This blog has been created to discuss arts marketing related issues in the United States.
Saturday, January 20, 2007
Book Review: Arts Marketing Insights
Book: Arts Marketing Insights: The Dynamics of Building and Retaining Performing Arts Audiences by Joanne Scheff Bernstein.
In this book, the author sets out to describe the shifts in audience behaviors over the past decade, and how it affects the marketing strategies employed by arts marketing professionals. The author does a good job of describing the shifts which have occurred in audience behavior throughout the past decade, but if you are looking for the same level of insight and brilliance which she has demonstrated in earlier works (mostly her collaborative work with Philip Kotler), you will be disappointed. This book gives you the basics—understanding your customer, the use of marketing research, and yes, even the beloved four P’s: product, price, place and promotion. Bernstein even outlines some of the most feared problems in the industry such as declining subscription rates and the aging of our audiences, and suggests using the same techniques which marketers have used over the past ten years to combat those problems. And this is where the book stops. Forgive me, with all the stuff out there now on marketing in the arts, I expected someone with Bernstein’s reputation to add much to the current critical debate over the future of arts marketing. What she does is provide a nice recap of what most of us already know.
I found her chapter entitled “Leveraging the Internet and E-Mail Marketing” the most disappointing. For a book published in 2007, I found it odd that there was very little, if any, discussion on how the use of technologies, other than websites and e-mails, could be used to communicate with potential audiences. What about Podcasting? RSS feeds? Social networking websites? Blogging?
To wrap up, if you would like a basic snap shot of the current problems facing arts marketers today, as well as a nice review of marketing basics, this book is for you. If you are looking for anything else, I am afraid you will be disappointed.
Chad: I was just asked to review this book for a journal (Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly), so I guess its cheating to look for what others are saying about it. Still nice to know what to expect as I go into the book.
ReplyDeleteMark Hager
(Director of Research at Americans for the Arts, 1999-2000)
Chad: I was just asked to review this book for a journal (Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly) so I guess it's cheating to go looking for what other people are saying about it. But thanks. This lets me know a bit of what I'm in for before I dive into the book.
ReplyDeleteMark Hager
(Director of Research at Americans for the Arts, 1999-2000)
hi! Do u know if I can get a copy of this book online? Free?
ReplyDeleteDoris