend to visit when there are fewer punters – early May, September and October – which is “good news” for the park.

“We do have a huge amount of corporate events booking in for early May, probably more than any other year we’ve had,” he says.

“We’re well able to deal with any amount of customers on our peak days, but it’s trying to spread the crowd so you can get people to come in off-season periods.”

Coyle says the attraction is managing to retain a lot of corporate bookings, which is unusual since companies tend to send workers to different destinations each year for annual away days.

At the moment, the park - which is located near Ashbourne in County Meath – is only operating on weekends but will be up to full speed again from May till the end of December.

The amusement park and zoo normally takes in a lot of cash during the busy Easter break, but this year the bleak early spring weather took its toll.

“Unfortunately this year, Easter was very early and the weather was horrendous,” Coyle says.

“It wasn’t a great Easter for us, but we had two days where it didn’t rain out of 15 … we had huge numbers come in on those days. It’s encouraging to see that.”

Coyle estimates that anywhere between 5,500 to 6,000 people visited on the two good days, while the park catered for just 2,500 when the weather was bad – a far cry from the 10,000 it hosts at the height of the summer.

Naturally for Ireland’s only major amusement park, the weather plays a big part in determining ticket sales for any given day.

Even in July – when the park is at its busiest – Coyle believes a poor forecast can deter as many as 4,500 patrons from showing up. It is “one of the greatest challenges”, he says.

SPARK against Social Welfare and Pensions Bills Charles and Ray Coyle Leon Farrell / Photocall Ireland Leon Farrell / Photocall Ireland / Photocall Ireland

Family affair

Tayto Park opened in 2010 and was the brainchild of former farmer Ray Coyle, Charles’s father. The elder Coyle started snacks manufacturing giant Largo Foods in 1982 and acquired the iconic Tayto and King crisp brands for €62 million in 2006.

After 35 years at its helm, he retired from Largo just over a year ago but is still CEO of Tayto Park.

“He’s here every single day, and he certainly lends his knowledge and thoughts on how things should be run on a day-to-day basis, but Ray would be more involved in the strategic, long-term view of how the business is going,” Charles Coyle says.

“It’s great to have him because he always seems to notice when we’re not doing something right. He’s very quick to let us know … Every time I think I’ve learned everything, I’ve very quickly learned something new. I’ve been very fortunate to work beside him.”

The business is something of a family affair, with Coyle’s sister and Olympian, Natalya, and mother, Ros, also working for the business.

All four Coyles are shareholders in the park’s parent company, and in 2016 the attraction generated a near-€3 million profit – although that was down on the €5 million it netted the previous year.

“The focus is always on the business, whether it’s at the dinner table or in the park. You’re always working towards the same goal. You may have differing views of how to get there, but that just makes the end-goal that much stronger,” Coyle says.

Some €45 million has been invested into the park so far – including €10 million of Ray Coyle’s cash for the Cú Chulainn wooden roller coaster - and the company plans to keep investing in new rides, attractions and infrastructure, although Coyle is keeping his cards close to his chest.

The newest addition to the park is a driving school for children, which is run partnership with motoring brand Nissan.

Tayto Park re-opens Leon Farrell / Photocall Ireland Leon Farrell / Photocall Ireland / Photocall Ireland

It’s also hoped that Meath County Council will approve a 250-bedroom seven-storey hotel that’s currently in the planning process.

“That would be one step towards turning ourselves to a destination,” Coyle says.

He says the park will never be as big as the UK’s Alton Towers resort – which is owned by Blackstone-backed Merlin Entertainment – but is aiming to become Ireland’s answer to Paultons Park, a family-friendly theme park in Hampshire that hosts ‘Peppa Pig World’.

Tayto Park’s management has learned a lot about best practice from its UK and mainland European counterparts.

“A couple of years ago, just after the (Cú Chulainn) roller coaster was installed and running in June 2015, we probably reached our max capacity because we put in a huge amount of rides, but we had no idea just how busy we were going to be,” Coyle says.

“We probably didn’t have as many attractions for people and as such they were either queuing or they spent most of their time walking around the zoo and factory tour, so they didn’t really get the full ‘Tayto Park experience’.

“As such, we probably suffered for it as a result. People thought that we didn’t have a huge amount to offer.”

In 2016 and 2017, the company installed extra food outlets and other infrastructural facilities and created a greater walking distance between rides to get the crowds to disperse more.

“On any given day in the park, we think we can easily cater for up to 12,500 to 14,000 people. In August and July, we have 10,000-odd people in a day,” Coyle says.

“One of the things we’ve learned from our colleagues in the industry in the UK and the continent was to spread the crowd to ensure that on those peak days you don’t suffer and your guest experience doesn’t suffer.”

Million-visitors mark

Unsurprisingly, the bulk of Tayto Park’s customer base is made up visitors from the island of Ireland: 60% from the Republic and 30% from the North.

Coyle estimates that four in every five attendees have visited the attraction at least once before.

“Our core market is always going to be Dublin, Kildare, Meath. That’s where the largest population base in the country is and we’re right on its doorstep,” he says.

However, he does think there’s more scope to bring in extra business from the UK.

“Mr Tayto is extremely well-known in Liverpool, Manchester, London. People do recognise it as a brand, so I think it would be successful in pulling some of those people over.”

90306580_90306580 Reference 90306580 Photographer Sasko Lazarov / Photocall Ireland Reference 90306580 Photographer Sasko Lazarov / Photocall Ireland / Photocall Ireland

But the company doesn’t have the budget for a full-on advertising campaign in Britain and puts most of its marketing spend into targeting punters in Dublin, Cork, Galway and Belfast.

Tayto Park is expecting to bring in about 760,000 punters this year, similar to 2017′s tally.

The goal is join the likes of the Guinness Storehouse and Cliffs of Moher and become a million-visitor attraction. Ray Coyle has previously stated that 2021 will be the year it happens.

“That’s always the goal, to get to one million,” the younger Coyle says. “We are hopeful that we’ll be able to give our guests enough reason to come back and new guests.

“We do believe in a couple of years’ time we’ll be fairly close to it, but it’s going to take a while and a lot of work in terms of giving people reasons to return and good customer experience. It’s also going to cost a lot in putting in new attractions.”

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Written by Conor McMahon and posted on Fora.ie

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    Mute Michael o connor
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    Jan 4th 2024, 11:04 AM

    Another cover up incoming, either that or it’ll be dragged on so long there will never be a conclusion. Remember all the investigations into Fine gael donor Denis o Brien and Actavo/siteserv and the dealings and debt write offs he received from certain banks? Still ongoing about 5 years later!!

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    Jan 4th 2024, 11:27 AM

    Evidence based? The poor girl was let down by incompetent staff. End of.

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    Mute Costigan Family
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    Jan 4th 2024, 12:18 PM

    @Brian O’Connor:
    I don’t think that it was the nursing staff who were to blame to be fair, didn’t one nurse repeatedly try to get her seen by a doctor?

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    Mute BigEd
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    Jan 4th 2024, 12:52 PM

    @Costigan Family: i was myself waiting on several occasions in ED 16+ hours…. I am yet to see one busy nurse….try retail or hospitality…. Its the management thats fails miserably… Poor girl…. May she rest in heaven…

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    Mute Pat Redmond
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    Jan 4th 2024, 7:03 PM

    @Costigan Family: it is not the overworked doctors’ fault that the HSE is chronically underfunded. There are one thousand vacant consultant posts because of the crap conditions offered by the HSE.

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    Mute Gerry Kelly
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    Jan 4th 2024, 12:11 PM

    We seem very likely to have a general election this year
    I will vote for the party that pledges to fight the monster that is our state bureaucracy
    From the department of “social protection” to the HSE these unfeeling blobs make life a misery for huge numbers of people most of whom are on low/modest incomes and in difficult circumstances
    If the word “republic” is to have any meaning then the state should be on the side of citizens. Instead it seems to be constantly stonewalling or fighting its citizens in long expensive court cases.
    Time for real meaningful change

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    Mute Tom D
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    Jan 4th 2024, 1:49 PM

    @Gerry Kelly: We accept that the state is not competent enough to provide food for example (collectized farms never worked) or consumer good etc why oh why then do we think that public sector beauacrats can run a health care system. Long lines, scarcity, misallocation of resources, no accountability, service users being seen as a burden, or a nuisances-all of these things are a result of state beauacracy. The state can fund healthcare, ideally through social insurance, but I shouldn’t actually run the system. Healthcare can be delivered to a high quality without long waits e.g germany, Switzerland etc.

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    Mute Geo No
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    Jan 4th 2024, 12:26 PM

    The people in the Midwest were promised a centre of excellence by the HSE when the a&e was closed in Ennis and Nenagh. Brendan Drumm, Mary Harney and every Minister and HSE CEO since have let the people down. Hang your heads in shame.

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    Mute Bass Boss
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    Jan 4th 2024, 12:58 PM

    .. they just don’t care, not the first time or last time.. will happen again..

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    Mute tommy power
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    Jan 4th 2024, 1:17 PM

    Do you want the truth or an enquiry?

    Civil Servants do not appoint people to find truth.

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    Mute Paul Kavanagh
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    Jan 4th 2024, 1:51 PM

    I’m afraid to think what I would do if this was one of my family members.

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    Mute John Smith
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    Jan 4th 2024, 3:14 PM

    @Paul Kavanagh: Could not agree more Paul. I cannot as a parent imagine begging, pleading for help for my child as she lay dying before my eyes.
    If the ministry for health, the ceo of the hse and the ceo of the hospital involved had the slightest most minute shred of dignity they should have resigned the minute this appalling tragedy happened.
    Like you said I would seriously consider taking matters into my own hands if this happened to my child.

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    Mute Liam Foy
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    Jan 4th 2024, 2:20 PM

    The stardust case had a tribunal of inquiry in 1981 that was a cover up. In 2009 the government published a redacted re-edited report from Mr Paul Coffey however in 2017 after the retired Judge McCartan review he stated looking at the evidence both the Keane review and Coffey review were wrong.

    I not surprised about the terms of reference because government refuses to own their fatal failures and deny natural truths and justice. Her family should walk away.

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    Mute Marie Agnew
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    Jan 4th 2024, 2:30 PM

    @Liam Foy: It was found in the enquiry that the two top doctors on the ward that night were more interested in broken bones and minor injuries than treating the most seriously ill, I do think that says it all! They should be demoted or struck off.

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    Mute Pat Redmond
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    Jan 4th 2024, 7:12 PM

    “There are insufficient doctors to care for the numbers and acuity of patients presenting in the timescale expected by the triage system, the hospital and the community”, the report stated. Blame management and the Minister for Health, not the overworked, burnt out, doctors.

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    Mute Peter Byrne
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    Jan 4th 2024, 4:35 PM

    I must say from my inter action with Medical Staff in a major Dublin hospital, the care has been fantastic.

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