October 2014 Blog salon
October 2014 Blog salon
Subscriptions Are Not (un)Dead
October 2014 Blog salon
The Role of Selfies in the Artistic Digital Space
October 2014 Blog salon
7 Steps to Upgrade Your Organization’s Analytics
October 2014 Blog salon
Don’t Just Engage Your Communities. Marry Them.
October 2014 Blog salon
What’s the point of marketing the arts?
October 2014 Blog salon
What do food trucks have to do with the future of arts marketing?
Over the past few weeks, a new face has been popping up at street fairs and food festivals across the country: an Amazon “food truck,” doling out Kindle Fires alongside neighboring trucks’ hot dogs, hamburgers, and artisanal cupcakes.
October 2014 Blog salon
The Shared Space of Arts Marketing & Education
October 2014 Blog salon
#Whippersnappers – 5 Tips for Marketing the Arts to Multigenerational Audiences
Would you send a Vine to your grandmother?
Would you tell your teenager to check out an ad in the newspaper?
OMG, did you really just send that on Snapchat? And what the heck is Snapchat anyway?
October 2014 Blog salon
How does loyalty begin?
October 2014 Blog salon
If You Say “Facebook is Not a Direct Sales Tool” You’re Not Using It Correctly
If you still say “Facebook is not a direct sales tool” you’re not using it correctly. And you don’t understand how the marketing world has dramatically changed.
October 2014 Blog salon
Dashboard Co-op’s Outreach Strategy
Audience is something we think about every moment. How are viewers engaging with our exhibitions? How are they responding to the organization’s methods of outreach? Are they even showing up in the first place?
October 2014 Blog salon
Being David in a Goliath World: Finding Your Place in the Marketing Noise
October 2014 Blog salon
Engaging Audiences in the Mobile Moment
October 2014 Blog salon
Don’t Dismiss Digital Experiences
October 2014 Blog salon
The Cohort Club
For Geva Theatre in Rochester, NY, I created an engagement group that has significantly impacted the way we interact with patrons and stakeholders, it’s called The Cohort Club.
I started with four ideas:
1) Education breeds excitement.
October 2014 Blog salon
Tapping back into lost audiences
October 2014 Blog salon
Lean Strategies for Patron Engagement
October 2014 Blog salon
Let’s Redefine the “We” in “All the Places We’ll Go”
October 2014 Blog salon
The Easy Math of Good Service
I’m very excited to say that I will be leading a Community Forum at this year’s National Arts Marketing Project Conference in November.
October 2014 Blog salon
Countdown to our National Arts Marketing Project Conference 2014 is ON!
October 2014 Blog salon
Inverting the Pyramid
Ms. Jill Robinson
The art of upgrading active patrons
Posted by Oct 10, 2014
Ms. Jill Robinson
I want to point your attention to the most important patrons in your audience. They’re not necessarily the ones who have given or attended the most over their lifetime. They’re your “right now” patrons—the audiences that are participating and engaging with you for your most current event and could do any number of things in the future.
These currently active patrons allow your organization to operate right now. They’re the ones that your mission serves today.
But don’t assume that they’ll be there tomorrow. Research indicates that first-time attendees—a large portion of many organizations’ patrons—tend to come once and then never return.
Read MoreMr. Al Stilo
Subscriptions Are Not (un)Dead
Posted by Oct 10, 2014
Mr. Al Stilo
Sometimes I feel like a Zombie because everything I read says the one thing that I believe most in -- is dead. You see, I am a subscription guy, I LOVE subscriptions. But the obituary is clear, as eloquently stated in Terry Teachout’s 2013 WSJ article, Theater's Expiring Subscription Model. (The statistics are plain to see in TCG’s 2012 Theatre Facts. Theatre subscription revenue is down by 13.7% from 2008-2012. Is trying to breathe life into subscriptions like “The Walking Dead?” Have my brains been consumed?
I don’t think so. I always have and never stopped believing in membership. Subscriptions give patrons the best value. Plus, they give organizations the ability to take artistic risks that can result in brilliance (or failure) without worrying about the commercial viability of every individual endeavor. Believing is one thing, but I have also looked for new and innovative ways to sell subscriptions.
Read MoreJerry D. Yoshitomi
Inverting the Pyramid
Posted by Oct 10, 2014
Jerry D. Yoshitomi
Who in the organization already knows how to increase audiences and revenues? It's the Marketing Director and the Marketing Team. They've been attending Marketing Conferences, participating in online webinars, reading and commenting on blogs, etc. They are hired and paid because they are expected to know more about marketing than anyone else in the organization. They have the responsibility to hit the numbers, but lack the authority to implement the practices that would assure success.
Read MoreBrianne Logan
The Role of Selfies in the Artistic Digital Space
Posted by Oct 09, 2014
Brianne Logan
I can’t lie to you all about this, nor can I really explain my reasons. Whenever the field gets into one of those spectacular debates about the place of selfies, or photography, or technology in artistic spaces I find myself gleefully watching it all unfold on twitter, reading the resounding “no way” opinions penned by, often British (to my delight), art historians, or the “experimentation is healthy for forward motion” responses written by the more digitally native arts marketers among us.
I find the fear of the archetypal selfie-snapping hordes of visitors—of course, besmirching the integrity of fine arts experiences with dumb poses--to be such a fascinating thing. The issue has raised real questions for the field on what it means to be present in an artistic space.
Read MoreJordan Silton
7 Steps to Upgrade Your Organization's Analytics
Posted by Oct 09, 2014
Jordan Silton
There are lots of buzzwords in web analytics. Attribution and big data get a ton of attention, but there are several things you can do right away to upgrade your organization's analytics abilities. The following seven steps can help your arts organization get the data you need to make better decisions about your digital marketing campaigns.
(1) Audit Your Implementation
The first step to upgrading your analytics is to ensure you are confident in the quality of your data. Arts organizations have more data than ever to inform decisions about their digital presence. It's nearly impossible to get "perfect" data, but with a tag audit, you can ensure tracking code is properly placed throughout your website and your analytics platform is configured to deliver results you can count on.
Read MoreMr. Chris McLeod
Don’t Just Engage Your Communities. Marry Them.
Posted by Oct 09, 2014
Mr. Chris McLeod
In the midst of an increasingly crowded digital and offline marketplace both small and large arts organizations are frantically trying to figure out how to better reach and engage audiences. They dress themselves up in their finest digs with pretty websites and sexy logos to get people to turn their eye and notice them. Sound familiar? This process is much like what can be found in any social setting of eligible bachelors and bachelorettes.
So the question is: Given the crowded space, how do you as an arts marketer (or any marketer for that matter) attract, engage, and stay relevant to communities and other audiences? The answer is treat them like you want to marry them. Crazy, right? Let’s take it from the guy’s perspective because, well, I’m a guy.
Read MoreAmelia Northrup-Simpson
What’s the point of marketing the arts?
Posted by Oct 09, 2014
Amelia Northrup-Simpson
I recently started teaching a graduate-level arts marketing course. When I was first handed the materials from the last time the course was offered, I immediately began sorting through to determine what would be useful to students learning the basics of arts marketing.
Something was missing, though. The only time the previous class had addressed money was toward the end of the course to discuss budgeting.
While managing a budget is an important skill, the role of revenue is a much larger part of an arts marketer’s job.
The way I see it, an arts marketer has two basic objectives:
Objective #1: Bring the arts and audiences together
Objective #2: Take responsibility for marketing revenue goals
Read More