Fans ignite the engine
Editorial
Fans: Cultivating a fan base, and using that to grow your audience from the bottom up. If you have "patrons," then you're using an old model. There are lessons we can learn from rock bands and politics about grassroots marketing.
What are you doing to improve your "patron experience"? What is the size of your mailing list? Do you use social networking applications?
These are all typical theater marketing questions, asked by consultants, seminars, boards. The problem is, each of these questions has a fundamental flaw. And they all point to an old-school (and not in a good way) model of theater marketing. They're questions that assume that everything is basically fine, but it would be nice to do a little better.
If you agree with that assumption, you can stop reading now.
I don't think everything is basically fine, but then again, I'm not fully immersed in arts administration. As long as I spend part of my time in other industries, I find I can look at the theater business as an outsider. And that's actually kind of cool. There's a lot that can be learned from that perspective.
But, you ask, what's the problem with the questions at the beginning of this piece? Yeah, I got distracted.
The problem with the first question is the word "patron." Hate it. Evokes all the wrong attitudes. We should be looking for "fans." And it's not a mere issue of semantics: "patrons" pay you money to do your art, either to their specifications (a la medieval panel painters) or at your whim. There's nothing in that word which indicates they like what you're doing, let alone love it. I spent much of the late 80s and early 90s in the music business, working with indie bands, and we never talked about "patrons." Rock bands have fans—adoring, passionate folks who eagerly await your next piece of work, put up posters in their dorm rooms, will travel to other cities to see you perform, want to be your friend.
As much as you might protest, that doesn't happen in theater. Really, it doesn't. Not on a scale that can make a real difference.
But I don't believe it can't.
This could be an entirely separate sub-article, and I'll address some strategies in later posts, but there are three starting points that can help us move from "patrons" to "fans."
- Keep in front of your audience. If they like you, they want to keep seeing your work. Three evenings in a year is not enough to sustain this; they'll find other things to interest them.
- Give your audience (and audience-to-be) many points of access. You can hear a song on the radio; if the only way someone can see your work is through a $20 ticket, then they're not going to see your work very much.
- Focus your fan-dom on the things people can get into. Venues rarely have fans, they're empty vessels. Companies (if they have a strong artistic vision and mostly have the same people in all productions) are more "fan-able." Actors are best. Few theatergoers can tell direction, so advertising "directed by" is mostly either tradition or vanity. Writers are eminently fan-able, but most newer playwrights don't have a body of work that can sustain fandom. Let's take a clue from the movies: people go to see stars. Not scripts, not production companies.