In 2008, working with Shugoll Research, we developed several focus groups
with specific target audiences, including current subscribers, lapsed subscribers,
multi-show buyers and single ticket buyers. During these focus groups, we
presented several alternatives to the traditional subscription, many of which had been recently introduced by other theaters, and to my
complete horror, none of them tested anywhere near as well as the traditional
subscription. Even if I wanted to abandon our subscription model, I didn’t have
any attractive alternative. Then the
realization came – if our customers still want subscriptions and our subscriber
base is rapidly declining, then the way we sell, market and promote subscriptions
if fundamentally flawed (it should be noted that we also tested satisfaction
with artistic product and found that was not a challenge for us). In short, we
were killing subscriptions.
As our 2012-13 season comes to a close, I’m happy to report
that we have experienced significant increases in our subscription base
for four consecutive seasons, almost achieving a record high number of
subscribers and since 2008, have increased our subscription revenue by 115%. Even more surprising, the turnaround started
to occur in 2009 at the height of the global economic crisis and a full 1.5
years before the opening of the new Mead Center for American Theater.
If I were to articulate the formula of our success, it would look like this:
great artistic
product + best seats + best price + outstanding customer service = more
subscribers
Artistic Product: Whether we like to admit it or not,
the most important of the 4Ps of marketing is product. If your customers are
not satisfied with the artistic product of your organization, you will not see
an increase in your subscription base.
Best Seats at the Best Price: Being able to get the best seats in the house at the best possible price is a powerful value proposition for subscribers. If you have a robust
subscription base, often times the only way to get the best seats in the house
is by subscribing. Make sure to message that in your sales materials. Also, be
very careful of undercutting your subscriber average ticket price, particularly
at the last minute. A substantial last minute discount may provide a lift to an
under-performing production, but the long term side effects could be much
worse.
Outstanding Customer Service: Let’s be honest –
customer service usually sucks these days. So it’s the perfect opportunity to
shine. Steward your subscribers like development does their donors. Be
proactive in finding ways to provide exceptional service. For example, if inclement weather is coming, instead of waiting for subscribers to call you to
exchange their tickets, why not send them an email alerting them of the
inclement weather and offering to make the exchanges on their behalf? And if you don't already, find ways to thank your subscribers throughout the year. For example, there is a theater on the west coast that partners with a winery each year to give their subscribers a free bottle of wine when they renew their subscriptions as a way of thanking them for their support.
Beyond the formula, below are a couple of significant
strategic changes we made that made all the difference:
Lengthen the
Subscription Campaign: Prior to 2009, Arena Stage would announce its season
in March and would continue to sell subscriptions until October,
providing for an 8 month subscription campaign. These days we begin our
subscription campaigns in January and sell through March of the following year,
thereby lengthening our campaigns to 15 months. Avoid delaying the start of your subscription
campaign at all costs. Each week you lose will be very costly, and you cannot
replace lost weeks.
Don’t Forget About
Upgrades: When I was taught how to market subscriptions, I learned
to break a subscription campaign into two parts: renewals and acquisitions. Today, we have
an additional focus on upgrades. Our goal is no longer just to renew
our subscribers; we want to upgrade them as well year after year. Primarily we focus on
getting subscribers to increase the number of plays on their subscription, but
you can also have them upgrade into better seats, add parking to their orders,
or increase their annual fund donation. This year we are even experimenting
with add-ons for café meals to great success. In FY13, almost ten percent of
our subscription base upgraded into larger packages, which doesn’t sound like much
until you consider that amounts to roughly $175,000 in additional revenue. On
top of which, full season subscribers have a renewal rate 25 percent points
higher and give donations that are 4 times larger than partial season
subscribers.
Speak to Subscribers
Like You Know Who They Are – Because You Do: Gone are the days when you can
create one beautiful season brochure that speaks to all of your patrons, and
then mail it over and over again until you beat people into submission.
Subscription renewals and solicitations should be highly targeted. You know
what types of productions each patron likes and on what nights they like to
attend. If you sell café meals and parking through your box office, you even
know if they like to park and what they like to eat. You know if they are a
full price or discount buyer, how many shows they attend a year on average, and
how many people are usually in their party. So why are we still wedded to one
size fits all solicitations? Our job is to get the right offer in front of the
right prospect at the right time. And we have all the data we need to
accomplish that.
Develop a Sales
Pipeline. Even up to a few years
ago, we would mail subscription solicitations to traded lists. Then we started
to look closely at our response and tracking reports. Guess what – we found that
list trades were not working, not even close. It would have been just as
effective to drop season brochures out of a helicopter over the city. And this
was considered a “best practice” that every major arts organization in the city bought into. However, we were not measuring efficacy. The failure of these
campaigns is easy to understand. In short, we were asking people to marry us
before we went on a first date. Most of these targets had never seen a show
at Arena Stage. Why would they invest hundreds of dollars when they had never stepped through our front doors? We changed tactics and concentrated our efforts on
developing a sales pipeline. We would trade lists for single tickets, primarily
to our most popular productions. This in turn would create an influx of new
single ticket buyers. Once they had their first experience at Arena Stage, we
would send them an offer to return to a second show. Once a patron had seen two
or more shows, the likelihood that that would then respond to a subscription
solicitation quadrupled. Don’t waste time and money mailing to poor prospects.
Instead concentrate your resources on developing more multi-show buying patrons
as those will be your best leads in your next subscription campaign.
Testing and Failing. The
only way to succeed is to fail. The key is to succeed on a grand scale, and
fail on a small one. Aggressively measure the success of every campaign, no
matter how small. And test something new at least every week. Tactics will
change from year to year, and you’ll need to adjust in order to maximize return
on investment. As we doubled our subscription revenue over the past four years,
we actually started to spend less as we grew more efficient. For example, I
like to test new offers in our telesales room. Over the period of a week, we
may have three or four offers in the telesales room. By the end of the week,
after a thousand or so calls, we usually have a clear winner among the offers
tested. That offer is then rolled out in an email solicitation, and if it
responds well, then we’ll include the offer in a large direct mail campaign
and then test it against the current control package to see if we achieve a
better ROI.
If you are currently experiencing less than stellar results
on your subscription campaign, before throwing the baby out with the bathwater,
I’d encourage you to examine each of the variables in the subscription formula above, and
then vary your tactics to see if you get better results. Sometimes it isn’t the model that is dying,
it is how we apply the model that is responsible for our underwhelming results. At least it was in our case.
2 comments:
Chad this is a great post! Lots of wisdom, and I've had a hunch that subs weren't dead especially considering that the baby boomers are now of subscribing age, which to me means there are more fish in the lake than have ever been (not that I know anything about fishing).
Question: you say that "
if our customers still want subscriptions and our subscriber base is rapidly declining, then the way we sell, market and promote subscriptions if fundamentally flawed (it should be noted that we also tested satisfaction with artistic product and found that was not a challenge for us). In short, we were killing subscriptions.
"
So outside of artistic product, what was Arena Stage doing to kill subscriptions? That is, what were you doing outside of your equation for success?
Also separately wondering if you find the political climate in DC has any effect on your subs or single ticket revenue. I can't help but notice you lost 40% of your subscriber base during the two terms of a particular individual. Not placing blame on a political party, of course, but maybe climate? Madison, WI encountered something similar during the Gov Scott Walker protests.
Erik Schroeder
Director of Marketing
Lookingglass Theatre Company
Hi Erik,
Great couple of questions. Let me answer the second one first. The political climate in DC doesn't change, even if we have a Republican President. For example, in 2004, 89% of DC residents voted for John Kerry. DC is overwhelmingly Democrat, and that doesn't change with administrations. That said, when we do see turnover in the White House, we see some turnover in our subscription base as Presidential appointees change. I have heard from other DC theaters that their sales are down this year because of the election year, but it doesn't seem to have affected us as our sales are up. It is hard to purchase media in election seasons, particularly in a swing state like Virginia, because you are competing for very limited inventory (particularly on television).
To your first question, I think this previous post might answer it:http://arts-marketing.blogspot.com/2011/09/subscriptions-dead-maybe-not.html. It is along the same lines as this blog post, but a little more tactically oriented.
Chad
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