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Built For a Different World: The Arts Business Model Problem
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Apollinaire Theatre Company’s Romeo and Juliet: A study in community-growing, audience-building art
This is not your mother’s Romeo and Juliet. Let me count the ways.
Everybody hates marketing. But everyone loves a good story.
Traditional marketing is no longer serving today’s consumer.
Why digital content can never replace live performance
If we continue to provide digital programming, will it hasten the death knell for live performance?
How will cultural organizations survive the next big disruption? Neuroscience and Amazon have the answer.
These are daunting times for the cultural sector. What’s the right way forward for the industry?
Can arts organizations survive the longest-running disruption in history? Opera Australia has cracked the code
Opera Australia increased their sales revenue 28% in eight years and became the only major, year-round opera company whose ticket sales provide more than 50% of its income. How’d they do it?
Does your social media feed ignore your customer?
Here’s a hard truth: the average customer doesn’t care about you.
The California Symphony: Explaining Aubrey Bergauer’s extraordinary success through the lens of business theory
Aubrey brought the California Symphony back from the brink of financial ruin with jaw-dropping speed. The lens of business theory provides an explanation.
10 signs your cultural organization is egocentric
The egocentric perspective infiltrates everything from websites and social media to fundraising and marketing materials.
What opera singers share with marketers
Opera singers are trained to pursue their character’s deepest motivations. A marketer must be similarly equipped.
TikTok + Opera = A match made in heaven?
In the nine months since their first post in July 2020, their TikTok account has gathered an impressive five million likes and nearly 400,000 followers.
Help working parents rekindle their relationships
Add 4-5 hours of babysitting, and it’s a pretty expensive night out
Help concert-goers rub elbows with celebrities
Sometimes, you just want to see and be seen.
The Met is in the New York Times again, searching for another solution to its financial crisis. This time, they brought in BCG.