Archive for Community Database
Community Database: Understanding “Genre”
Posted by: | CommentsThe Swedish have a saying that “Shared joy is double joy” – and that’s a great attitude to bring to the analysis of the Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database as you discover what your audiences do (and don’t) have in common with those of other organizations.
So far, 49 arts & cultural organizations have uploaded their audience & supporter databases into the highly secure and totally confidential repository. Yet their combined reach already accounts for nearly 700,000 Arizona households – which is close to 25% of ALL Arizona households.
It is important to understand the BREADTH of organizations represented in the Community Database – and understand that each organization’s entire database is classified into a Genre.
As you can see, various types of arts & culture organizations represented. Here is how they are grouped:
Genre • Participating Organization(s)
- Choral/Vocal • Phoenix Boys Choir
- Orchestra/Instrumental • DuoWest • ProMusica Arizona Chorale & Orchestra • West Valley Symphony Association Inc.
- Dance • A Ludwig Dance Theatre • Arizona Dance Coalition • AZ Dance Group • Conder/Dance • Desert Dance Theatre • Scorpius Dance Theatre • Southwest Youth Ballet Theatre
- Theatre • Actors Theatre • Arizona Broadway Theatre • Arizona Theatre Company • Broadway Palm Dinner Theatre- Arizona • Carnival of Illusion • Childsplay, Inc. • Nearly Naked Theatre • New Carpa Theatre • Phoenix Theatre • Prescott Center for the Arts • Southwest Shakespeare Co. • Theatre Artists Studio
- Performing Arts Center • ASU Gammage • ASU Kerr Cultural Center • Chandler Center for the Arts • City of Prescott/Elks Opera House • Del E. Webb Center for the Performing Arts • Herberger Theater Center • Mesa Arts Center • Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts
- Museum • Arizona Museum of Natural History • ASU Art Museum • Children’s Museum of Phoenix • Heard Museum • Phoenix Art Museum • Smoki Museum, Inc. • The Children’s Museum Alliance, Inc.
- Service/Advocacy • Alliance for Audience • Arizona Citizens/Action for the Arts
- Film • Phoenix Film Foundation
- TV/Radio • Friends of Public Radio Arizona – KJZZ & KBAQ • KAET Arizona PBS
- Education • Phoenix Conservatory of Music
- Nature • Desert Botanical Garden
- Other • Jazz in Arizona (Jazz in AZ) • Metropolitan Tucson Convention & Visitors Bureau • Scottsdale Convention & Visitors Bureau • West Valley Arts Council
Such a wide variety of groups are collaborating to build arts and cultural capacity in Arizona! Understanding how “genre” is represented is a basic step to get acquainted with Community Database.
In the coming weeks, we’ll examine the total database from a variety of perspectives. We’ll talk about distribution of organizations by budget size and examine audiences from the perspective of their demographics and also discover fascinating patterns in what they attend – and where – and when.
——————–
Have a question about the Community Database that you’d like to ask Erika to explore? Please submit it to Census@allianceforaudience.org.
Introducing Erika Sung
Posted by: | Comments
I am delighted to introduce you to Erika Heeksung Sung, a doctoral student in community resources and development at Arizona State University, where she focuses on nonprofit management.
Thanks to a grant from the Lodestar Foundation, Alliance for Audience has been able to contract with ASU for Erika to conduct research & analysis focused on the Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database.
As always, the information that every organization loads into the community database is highly-secure and completely confidential. Neither Erika nor anyone else outside of your organization (including me) has access to detailed information about YOUR organization’s patrons or performance.
However, what Erika does possess is the unique opportunity to LOOK AT and THINK ABOUT the aggregate data of the Community Database and offer a perspective that, frankly, most of us don’t take the time (or have the patience or skill) to do.
Starting this week, look for Erika’s weekly observations on the Community Database. And if you have a question you’d like to ask Erika to explore, please send it to: Census@allianceforaudience.org.
In her academic studies, Erika’s research interests center on cultural and arts programming and relationships with community development. She works with Dr. Rhonda Phillips, Professor, ASU School of Community Resources and Development, on cultural data projects including the Arizona Indicators initiative and the international Encyclopedia of Quality-of-Life Research study.
Erika’s prior experience includes over 3 years’ experience with a cultural nonprofit organization, the Seongnam Arts Center in Korea, where she served as a Cultural Program Planner. She holds a M.A. in Music Education.
Welcome Erika!
# # #
AFA Receives Grant to Boost Participation via Community Database
Posted by: | CommentsYesterday, the Flinn Foundation announced a grant to Alliance for Audience for which we are incredibly excited and grateful! See their announcement here: http://www.flinn.org/news/1038
In brief, the grant is going to allow us to conduct a audience engagement science experiment using the new Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database.
Step 1 – TRG will conduct a “market modeling” analysis on the records in the community database to that will identify a core demographic or “sweet spot” of current and active arts & cultural patrons.
Step 2 – Then, TRG will identify 20,000 households in Maricopa County that MATCH that demographic “sweet spot” but that are not arts & cultural participants. (In essence, that will be a list of households that are not arts & cultural participants – but, judging by their demographic profile, SHOULD BE!) That group will then be split in two – with half set up as a control group – to which nothing special will happen; and an active group that will be the recipients of multi-faceted year-long marketing efforts.
Step 3 - In the first 4 months, Alliance for Audience will invite a select few organizations (to be strategically recruited based on the Step 1 demographic analysis) to make the active group the subject of their own marketing efforts - and AFA will underwrite those marketing expenses. We’ll be monitoring the response rate of those efforts very closely.
Step 4 – Beginning at month 6, we will open up the active group list as a mailing list to ALL organizations participating in the Community Database. (Obviously, with some structure to assure that they don’t receive everybody’s materials all at the same time.) Since organizations that are participating in the community database have the ability to analyze the demographics of their own audiences, this can be a rich resource for organizations that wish to strategically test their own new audience-engagement efforts.
Step 5 - A year from now – we’ll compare the rates of participation of the active and control groups. Our hypothesis, of course, is that the active group’s participation will be higher. What we are especially interested to learn is HOW MUCH HIGHER?
This is an incredible learning opportunity – not just for Alliance for Audience but for Arizona’s entire Arts & Cultural sector. Expect to see (many) more posts about this project as it progresses.
Please note that this experiment purposefully focuses on a single demographic target (to be determined based on the Market Model analysis) so as to design, administer and measure results most clearly. A key point of this experiment is that its methodology must be replicable for future efforts with other demographic target audiences, as future audience development efforts must continually pursue priorities for audience diversity.
If you haven’t signed up yet to participate in the Census/Community Database – it’s not too late! The next deadline for new organizations to sign the participation agreement is November 9. CLICK HERE for more info.
# # #
Say YES by November 9 to join the Census/Community Database in December
Posted by: | CommentsNovember 9 is the deadline for NEW organizations to sign up for the Arizona Arts & Culture Census/Community Database!
This opportunity is FREE OF CHARGE and is exclusively available as a benefit to Alliance for Audience member organizations in Greater Phoenix, Metro Tucson, Flagstaff and the Prescott Area.
Simply complete and return the participation agreement (CLICK HERE) by November 9. The participation agreement includes important information regarding deadlines & processes related to uploading your data.
For additional information, please visit: http://www.allianceforaudience.org/Pages/arts&culturecensus.html or contact Matt Lehrman at MLehrman@allianceforaudience.org; 602-971-2223 x101.
# # #
What We Know Now! Briefings in Prescott & Flagstaff
Posted by: | CommentsAs you are likely aware, Alliance for Audience (in partnership TRG Arts) has created the Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database – an information asset that now tracks the arts & cultural participation of nearly 700,000 Arizona households (which is about 25% of the total number of households in the State of Arizona.)
Organizations in Northern Arizona (and anyone who would like an excuse to spend a day in cool weather) is invited to attend these upcoming briefings…
- Wednesday, October 26, 2011
1:30 – 3pm – Elks Opera House, Prescott
please rsvp to MLehrman@allianceforaudience.org
- Monday, November 7, 2011 – as part of the Flagstaff Arts Summit
5–6:30pm, Coconino Center for the Arts, Flagstaff
please rsvp to JTannous@culturalpartners.org
PURPOSE OF THIS BRIEFING:
Recently, TRG Arts shared its overview findings in a briefing in Phoenix. Their presentation revealed insights both impressive and unprecedented. Arts & cultural organizations (both as a an entire sector AND as individual entities) now have the power to evaluate their audiences demographically – as well as see the patterns of their participation in the arts & cultural economy.
And this is a FREE benefit for member organizations of Alliance for Audience.
If you’re ever wondered WHO are your audiences and WHERE you might best look for more – you will absolutely want to take part in this discussion.
For background information about the Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database, CLICK HERE.
Matt Lehrman, Executive Director of Alliance for Audience will share the Census/Community Database findings – and we are going to have an absolutely fascinating discussion together about the implications of what the data reveals. Whether your organization is – or is not – presently participating in the Census/Community Database, you’re welcome to attend – you’ll find this discussion VERY INTERESTING & HIGHLY RELEVANT!
# # #
This is your NEW invitation to join the Arizona Community Database!
Posted by: | CommentsSo far, 50 arts & cultural organizations have joined the Arizona Arts & Culture Census/Community Database – and uploaded information on nearly 700,000 unique households.
Now it’s YOUR turn! Please consider this your invitation to JOIN the Arizona Arts & Culture Census and Community Database! (This is open to ALL Alliance for Audience member organizations in Greater Phoenix, Metro Tucson, Flagstaff and the Prescott Area.)
Simply complete and return the participation agreement (CLICK HERE) by November 9. Be sure to note that the participation agreement includes important information regarding deadlines & processes related to uploading your data.
Participation in the Census/Database is voluntary; available exclusively to member organizations of Alliance for Audience and FREE.
The Census/Community Database is conducted via the “eMerge” technology of TRG Arts, which enables authorized users to conduct research and compile dynamic direct mail lists in an environment that is highly secure and which carefully guards confidentiality and protects privacy concerns.
For additional information, please visit: http://www.allianceforaudience.org/Pages/arts&culturecensus.html or contact Matt Lehrman at MLehrman@allianceforaudience.org; 602-971-2223 x101.
# # #
Tucson Briefing on Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database
Posted by: | CommentsFollowing up last week’s presentation by TRG Arts (and yesterday’s sharing of the presentation slides), I’ve been asked to conduct a TUCSON BRIEFING on the Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database:
- Date: Wednesday, September 21
- Time: 2pm – 3:30pm
- Where: Tucson Pima Arts Council’s Community Room,
- 100 N. Stone Ave.
Please RSVP to Daniela Ontiveros at DOntiveros@tucsonpimaartscouncil.org to let us know to expect you.
For more information about the Arizona Arts & Cultural Census/Community Database, CLICK HERE.
I won’t attempt to recite all of the TRG presentation – but I took very good notes! So rather than make a big formal presentation, let’s just sit down together to review their findings and then discuss the implications in Tucson, in Arizona and beyond.
Whether your organization is – or is not – presently participating in the Census/Community Database, you’re welcome to attend – and I think you’ll find this discussion VERY INTERESTING & HIGHLY RELEVANT!
(And yes, I’m working on dates to bring this discussion to Flagstaff and Prescott, too!)
# # #
Revealing What We Know Now
Posted by: | CommentsOn September 8, TRG Arts’ CEO Rick Lester and VP Will Lester led a remarkable 2-hour presentation and discussion in which they shared insights & information gleaned from the analysis of the demographics and patterns of participation of 700,000 Arizona households who are arts & cultural participants.
It is not hyperbole to say that the meeting was incredibly revealing & instructive.
As promised, HERE is a link to their presentation slides along a few of my notes on what they said:
- “Assumption Free Management” - On page 3, Rick Lester made this point emphatically: The power of statistical information is now within (easy) reach of arts & cultural organizations large & small. The goal of that information is not to command or compel artistic decisions – but rather to enable organizations to pursue “Assumption Free Management.” For every participating organization, the community database is a tool that can/should/will help them eliminate guesswork, risk and waste from their operations.
- Are We Normal? On page 5, Rick Lester noted that this is the first question every community asks when they first look at their data is: As also pointed out on page 15, what stands out most is that of nearly 700,000 unique households tracked (so far) in the database, only 21% appear on more than one organization’s database. Stated another way, 79% of the Arizona households tracked appear as participants/donors of JUST ONE organization. Rick and Will noted that this isn’t the highest or lowest percentage TRG has seen – but it should be a POWERFUL indicator of opportunity for organizations in Arizona to work together to encourage audience members to increase their participation.
- Relevant? You bet! – On page 12, Will noted that 25% of ALL Arizona households are already represented in the database (and because we’ve gotten off to a particularly strong start in the Phoenix area, the database tracks 34% of Maricopa County residents.) That means that this database is already significant in its ability to understand the demographics and participation patterns of Arizona audiences.
- These ARE the “Good Old Days” – Rick & Will spent a good amount of time discussing the general age parameters of Arizona audiences (and national audiences) - and forecasting how, in coming years, the numbers of ”traditionalists” will diminish and how the patterns of Baby Boomers will begin to change. Their “bottom line” is that in 10 years or so, arts & cultural administrators will look back to TODAY as being the “good times” – because the number of audiences is going to shrink and there is going to be increased competition for those that remain.
- Confront Conventional Wisdom – Rick concluded with the provocative thought that conventional wisdom is not the “safe” bet that most arts & cultural administrators assume. He offered that in Arizona and nationally markets behave distinctly, economics are fast changing, and organizations everywhere need to do a much better job of understanding WHO are their audiences, WHERE are there more of them and HOW to convey an invitation to participate in an appropriate and effective manner. He pointed out that just as TRG can measure the “total arts & culture market” of Arizona, that each participating organization RIGHT NOW TODAY has the power to log into the community database system and analyze the specific demographics, patterns of participation, geography and more of their own audiences.
Finally and MOST IMPORTANT – this is NOT a one-time research project. This is an ON-GOING system of tracking audience behaviors and the start of an on-going learning process for leaders in all facts of arts & cultural organization management and leadership.
So, stay tuned! There’s MUCH MORE to come!
# # #
IMPORTANT! – INSIGHTFUL!! – PRACTICAL!!!
Posted by: | CommentsToday, more than 70 of your colleagues will participate in the FIRST-EVER presentation of the findings of the Arizona Arts & Culture Census & Community Database!
It’s not too late – you are STILL welcome to attend! In fact, I URGE you to attend!!!
- When: TODAY!!! Thursday, September 8; 1:30 – 3:30pm
- Where: Phoenix Art Museum, Whiteman Hall Auditorium
- Cost: FREE, but please RSVP: http://azcensus.eventbrite.com
Rick Lester, CEO and Will Lester, Vice President of TRG Arts flew in to Phoenix on Wednesday – and just gave a briefing to the Board of Directors of Alliance for Audience. WOW!!!
I won’t spoil their surprises – but let me just say that this is some POWERFUL stuff – and it’s worth experiencing IN PERSON! I promise, you’ve never had access to these kinds of insights before – into WHO our audiences really are and HOW they actually behave within Arizona’s arts & cultural sector. STUNNING!!!
Yes, I’ll write up some notes to share afterward – but after what I just saw today, I have to tell you that this is a presentation that you will really wish you had experienced directly. IMPACTFUL!
And this is definitely NOT just for marketing people… This has the potential to benefit your ENTIRE organization (artistic, curatorial & development leadership – as well as marketing and executive leadership!) PRACTICAL!
If you are not able to attend, please let me STRONGLY ENCOURAGE you to immediately forward this message to someone else in your organization and URGE them to attend. (Don’t be surprised if by this time tomorrow, they are writing about the meeting in boldface, all caps & exclamation marks, too!)
See you this afternoon!!!
# # #
You’re STILL welcome to attend “What We Know Now”
Posted by: | CommentsThis Thursday, Alliance for Audience presents the FIRST-EVER presentation of the findings of the Arizona Arts & Culture Census & Community Database:
- When: Thursday, September 8; 1:30 – 3:30pm
- Where: Phoenix Art Museum, Whiteman Hall Auditorium
- Cost: FREE, but please RSVP: http://azcensus.eventbrite.com
This meeting will feature presentations by (and discussions with) Rick Lester, CEO and Will Lester, Vice President of TRG Arts and promises insights into the demographics and patterns of participation of Arizona’s audiences for arts & culture.
Here’s just one question the Census/Community Database will answer:
- Of the roughly 700,000 unique households compiled in the Census, what percent appear on ONLY ONE organization’s database of participation/support over the last 5 years?
(Care to guess???)
On Thursday, we’ll answer that question – and much more. And more than that, we’ll discuss the IMPLICATIONS & OPPORTUNITIES that result from these insights. This is just the beginning of what we can all learn!
I very much hope you’ll plan to attend Thursday’s meeting.
# # #
