SEAKEEPER CATCHING ON

TRADE-IN PROGRAMME NOW BEING OFFERED AS STABILISERS GROW IN POPULARITY.

Portrait of Tammy Strobel
My Reading Room

SEAKEEPER, THE LEADER in marine stabilisation, has launched a trade-in programme, offering Owners of yachts with a Seakeeper the opportunity to receive as much as a 50 percent discount when upgrading to a new model.

The unique programme offers customers a streamlined valuation process that makes it easier and more affordable to enjoy the latest Seakeeper technology.

“We’re thankful for the more than 3,000 loyal customers who share our vision and continue to make Seakeeper a success,” says Andrew Semprevivo, Vice President of Sales and Marketing. “With a quick visit to our website, they can upgrade to our newest models with the confidence they’re getting the best price and the best service possible. We want to make it as easy as possible for our customers to experience the future of Seakeeper.”

Through a trade-in portal on the Seakeeper website, customers can enter their current model and automatically receive the discounted pricing on a new unit of their choosing. All current Seakeeper owners will have access to the world-class support of Seakeeper’s global installation network, as well as a two-year warranty on the new Seakeeper model. Kits are also available to adapt existing boat configurations to new Seakeeper models.

Seakeeper has been encouraging anglers to “Fight the fish, not the roll” for years, but it seems that fishing charters are now taking that idea to heart.

Captains and customers alike are raving about the results that their Seakeeper gyros are achieving. Earlier this year in the US, Haphazard Sportfishing refit a Seakeeper 9 onto its trusty Hilton 61.

“Our day started with some rain, fog, and a pretty rough ocean. . . . I unlocked our new Seakeeper gyro [and] we didn’t do much rocking and rolling the rest of the day,” says Captain Joey Belton. “I was thrilled by its performance.”

Seakeeper opens the possibility of fishing trips to those who might otherwise be left ashore – whether by offering a stable platform to little future anglers getting their first taste of life on the water, or by eliminating the boat roll that would ruin a trip for those without well- developed sea legs.

http://www.seakeeper.com