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Audience Development Introduction
PromotionAll promoters, as the name suggests, spend a good deal of time and energy promoting their events and exhibitions to the widest possible audience. We put posters up, distribute leaflets and place adverts in newspapers in order to raise awareness about our events, exhibitions and venue, and to encourage people to come along.
What is Marketing?Marketing is a planned and practical way for any group or organisation to achieve its goals (sometimes called mission or vision). Marketing will allow you to make informed decisions to ensure that you are both doing the right things and doing things right. This will help you to achieve your goals by targeting your time, effort and resources more appropriately and effectively. Marketing involves promotion as one tool, but also uses a wide range of other tools to achieve our goals – including programming, pricing, the place that we do what we do and how customers can get hold of tickets, positioning ourselves as distinct from other similar local organisations and groups, the process that we have in place for relating to audiences and their needs, the skills and strengths of the people we work with, and a knowledge of the people that we do our work for. Therefore, unlike promotion alone, marketing goes to the heart of everything that a group/organisation is and does, and puts audiences at the centre of that process. The marketing planning process is structured and straightforward process which any group or organisation can embark upon. What Marketing is notThere is much suspicion about marketing and its place in the arts. People hear about marketing most often in relation to hard-nosed business and commerce, and therefore assume that it is not relevant to creative organisations. Below, we try to dispel some marketing rumours…
Audience DevelopmentAudience Development is a phrase that is often used in the arts now. This is possibly because it describes one tangible and beneficial result of successful marketing – that is, the development of new audiences for the arts. So, why develop audiences for the arts? There are plenty of reasons, but here are just six:
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MARCUS WILSON:
DEVELOPMENT MANAGER (AUDIENCES & COMMUNICATIONS)
Taking a lead on HI-Arts' Audience Development projects is HI~Arts' Development Manager, Marcus Wilson.
Marcus is very familiar with the cultural sector of the Highlands and Islands and its arts infrastructure, having worked there since 2000. In 2002 he completed a two-year peripathetic visual arts marketing project which took him across the region in a series of two-month long residencies with key arts centres. During each residency, Marcus worked with these centres, their staff, audiences and local artists to develop marketing strategies that could then be implemented and monitored effectively. The outcomes and findings of the Visual Arts Marketing Project were published in August 2002 in a Final Public Report.
Since then, Marcus has worked to support a wide range of cultural organisations across the Highlands and Islands with their audience development strategy, which developing a number of high profile projects and services for the arts sector, including thebooth online ticketing service (www.thebooth.co.uk), the HI-Arts Journal (www.hi-arts.co.uk) and AudienceBase (a free software package used to collect audience data and conduct marketing campaigns).
Marcus' started his career in arts marketing in venues and festivals in Yorkshire. After a period working in events management in an International Student House, Marcus returned to the arts sector as Marketing Manager of London's Bloomsbury Theatre.
In autumn 2008, Marcus spent a month researching into rural arts development in Arizona.
Marcus will be tutor in residence on this year's week-long Scottish TMA Essentials of Marketing Course.
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