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Visit Mesa Turned a Sold-Out Sporting Event Into a Citywide Banana Pass

When the Savannah Bananas announced their 2025 Banana Ball World Tour would kick off at Mesa’s Sloan Park, Visit Mesa had a sold-out stadium and a city full of fans with no ticket. So the DMO built a digital Banana Pass on Seeker XP, turning a two-day game into a weeklong, citywide celebration.

The pass sent residents and visitors to 14 banana-themed spots across Mesa and gave every check-in a shot at the one thing money couldn’t easily buy: tickets to the game. The campaign went on to win Best Marketing Campaign at the 2025 Arizona Governor’s Conference on Tourism.

Overview

Visit Mesa launched a check-in challenge called Banana Week using Seeker XP’s digital passport platform. From January 26 to 30, participants checked in at banana-themed treats and deals across 14 local businesses, and checking in at three spots earned the Going Bananas badge plus an entry to win two tickets to the sold-out Savannah Bananas game. The pass drew over 4,000 views and the campaign generated 488,000-plus media impressions, turning a sold-out event into foot traffic for local businesses.

At a Glance

About Visit Mesa

Visit Mesa is the destination marketing organization for Mesa, Arizona, the largest city in the East Valley of metro Phoenix and the third-largest city in the state. Branded City Limitless, Mesa sells a range that runs from Sonoran Desert trails and Salt River water recreation to a downtown arts district, the Cactus League spring training scene at Sloan Park, and a growing food culture.

Like many DMOs, Visit Mesa works to convert big visiting moments into spending that reaches local businesses, not just the venue hosting the event. When the Savannah Bananas chose Sloan Park to open their 2025 world tour, the games sold out fast, which left a familiar gap: enormous local excitement and a stadium that couldn’t hold it. Visit Mesa wanted a way to channel that energy into Mesa’s restaurants, breweries, candy shops, and attractions, and to capture it as something measurable.

How it Worked

Visit Mesa promoted the Banana Pass through its website, social channels, and Banana Week press coverage. Anyone could open the pass on their phone and join in seconds, with no app download required.

Once in, participants explored a curated set of 14 banana-themed spots across Mesa, sorted into categories like Dine, Mesa Beer Week, and Water Fun:

  • Restaurants and treats — chocolate-dipped bananas at Mad Candy, banana specials at spots like Balboa’s
  • Breweries and cider — Banana Split Cider at Cider Corps, tied into Mesa Beer Week
  • Outdoor and water recreation — Yak N Sup Canyon Lake Tours, which handed out free banana-flavored chapstick to its first 50 customers
  • Attractions — cultural stops like the Musical Instrument Museum and the Arizona Renaissance Festival grounds

Checking in at three of these spots earned participants the Going Bananas badge and an entry to win two tickets to the sold-out game. The reward gave fans a real reason to taste their way across the city rather than just show up on game day.

Activities

Taste the Treats

Participants checked in at banana-themed restaurants, candy shops, and cafes to sample chocolate-dipped bananas and banana specials across Mesa.

Sip the Banana Beer

Tied into Mesa Beer Week, fans checked in at breweries and cider houses for one-off pours like Cider Corps' Banana Split Cider.

Explore the City

Check-ins reached beyond food to water tours, museums, and attractions, pulling participants across Mesa in the days before the game.

Badges

Going Bananas

Check in at 3 banana spots

Rewards

Check in at 3 banana spots: Earn the Going Bananas badge and an entry to win two tickets to the Savannah Bananas game at Sloan Park in Mesa.

The single, attainable milestone kept the barrier low. Three check-ins was enough to feel doable on a normal week in Mesa, and the prize, a seat at a game nobody could get tickets to, did the rest of the motivating.

Why We Love It

  • Turned a sold-out event into a citywide one

    A sold-out stadium holds a fixed number of fans. The Banana Pass let everyone else in Mesa join the fun, stretching a two-day game into a weeklong citywide event.

  • Drove foot traffic to local businesses

    Every check-in sent a participant into a local restaurant, brewery, candy shop, or attraction, giving more than a dozen Mesa businesses a share of the Savannah Bananas excitement.

  • Produced measurable results

    The pass drew over 4,000 views and the campaign generated more than 488,000 media impressions, giving Visit Mesa hard numbers to report on the activation.

  • Kept the mechanic simple

    One badge, three check-ins, a clear prize. The simple structure made the pass easy to explain in a headline and easy for a busy fan to actually finish.

  • Leaned into the theme

    Banana-themed pours, chocolate-dipped bananas, and free banana chapstick gave the campaign a personality fans wanted to photograph and share, not just a discount list.

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