“When you say nothing at all” Not so much on Twitter

July 30, 2009 • 2 Comments

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The line in the song goes “You say it best when you say nothing at all” and sure that is true when you are in a long, loving relationship, but when you are courting, lack of communication is a sure fire way for someone to lose interest, forget about you, or feel ignored.

Marketing and fundraising for the arts is all about the relationship – enough people including me have written about that, so let’s just accept it as a fact.   There are lots of ways to build a relationship, as varied as the folks we are trying to reach.  So what happens when a company starts to use certain communication tools and then just stops.

Let me start with, my name is Jodi and I am a social networking addict.

I actually use TwInbox to download all of my tweets to my Outlook inbox.  Yes, I read every tweet from everyone I follow (I also do the same via RSS feed for all status updates from Facebook).  Some of my dear Twitter friends are very active so I can get anywhere from 800-2000 tweets a day.  Last night I realized I was following over 1000 people on twitter.

This just looked so extreme to me that I decided to streamline a bit.  Rather than eliminate active tweeters who help me keep up with the news and have such great conversations, I decided I would trim those infrequent folks who are “lurkers” or simply inactive, most likely they signed up for Twitter and just never really got how to use it or didn’t like it – hey, to each their own.

Someone had tweeted me about this great program “UnTweeps” that allows you to see who hasn’t tweeted in intervals of 30, 60, and 90 days.  I figured if someone hasn’t used the program in two months, they were not really using it, so I picked the 60 day option.

As I was scrolling down the list of 88 accounts who had been inactive for over 60 days, I was wondering why on earth people didn’t delete the accounts rather than letting them “hang” out there in cyberspace.  Maybe I am super vigilant but I can’t stand having dead accounts out there.

Now of the 88 folks who hadn’t been active, 85 were individuals – about 5 were celebrity accounts that I am sure a well-meaning publicist insisted the actor start.  I am sure the rest fell into the aforementioned, set it up, didn’t like it, didn’t get it or maybe are just way too busy too type 140 characters category.

But three accounts stood out glaringly:

Lincoln Center

Kennedy Center

Westside Story

Now certainly it is every organization or businesses option on how to communicate with customers and how often.  I know how busy marketing departments are.  And, I am among those that believe interns shouldn’t be in charge of the social networking sites, so I understand truly how difficult it is to keep up.   But what does is say when you start something and just stop?  And worse you leave it out there just hanging?

To me this was the same as having a website that was out-of-date.  Something that has been improved upon greatly.

I was turned off and frankly I expected better.  I un-followed two of the three – I’ll let you guess which ones and left it at that.

In building relationships information in key.  People are in a relationship because they want to be in the know. They want to be able to information quickly.  They chose to follow you, and you can’t just leave them hanging.  So either delete the account or better yet, don’t set it up until you know how you are going to use it and have a plan to keep it up-to-date.

Opera takes the lead in innovation

You have to hand it to Opera, for a “dying, old-fashioned” art form it sure is innovative in marketing and production.  Opera was first in presenting live simulcasts and seems to have mastered the process for both audience experience and financial gain.  And now, Seattle Opera a web reality series!

That’s right, a reality show called “Confessions of a First-Time Operagoer” will follow the production of The Ring and a 19 year-old college student’s (Cassidy Brettler’s) first opera experience complete with behind the scenes documentation.

From The Seattle Times:

One cycle of “The Ring” consists of four epic operas, intended to be watched on four separate evenings but together creating a 15-hour production. Presentations of the complete cycle are very rare; Seattle Opera undertakes the task only every four years. This year, three cycles will be presented at McCaw Hall starting Aug. 9, with Stephen Wadsworth directing and Robert Spano conducting.

As “Confessions” host, Brettler will talk to the production’s cast and crew, take behind-the scenes tours, go to rehearsals, meet fans and attend a complete “Ring” cycle. She’ll document her activities and insights on the Seattle Opera blog and Facebook page.

Aubrey Bergauer, audience development manager at the Seattle Opera, says the “Confessions of a First-Time Operagoer” project is an attempt to get younger audiences to appreciate opera.

BRILLIANT.  Finally a reality show I might watch.

Demand-based pricing is the future of the performing arts – commercial and nonprofit – but requires some thought.

July 29, 2009 • No Comments

There has been a lot of discussion about demand-based or variable-price ticketing and the arts (including this recent article in Palm Beach Live about nonprofit performing arts groups in Florida experimenting with it and Ken Davenport discussing demand pricing on Broadway).  The arts have been playing with the idea and implementing in many ways for years – extensions commonly include a price increase, evening weekend performances have long cost more.  I am a big proponent of implementing it on a performance by performance basis.  I think widespread use similar to the airline industry would be a huge benefit to the bottom line for the performing arts, both commercial and non-profit, as well as increasing capacity.

However I have two concerns regarding implementation.

First,  not surprisingly, we have figured out the premium ticket pricing for those who wait for the last minute of a hit show, but are we offering low enough prices for early purchases?  I have written about this before, are we doing enough for early adopters?  For example, I know if I buy a ticket from New York to Detroit at least two months in advance I can get a round-trip ticket for around $100.  If I buy same ticket between 21 to 30 days prior to the flight it will easily cost double that amount.  If I get outside the 14 day window it might be $250.  At the very last minute it might be back around $200 or just under, but it will never again be the super low price that I would have paid for planning in advance.

Some would argue that the high-end is where we need to focus and certainly that is what most commercial productions and those who are exploring it in nonprofits have spent energy.  But can you have one without the other?  Is the unused inventory as important to address and making profit when a show is a hit.  Since there are more non-hits than hits, I think it has to be looked at equally.

Performing arts subscriptions usually don’t represent that steep of a discount early on and include multiple shows.  The commercial shows are a bit better in early bird discounts, but still not at the magnitude of industries that use this type of pricing consistently.  As a matter of fact we save the steepest discounts for the very last minute buyers, usually day of or rush tickets.

But what about previews?  Of course there are discounts for previews often quite good discounts but again these are based on show schedule not time of purchase.  It can be argued that the airline industry restricts the most often purchased flights from any significant discounts no matter when you buy, but they offer many more options than the performing arts, so we have to make our variable pricing incentive enough to keep an audience member form other forms of entertainment.  There are a few select membership programs, TDF for example, that offer tremendous discounts to their constituents, but these are not widespread to the general public.

I have seen companies do one or two day sales when ticket first go on sale – usually when little information about a production is known and we are counting on people having faith in the institution (something we should seriously be assessing – see this post on consumer trends and this one on trust issues).  The commercial sector has a huge advantage in this scenario as the tickets don’t go on usually before you have that information.  The production of Hamlet coming to Broadway this fall was one of the first to offer advance sale $25 tickets to the public from the moment single tickets went on sale.  It will be interesting to see how it plays out for the production, but also to see if it adopted for other productions with less known titles and lead actors.

One could point to Signature Theatre Company in New York ticket initiative, which offers a significant savings to the audiences through their $20 ticket initiative, but the program isn’t a true variable price program.  However it is important to understand the initiative for this discussion.   PLEASE be clear is not a discount but an underwritten ticket.  This is vital to understand because without the corporate, foundation, and individual support that is underwriting the tickets Signature would not be able to make up for lost earned revenue they previously had from a strong and loyal subscriber base. (Cheer to Time Warner, Mellon, Ford and all other long time supporter of the program). Through the underwritten program, Signature sells out within hours of putting a show on sale and has diversified their audience AND when a show extends the customer who wasn’t quick enough to get an underwritten ticket has to pay $65 for a ticket.

This program which I am proud to have been a part of implementing and developing is an amazing feat for a relatively small although visionary company to pull off.  If all businesses, foundations, and other entities would see the tremendous value and implement the program nationwide we would solve the entire price point issue at least for the nonprofit performing arts sector.  I encourage everyone to pursue this, but since it is rather unlikely that it can be achieved in sweeping fashion, I think organizations who are taking matters into their own hands and exploring variable pricing need to learn from it.

The extreme reduction in price, for certain seats purchased far in advance can and could be achieved within the subscription model if subscriptions still offered some sort of “perks,”  for example keeping seat locations which is often key to long-time and older patrons.  Or seat location and day and time of performance could play into reduction offers.

So the if the first issue is whether ticket prices are low enough early on in variable pricing and the corollary issue of whether there is enough difference in price points based on the demand.

This companion post from April offers a few more ideas on this while discussing reversing last minute buying trends.

The next concern I have about demand pricing is about our technology being able to keep up with scaling the house.  This is probably a much larger concern in the non-profit arena, but is key to implementation.  As more and more transactions are done on the internet it is vital for us to demand that ticket software vendors keep up.  As most still can’t handle membership programs without several odd steps, I think the concern is well warranted.  It also won’t be beneficial to the bottom-line if there are only one or two services who can handle the process so additional income is eaten up by fees and surcharges.

Cincinnati Opera – BRILLIANT spoof of Facebook for marketing piece

July 28, 2009 • No Comments

Check out the following link to Cincinnati Opera’s telling of Carmen via facebook status updates!  What a wonderfully fun play on social media.  Questions – why isn’t available on facebook?  and why no link to facebook page for the Opera?  I hope they blow this up for the lobby or include it as program notes!

McLennan and Taylor – are we selling tickets or building community? Good Question

Last week there was some interesting discussion around Doug McLennan’s post on diacritical Pay Attention! If Selling Tickets Is Your Business Model, You’ve Got A Problem about the “Attention Economy” and Andrew Taylor’s response What, exactly, do you sell.  I think this discussion is a great companion to yesterday’s post on recovery consumer trends.

McLennan kicked off the discussion by addressing the shifts from manufacturing to transportation to experience to attention economies.  McLennan states “In the infinite choice marketplace, ideas and products only get traction if they get noticed.”  He notes as usual that the arts are behind others in addressing the shifts:

If you believe your business model is the classic consumer transaction (I make the performance, you buy the ticket) then you’re done. Sorry. That’s a Manufacturing Economy mindset, and while it worked when choices were limited, now that you’re competing in the infinite marketplace offering 8000 or 8 million choices, it’s increasingly unlikely that your “audience” is going to choose you as often as they did in the past.

In the Attention Economy it isn’t enough to be the best orchestra or theatre or dance company. People aren’t comparing you with other orchestras or theatre or dance companies; they’re measuring whether classical music or theatre or dance is something they want to choose at the moment. They’re deciding whether they want an active or passive experience; they’re trying to determine what level of social encounter they feel like today. They’re weighing whether they want a predictable, known, comfortable quantity or whether they want to be adventurous and try something new. They’re figuring out whether they want to learn something and are willing to work for that or whether they’re looking for pure entertainment that costs them little. Price matters – if it’s going to cost, it’s got to be better than the free alternative. It doesn’t matter that there are 47 varieties of spaghetti sauce on the shelf in front of me if what I really want is pesto.

The choice is bewildering. Paralyzing, even. You can’t compete with such overwhelming choice with a consumer transaction model, no matter if you’re the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Metropolitan Opera or the Guthrie Theatre.

The responses to the post address key issues – power imbalance between consumers (audiences) and manufacturers (arts orgs), stepping beyond marketing, the inevitable focus on the bottom-line and traditional earned revenue ideas, institution-building over creation of art, relevancy (perhaps the word that appears most in this blog) to our communities, and the need for human to human live connection in addition to virtual communities.

Andrew Taylor of Artful Manager (another daily must read) quickly posted his response addressing a key point that the audiences we have had for years and the work we have produced may be outdated or holding us back:

The deeper challenge for arts organizations is that they DO sell a product, even as they DON’T. That is, an important segment of any arts audience doesn’t recognize the complex bundle they’re seeking when they buy a symphony or theater ticket. They’ve come to use that event as a placeholder or proxy for that bundle, without even knowing it. To this core group (often the most passionate about the art form, the most loyal buyers, the most committed donors) the bundle IS the product. And as you innovate around the delivery or context of your creative work, you challenge their passionate connection to the discipline’s tradition.

It’s not necessarily a generational divide, although generation cohort likely plays a part. But rather it’s a challenge of serving multiple audiences with widely varying interests and expectations.

McLennan posted a follow-up Ticket Sales, Business Models & Community – Five Ideas To Build Community the next day expanding on the thought that community (as exemplified by social media) is key to building relationships and elevating an organization above the plethora of choices available to fill their time.

This all circles back neatly to yesterday’s post on consumer trends because community is the key to addressing all of those trends as well.  The strength of the performing arts is in bringing people together to share something, we create community by creating art.  This has to be applied to how we run our organizations and how we interact with the world around us.  We MUST define and enact how we will do this in the near and distant future.  We cannot cling to the old ideas or methods.  It is up to the current generation of leaders and those rising in the ranks to take charge and re-center our institutions large and small.

Post recovery consumer trends via HBR and what they mean to the Arts

July 27, 2009 • No Comments

I spend a lot of time reading business journals, nonprofit studies, seemingly unrelated non-fiction because I actually find that these sources inform my thinking as much as if not more than traditional periodicals and studies of the arts.   In last month’s Harvard Business Review an article, Understanding the Post Recession Consumer did an interesting analysis of current and future consumer trends. For days after reading the article, I found myself jotting down notes as to how the articles key points related to the arts.

I was especially intrigued because I often feel the arts are behind the rest of the working world in realizing or adopting new trends even though I know this can’t be true considering the creativity and intelligence in the field.  Perhaps we just don’t do enough analysis – who has time or the money – or we just don’t realize the trends until after they happen – see the note about time and money.

So what happens if we steal a page from corporate America and look at what consumer trends are?  We have to keep in mind of course we aren’t selling shoes – wouldn’t that be easier?  Of course this means looking beyond a single ticket sale or donation.   We have to look at our institution as a whole (Doug McLennan and Andrew Taylor addressed this nicely last week – as my next post will cover).

But back to consumer trends and Understanding the Post Recession Consumer…the researchers note a methodology of assessing past recessions, consumer surveys and other impressive details that I will not enumerate so I can get to the meat of the article:

Four key trends are being accelerated by this recession: consumer demand for simplicity, a call for ethical business governance, a desire to economize, and a tendency to flit from one offering to another.

Four other important trends are slowing: green consumption, a decline in respect for authority, ethical consumption, and extreme-experience seeking.

So what the hell does that mean for the arts?  Well, good question.   First we have to understand the accelerating trends:

A demand for simplicity.

Downturns are stressful and typically increase people’s desire for simplicity. Even prior to this recession, many consumers were feeling overwhelmed by the profusion of choices and 24/7 connectivity and were starting to simplify….  The recession is accelerating this maturing trend. Consider the rise of edited retailing (consumers are offered limited collections of coordinated product choices), a growing demand for trusted brands and value, an increasing desire for advisers—ranging from social networks to product ranking web sites—that can simplify choicemaking, and enthusiasm for less complicated, more user-friendly technologies.

If consumers are really searching for simplicity and are turning to their peers to help them eliminate choices, are the arts positioned to address this need?  We should be, after all what is more simple and natural than a community gathering to share an idea or experience.

Are we the “trusted brand” in business terms?  Have we built the relationships that are necessary to make us vital to our audiences?  Are we producing and creating relevant art that provides a valuable experience for our community?  Many an organization is a cornerstone in their community, but I have to wonder if each art organization pulled five random names from their databanks, called them and asked one simple question, “would you recommend to a friend that they participate in our programming,” what would the answer be?  This might inform us about the quality of the relationship.  Another key component for the arts is that the organization must be trusted to produce art that reflects the community, both large and small.  This often rests in the trust that the community has in the leadership of the organization.

As arts organizations we build as much of our brand on our leadership as our programming, and many have reaped the benefits of engaged, charismatic, community-building leaders, but some  leaders have become absentee in the day to day or aren’t even members of the community the organization interacts with.  Of course there are organizations this can work for if the leadership is at the top of their field and the organization is aligned with the idea that the artist’s association is enough, but it seems more and more like attendance is not mandatory for many of the field regardless of their stature, and we are falsely elevating many of the artist’s stature simple because they don’t want to be tied down to the institution.  Is this really helpful in creating a brand for the organization or is it serving the brand of the artist?

Many organizations are utilizing social networks – they have a facebook page and twitter account, the key is of course what are they communicating with these platforms?  Some are presenting additional perspective on their work or insights about the process of creating arts.  But some are simply offering another discount offer?  It is important to really assess what we have become in our communities and than strategize about how and what we are communicating in response.  We have to move away from just sending out the message and skipping the conversation – how else will we build trust?  A few months ago I addressed the idea of trust and trust issues, and each day this becomes the absolute key to surviving and flourishing – after all isn’t the basis of every relationship trust.  It is precisely this idea of trust that will prevent Eric Dillner from ever successfully running Milwaukee’s Skylight Theatre.

Which brings us to the next  consumer trend:

Call for ethical business governance or a focus on the boardroom

Like the simplicity trend, the focus on the boardroom has been building for years, spurred by notorious governance failures at companies like Enron and WorldCom early in the decade. The huge, taxpayer-funded bailouts of badly managed businesses will accelerate this trend, with two important effects: Government intervention will intensify, and the consumer backlash against companies with unethical or ineffective governance will worsen. The growing interest in the boardroom builds on an older instinct, the public’s well-established reflex to punish companies for unethical labor or customer practices is potent

From bloggers to print media, we are seeing more and more stories about arts organization’s leadership salaries and boardroom antics.  It is not just the new I.R.S. 990s that are searching for examples of quality leadership.  It is easier to attack nonprofit governance over corporate giants.  Frankly, some of the salaries at the top are ridiculous when compared to others in the organization, and I am not one who thinks that because you work in nonprofits you have sworn off having a livable or prosperous wage; however all one has to do is look up on Guidestar the gap between key leadership (and development directors) and the middle manager/department head level, to see the discrepancies – often double in scale.

Those in the performing arts are familiar with the arguments about performers pay usually falling far below livable wage and again out of scale with staff positions.  At this point it doesn’t matter who is right or who is wrong, the arguments and discrepancies are no longer internal or private.  We must take control of them as we must also deal with the issue.  As our consumers become more and more educated and are looking for simplicity, why bother with an organization embroiled in any kind of controversy.  Perhaps more prevalent and obvious is a board out of control or an organization without a clear sense of purpose, mission and vision.

Lack of strategy is visible to the outside world.  It is time arts organizations realize that scattered programming (often grant-driven), stop-start initiatives, inconsistency in quality, and endless changing/cancelling of events makes it very clear that there is no clear identity for the organization and no relationship to the community.  When this happens, it is the board and leadership that has failed the organization.  The board, as keepers of the long-term vision as well as fiscal trustees, should work WITH leadership to center, and the board should properly govern the organization.  Too often a board is entrenched in the day to day (they shouldn’t be at all) or kept at bay by the leadership so the result is that they are ineffectual, and therefore they are not governing.  Too often drastic changes must be made in the board make-up or membership that go ignored.  Better to act, right the organization, and deal with the fall-out rather than damage the organization, drag it off course, or worse – and this is what often happens – trap the organization in a cycle of repeating the same tasks and conversations over and over with no action or forward movement.

Trend number three is no surprise as a result of the severe recession.

Discretionary thrift or a desire to economize

Some consumers have no choice but to be thrifty. Increasingly, though, many affluent consumers are economizing as well, even though they don’t always have to. This is a relatively new trend, having emerged in the final three years or so of the prerecession boom. Our research among more affluent consumers has revealed mounting dissatisfaction with excessive consumption….Initially, many of these newly frugal consumers were reluctant to admit their attraction to thriftiness, concerned that others might see them as dull and austere. But the recession has made discretionary thrift acceptable—even fashionable….Recoveries typically unleash pent-up demand, and we expect that people will celebrate this one by buying a few indulgences and replacing their aging durables. But, as President Barack Obama observed on his way to the G-20 summit in March 2009, even the famously gluttonous United States is unlikely to reemerge as a “voracious consumer market.” Many postrecession purchases, we suspect, will be less extravagant versions of the originals. The discretionary thrift trend should regain momentum over the long term as consumers continue to find personal and practical satisfaction in it.

After all those discussions about whether discounts were bad and not don’t matter.  We can’t deny that we have trained our audiences to look for a deal – as has every other industry.  The entire field is rethinking/restructring the subscription model and bulk ticketing to address package price points and advance ticket sales (here are my thoughts – halfway down the post – on throwing out the model).

We also can learn to better state our value and help our donors, as well as community leaders, understand the continuing effects of the organization– education programs, quality of life, community improvement, economic impact, etc.

But if discretionary spending is going down, we do need to address ticket prices (at least in the performing arts) and continue exploring delivery methods.  This does mean addressing costs and business models.  We have to assess whether the expectations we, artists, and audiences place on production and the institution are realistically attainable – notice I didn’t say cut.  Each organization needs to assess what it’s financial model should be and what it can be.  We also have to understand the perception of our company, most arts organizations don’t have discretionary funds to spend so can’t we turn the eye on ourselves and take a look at what our consumers might be seeing.

This of course brings us to the final rising trend:

Mercurial consumption or a tendency to flit from one offering to another

In the prerecession boom, consumers became agile—and fickle—shoppers. They could instantly find a profusion of brands or products to meet their needs but would just as quickly abandon any choices that somehow fell short. They have brought this increasingly erratic loyalty into the recession…. The instantaneous spread of word-of-mouth through online social media has only accelerated the trend.  Technology- and social-network-enabled shopping strategies will allow this trend to pick up steam well into the recovery and beyond. Exactly what consumers buy may change, but their facility in navigating the options will prove durable—as will their readiness to shift allegiances.

Perhaps the most obvious and the scariest of trends.  The arts have many competitors for attention, support, and funds, and if allegiances are going to shift rapidly do we have strong enough bonds to supporters and the staff to maintain and grow the bonds.   The arts rely more on loyalty then one would assume from the discussions in blogs and print media.   This lesson is learned over and over again when a company has veers off path and the audience feels betrayed or a move into a new building causes huge upsets amongst subscribers regarding their tickets.  Audiences and long-term donors demand loyalty from the organization, and we rely on their loyalty to help our cash flow, create word of mouth, and simply to show up.  As these bonds fade, what can we as arts organizations rely on?  What new models will we have to create?  We know about the fly-by-night audiences (the choosers) who show up when there is a good review and then disappear until the next one.  If we are not focusing on maintaining the allegiance or an alternative, can we survive in between the hits?  Already we have seen the attempts to address this – star casting, event/festival programming, etc – but what are the achievable adjustments (sacrifices?) that we can make to bridge the potential losses of our most loyal and repetitive customers.

We need to understand what activities pull people away.  It is not as simple as saying what is our competition.  We need to know what the competition offers.  How the experience compares to ours and how they are similar.  We can’t simply declare all entertainment, the internet and the world our competition.  We must focus on the immediate draws and the true alternatives first.  Perhaps this will even lead to further evolution of our programming.

What goes up must come down?

And what about those declining trends: green consumption, a decline in respect for authority, ethical consumption, and extreme-experience seeking?

How do they affect the arts?  Declines in green and ethical consumption present a concern for price and ease out-weighing the supposed “good for you and the world.”   The kick-back was going to happen with or without the recession, after with all of the products labeled organic, energy-efficient or some other qualifier that lets the consumer know they are doing good well shopping and the increasing high prices for said products there was bound to be consumer revolt sooner or latter.  I know I have bought every organic cleaner, as well as, organic food (for the dogs and cat too).  I drive a Prius – which I love.  But we are embracing being “green” and internalizing it into simple day to day tasks, we waste less, recycle, and conserve water.  The articles researchers felt that that green consumption had stalled and would take off again post recession while ethical consumption would recover at a much slower rate.

“When people are focused on feeding their own kids and keeping a roof over their heads, concern about children in other parts of the world, or about animal welfare, drops on the list of priorities.”   It is this idea that many in the arts are struggling with, after all, when it comes down to feeding hunger or the feeding the soul, hunger will always win.  Of course we need both, but base human instinct will take over in times of trouble.  So how do the arts acknowledge this but still voice their value so that when the trend reverses the arts are not lost in the vast number of options?  We do only what we can do, focus on creating great work that is relevant.  We take a serious look at how we run our businesses.  We partner with and assist other groups in our community who are addressing the more immediate needs.  The institution becomes an activist in its community and serves the community in an unselfish way.  We can use our own education programs and community libraries as a example.  We all know that the programs that work in schools are the ones that enter into an equal partnership that addresses the needs of the students over the needs of the organization and shows educators the utmost respect and appreciation rather than condescending attitude.   We have all seen the amazing way that libraries have become the living rooms to many communities and have embraced technology and have maintained being a resource to the community.

As for the decline in respecting authority (“the decline of deference”), this has to be the one thing the arts can immediately turn into an opportunity.  After all the arts traditionally question authority and challenge the norms!  And the downward trend in extreme experience seeking has a companion effect of an increased local presence and awareness that surely we can capitalize on.

When I look around at several of the organizations out there and read the wonderful thinking that is happening out in the field, I have to believe that we can clearly address these trends.  Awareness is half of the battle after all.

Broadway World makes it easy to follow Theater Tweets without being on Twitter

For all those who are worried about having another social networking site to follow or are scared of Twitter and micro blogging, but still want to know about what theater folks are saying in the Twitterverse search no further.  Broadway World has come to your rescue.

Today they launched a Broadway Tweets beta and the best part is that they are tracking actors, shows and folks who tweet nonstop about the theater world!  Icing on the cake – you can rank the tweets!  If you are a twitter fanatic you can even retweet, reply or link from the site.

Check it out ASAP.

5 things we have learned about nonprofit theater in the last year and what they mean to the new reality we produce in

July 26, 2009 • 2 Comments

As many nonprofit theaters end or are near the end of their fiscal year, we are getting a better picture of the industry.  Arena Stage, Guthrie, and many others scraped by despite all of the economic challenges of the year.  Others like Hartford Theater Works and Shakespeare Theatre Company are using staff furloughs and other cuts to try and end the year in a reasonable place.  The news over the last few months had been full of theaters who are reassessing budgets and programming for the upcoming year – Manhattan Theatre Club, Long Wharf Theatre, etc.  Of course we all know about the theatres that have closed or been threatened with near closure.

On the news we have started to hear experts say the end is near – for the recession that is.  That recovery is on the way (Suzy Ormond said it on the TODAY show – what more can you want).  Whether it is or not, July is a traditional time for reflection of what the last year has brought to the industry.  Over the last week or so, I haven’t posted because I was talking to peers in the industry to see – well – what’s up.  So, what have we learned?

1.  There is a call for greater focus on mission and programming.  It isn’t exactly a revelation that we must focus on the art of what we do and the education programs that are key to our future.   But there is a growing realization that the field has spent a lot of time building our real estate portfolios and “corporate infrastructure” rather than building community.

2.  The recession is just now hitting our theatres full force.  Not surprisingly considering seasonal planning and grant cycles, we seem to be about 6 months behind other industries. Every major gathering last year centered on the idea that 2009 would be tough but 2010 would be a bitch – this seems to have been a pretty solid prediction.

3.  The theatres that are surviving are those in the larger and smaller budget categories.  The larger companies have significant subscriber bases and have budgets that although not fat – can withstand some cuts.  The smaller companies prove again that they are the most nimble and adaptable.  It is the much discussed mid-size theaters that are in the most danger.  Each budget cut is equivalent to cutting a limb off of a body.  However several of these companies are taking huge artistic risks and are getting some rewards.  For example, Hartford Stage is undertaking a tremendously ambitious coproduction with Signature Theatre Company of Horton Foote’s The Orphan’s Cycle.  Hartford Stage is receiving unprecedented support from the Mellon Foundation for the project and Signature continues their affordable ticket initiative with major support from Time Warner.  Writers’ Theatre in Glencoe, IL has produced acclaimed show after acclaimed show this year and just announced the FOURTH extension of A Minster’s Wife.  What these and other theaters that are surviving and growing have in common is that they were as prepared as you could be for an economy like this.  They were and are in the middle of long-term projects and initiatives that are the result of lots of planning and innovative thinking.  They were challenging the traditional assumptions and models before it became a necessity to do so.

4.  There are a lot of theatres that were not run as well as they could have been.  Sorry, someone had to say it.  Whether is was poor management, bad artistic decisions, lack of clarity in mission or focus, or an interfering/apathetic board, we are seeing case after case of organizations out of control.  Milwaukee Skylight Theatre has become the poster child for bad decision-making (and bad public relations), but they aren’t the only ones.  I don’t know the details (nor will any of us I imagine) that put the Magic in such debt that it was in danger of closing, but it certainly seems that before Loretta Greco and the board righted the ship, that “something was rotten in the state of the Magic.”   And surely I am not the only one who has noticed that a handful of leaders have been let go not to be replaced – therefore saving money on budgets.  The interesting question will be – do we as a field find a remedy to these leadership issues or is this a necessary correction that results in many theatres closing or down-sizing.  Goodness knows we have been working on it for years, so can we do more?   Is it simply a fact of an industry?  Ironically, as we become “more like business” (boy, do I hate that phrase and idea) we have in many ways become less effective, we have buildings we can’t afford to operate and staff salary structures that are completely dysfunctional and frankly abhorrent.   We have more “corporate” boards, many of whom are filled with board members who have no respect for the leadership’s understanding of their own industry or who want to impose corporate structure/personnel that makes no sense to the field.   Certainly there are healthy examples of boards and institutional leadership – most of them are running the types of theatres discussed in number 3, but it is no secret and it is time to stop denying that the other exists as well.

5.  Social media and web 2.0 are really cool and are great ways to communicate with audiences, donors, artists, etc. But in the end, if you don’t have anything to say, it doesn’t matter how you communicate it.  There are so many theatres who are doing amazing things with social media – MCC Theater, Steppenwolf, Berkeley Rep, and so many more.  RELEVANCE is demanded in everything we do.  There are too many other choices out there.  If you aren’t relevant and meaningful in our art and communications, you will cease to matter.  On the flip side, cheers to those who have taken a huge leap into exploring how to uses social media and web 2.0 in creation of the art, I do believe they will have a tremendous effect on the art form and frankly am more interested in that in the long run.

Last fall there was a lot of talk about was the recession a setback or were we entering a new reality.  I want to suggest this:

As we exited the information age and entered into the realm of user-generated content, as professional and amateur definitions have been challenged, as we have seen several corporate giant who were held up as models to emulate fall into ruin, the reality is that there are no new realities, there are no set-backs, we have entered into a period of constant evolution and change.  We will not be on “firm” ground again during the next cycle of time.  We will need to adapt constantly and be able to maintain a long-term visionary outlook as well as accomplish the day to day.  This isn’t new.  It began several years ago.  We are just becoming cognizant of the constantly shifting ground because the bottom finally fell out.  The beautiful thing about this is that this is a huge opportunity for theater and the arts in general.  This is a moment in time where we should stake our claim, speak out for and with our communities, and create great work.

For the last week I have been letting the things we have learned get me down, so much so that I stopped writing for a while.  I wasn’t and haven’t seen the kind of improvements that I would like to see.  I have written a lot about crisis and the opportunity that I believe comes from it – both on a very personal level and for the industry of theater.  I thought there would be more folks in search of the opportunity versus clinging to the past.  However, I realized today that this isn’t what was really bothering me.  The real issue that we are all struggling with and dealing with in our own way is the lack of stability.   On a personal level I have had a horribly difficult time accepting this idea of a constantly shifting ground, especially one completely out of my control and not a result of any of my actions.  In my own way I have down what several organizations have done – clung to the past, thrown everything out the window, and circled back to the core essence of what I believe in.

I can’t deny – I am scared shit-less.  Some days I can’t bear to get up and go out into the world, but each day I do, and I have to believe that there is a reason for it all.  I seek ways to interact with others, a platform to express my viewpoint, and an exploration of the issues that face my community.  Well, if that doesn’t sound like the process of creating theater, I don’t know what does.

Interesting news articles from the last week or so

July 24, 2009 • No Comments

 

 

Does Broadway Need Women? (Wall Street Journal): http://tinyurl.com/mqswru
Skylight Board Prez Hefty steps down. Dillner keeps job by a close vote: http://www.tuesdaysblog.com
TheaterWorks’ Staff Going On Unpaid Leave – Courant.com – http://shar.es/ZNBQ
New Study Challenges Thinking Behind Charitable-Giving Tax Incentives http://bit.ly/11nBjz
Michigan art groups get million-dollar grant to secure future | Freep.com | Detroit Free Press – http://shar.es/ZmIP
Marketing Small Businesses With Twitter – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/hYNZ
For New Leader of the Arts Endowment, Lessons From a Shaky Past http://bit.ly/O4Dch
FATEBOOK: http://tiny.cc/PQXoi
52% of Charities Saw Drop in Spring Donations, Survey Finds http://twurl.nl/p7l231
Jeff Daniels on how Piven’s "mercury poisoning" affected stars: "Jeremy did us no favors." http://is.gd/1HQnt
Jude Law mobbed at stage door in West End http://bit.ly/uEx8j
Addams Family’ Musical Snaps Up Broadway Theater http://bit.ly/18sMKH
Guthrie Theater ends ‘strange year’ with small deficit – http://shar.es/lhAH
Broadway Radio: Journalists were removed from the voting of Tony Awards. http://bit.ly/25GjRK
Lots more on Skylight including resignation letters – http://shar.es/lbJ9
Eight Artists Withdraw From Milwaukee Skylight Season in Protest of New Management – http://shar.es/lHQz 
Nominating Committee Announced for 2009-2010 Tony Season http://bit.ly/VL9t7
Skylight Opera Theatre continues in its public relations catastrophe: http://bit.ly/abb6Y
There are at least 90 foundations on Twitter – check out list via @Philanthropy411 http://bit.ly/4dMwn
Turmoil continues at Milwaukee’s Skylight Opera Theatre http://tinyurl.com/m7x7c9
Declining giving numbers don’t begin to tell the story http://bit.ly/PCNji
Why Generation X Has the Leaders We Need Now http://bit.ly/3uKyk
In Hollywood, a Gossip Feared Not by Starlets, but Executives http://bit.ly/lLldb
Jeremy Gerard (Bloomberg) on Tony voting changes: "I take this bird-flipping personally." http://bit.ly/lOWRs
A Nonprofit Dashboard and Signal Light for Boards | Blue Avocado – http://shar.es/jdaX

The Tempermentals – more hope off-Broadway

July 19, 2009 • No Comments

 

 

Yesterday I wrote about Our Town lighting a fire that was bringing life back to commercial off-Broadway, stoking those flames uptown is this summer’s The Tempermentals. 

 

Hopefully commercial producers will fight to keep the fire burning off-Broadway.  Even today’s New York Times was cheering about the recent flourish of great shows outside of the Broadway Box.  Although the article did double as a second review for Next Fall (which I will be off to see soon) and doesn’t give enough credit to the work of nonprofits who have produced a lot of great work in the last 9 years .

 

What is most interesting to me about both of these productions is that the absolute commitment to serving the play in it’s purest form.  Simple, almost non-existent sets, props and costumes rule both productions.  The directors have relied beautifully on the story-telling of these two very different scripts.  The audience experience is not only enhanced by this it is electrified.  The success of these two shows are directly tied to the artistry of theatre-making.

 

And I should note that these productions have bucked the trend that has trapped many over that last few years in that neither has big stars attached in fact Our Town’s only “star (and that is only in the theatre community)” is Cromer himself as the Stage Manager and although The Tempermentals has Ugly Betty’s brilliant Michael Urie in it – he isn’t a household name (YET – although I am among those that think he was robbed of an Emmy nomination this year, but that is REALLY a different blog posting). 

 

The Tempermentals is in a small theater on the third floor one West 36th Street.  The space actually reminds me of MCC Theater’s old space on 28th Street where we first produced Wit before moving it to the Union Square. This docudrama features a small cast of 5 (several of the actors play multiple roles).  One part history lesson and one part self-discovery lesson the show moves far beyond simply telling the little known tale of the start of the gay rights movement. 

 

That isn’t to say the tale isn’t important.  It involves the creation of an early advocacy group for gay right (Mattachine Society) that predated the ‘69 Stonewall Riots, and the show is one of those wonderful moments where one can learn in the theatre a nugget of history that is more than relevant today.