Title: Fundamentals of Business Session III
1Fundamentals of BusinessSession III
- September 17, 2003
- Presented by
- Diane Mielnikowski
- dmielnikowski_at_msn.com
-
Sponsored by
2What is marketing?
- Marketing is the process by which you come to
understand the relationship between your product
and your customer. - Source http//www.artsmarketing.org
3What is marketing?
- Starts with the recognition of customer needs
- Connecting what you have to offer with people who
want/need/value your offering - Focus is on building long term relationships
- The link between your organization and the
marketplace
4Take Home Assignment
- Check out the arts marketing site
- www.artsmarketing.org
- Go to Marketing Resources
5Where do you begin?
- With a clear understanding of
- Who you are and what you have to offer
- Who your customers are and what they need, want,
value
6Ingredients for success
- 1. Clarify Vision/Mission
- What is it that you want to communicate?
- 2. Identify Target Market/Audience
- Who do you want to reach?
- 3. Specify Marketing Goals
- What results do you want to end up
with? - 4. Prioritize Ways to Implement Goals and Set
Budget - How will you get the word out and
what will it cost? - 5. Create Action Plan to Achieve your Goals
How to accomplish goals?
And who? And when?
7Vision
- Clarify Your Vision/Mission
- "Vision is a love affair with an idea."
- Source The Leaders Voice, Clarke and Crossland
-
8Mission
- Clarify Your Vision/Mission
- A true mission is a clear and compelling goal
that focuses people's efforts. It is tangible,
specific, crisp, clear and engaging. It reaches
out and grabs people in the gut.
9Mission
- Clarify Your Vision/Mission
- Passion that drives the artistic product
- Why we exist
- Purpose and values
- Includes your key constituencies
10Examples of mission statements
"This nation should dedicate itself to achieving
the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a
man on the moon and returning him safely to
Earth."
11Examples of mission statements
12Examples of mission statements
About Face Theatre is committed to the creation
of performances that examine and participate in
the development of gay, lesbian, and bisexual
communities. Since our founding in 1995, we have
made a strong commitment to artistic innovation
and excellence within the various and emergent
modes of gay and lesbian theater, working to
challenge our artists' and audience's intellects,
imaginations, self-conceptions, moral
expectations, and ideas about gender and
sexuality in contemporary and historical
contexts. About Face has three programming
arms its award-winning Mainstage Season, its
innovative New Works Program, under the direction
of Resident Artist Jim Grimsley, through About
Face's participation in the National Theatre
Artist Residency Program of Theatre
Communications Group, and our nationally
recognized Education Programs, including the
celebrated About Face Youth Theatre and
Educational Outreach tour that collectively reach
over 10,000 Illinois students and teachers each
year. About Face has emerged as one of
Chicago's most respected theatres, and is quickly
emerging as a national center for the development
of gay and lesbian theatre.
13Examples of mission statements
- The mission of Bella Voce is to entertain,
inspire, and educate through the performance of
choral chamber music. We are committed to giving
historically informed, professionally polished
performances in original languages, and to
keeping the art of polyphonic, a cappella singing
alive and flourishing. Bella Voce places a
special emphasis on bringing little-known pieces
and neglected composers to our audiences. Our
wide-ranging repertoire includes a cappella
literature of the mid- and late-twentieth
century, works commissioned from American
composers, and sacred music of the Renaissance
and Baroque eras.
14Examples of mission statements
Zephyr is committed to making dance accessible to
diverse audiences, and to the advancement of
women and girls in pursuit of creative endeavors.
15Examples of mission statements
- The mission of Brookfield Zoo is to help people
develop a sustainable and harmonious relationship
with nature. - www.brookfieldzoo.org
16Test of a good mission statement
Can everyone on your board and staff articulate
the organizations mission and its activities?
17Test of a good mission statement
A few last examples . . . The mission of the
Joel Hall Dance Center is to use the arts to
enrich the lives of its community members through
dance education and performance. It reaches out
to the community, targeting those who would not
otherwise be exposed to the arts for classes,
educational outreach programs and local,
national, and international performances
http//www.joelhall.org/jhdc.php Black
Storytellings mission is to maintain the art of
storytelling as a primary source for positive
instruction and reinforcement of the rich beauty
embodied in the telling of "the story"!
http//www.blackstorytellers.com/
18Take home assignment
- With your board, artistic director, executive
director, and company, put your mission statement
to the test. Does it meet the following
criteria? - In just a few sentences, does your mission
statement communicate the essence of your company
to your stakeholders and to the public? - It is the description of your companys reason
for existence? - Does it define the direction in which the
organization is heading?
19Demographic/ economic environment
Technical/ physical environment
Marketing Intermediaries
Suppliers
Publics
Competitors
Political/ legal environment
Social/ cultural environment
From Marketing Management by Philip Kotler
20The Marketing Planning Process
- Establishing Objectives
- Financials, forecast, budgets
- Selecting the Target Market
- Customer needs, market size, growth profile
- Marketing Mix
- Product, place, price, promotion, positioning
- Implementation Control
- Measure Results
- Market research
21The Marketing Planning Process
- Establishing Marketing Objectives
- Financials, forecast, budgets
- Selecting the Target Market
- Customer needs, market size, growth profile
- Marketing Mix
- Product, place, price, promotion, positioning
- Implementation Control
- Measure Results
- Market research
22The Marketing Planning Process
- A successful plan must be
- Simple, easy to understand and communicate
- Clear, precise and detailed
- Practical, realistic in its application and goal
attainment - Flexible, adjusting to changing conditions
- Complete, covering all significant marketing
factors - Workable, identifying responsibilities
23Marketing Plan Components
- Objectives
- Strategies
- Tactics
- Budget
- Timeline
24Marketing Objectives
- Reasonable based on the realities of the market
and capabilities of the firm - Obtainable within reach of the company given
its resources and personnel - Measurable yielding results that can be
measured against projections or some accepted
company yardstick
25Marketing Strategies Tactics
- Strategies
- How you plan to accomplish your objectives
- Determine the overall design or program for
achieving goals - Tactics
- The stuff you will do - posters, press
releases, newspaper ads, etc.
26Marketing Mix
- Product
- Place
- Price
- Promotion
- People
- Promotion
27- Marketing Strategy
- Defining who you are Positioning
28Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Understanding where a brand sits in the mind of
the consumer. - It is the relationship which the consumer forms
with the product, even though it may be
functionally based, will include powerful
emotional ties together these help to transform
a product into a brand.
29Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Jack Trout's "five basic principles of the mind,"
from The New Positioning - Minds are limited. Even a little information is
too much. - Minds hate confusion. The only solution to
over-communication is over-simplification. - Minds are insecure. They're emotional, not
rational. - Minds don't change. A made-up mind is a closed
mind. - Minds lose focus. Don't expect one to understand
why your department store also sells insurance.
30Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- The key to positioning, Trout says, is
- owning one word in your
- customer's mind.
31Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- For example
- Fedex owns
- the "overnight," position
- Crest owns
- the "cavities" position
- Volvo owns
- the "safety" position
- even if you never buy these products.
32Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Distinctive positioning
- Target audience
- Frame of reference/competitive set
- Point of difference/whats unique about you?
33Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
What is The product? Benefits? Reasons to
believe? Personality?
34Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
What is The product? Benefits? Reasons to
believe? Personality?
35Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Distinctive positioning
- Target audience
- Frame of reference/competitive set
- Point of difference/whats unique about you?
36Identify Your Target Market
- Who is your audience?
- Who do you want to reach?
- Are they the same as your customer?
37Identify Your Target Market
- Who is my audience/are my customers?
- How many live in a market?
- Where can I find them?
38Target market
- How can you define your audience/target market?
- Demographics (age, income, gender, geography)
- Life-stage (young, old, cohort veteran, boomer,
gen x, gen y) - Wants, needs, desires, attitudes, interests
(dance enthusiasts) - Barriers, concerns, pressures
39Target market
- How could your offering benefit them? Solve a
problem? - What is your image with them?
- How do you reach them?
- How can you segment?
40In Class Exercise
- Take 5 minutes to describe your audience in
writing - Discuss in class
41Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Distinctive positioning
- Target audience
- Frame of reference/competitive set
- Point of difference/whats unique about you?
42Competition
- Competition compare to other groups or
activities
43Competition
- Who are your competitors?
- What are their strengths? Weaknesses?
- How do you compare? Contrast?
- Have you considered other kinds of competition?
44Other kinds of competition
- Sports events
- TV
- Restaurants
- Leisure Activities
45In Class Exercise
- Take 5 minutes and define your competition
46Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Distinctive positioning
- Target audience
- Frame of reference/competitive set
- Point of difference/whats unique about you?
47In Class Exercise
- Take 5 minutes and define what is Unique about
you. - Remember, positioning is the essence of
sacrifice. Select only one unique point of
difference relative to your competition, that is
relevant to your target audience.
48Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- Distinctive positioning
- Target audience
- Frame of reference/competitive set
- Point of difference/whats unique about you?
- PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
49Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
Positioning
- To ________ (target audience) xyz (your company)
is the ___________ (frame of reference) that
________ (point of difference/what is
compelling/unique about you?) - To music enthusiasts, Bella Voce is the premier
choral chamber group that provides a wide-ranging
repertoire including a cappella literature of the
mid- and late-twentieth century, works
commissioned from American composers, and sacred
music of the Renaissance and Baroque eras.
50Breakout
- 20 minutes
- Partner with someone in the workshop
- Each develop your groups positioning
- 15 minutes
- Present and discuss
51Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
PositioningTake home assignment
- Discuss and test your positioning with your
Board, Artistic Director, and Executive Director
52Marketing StrategyDefining who you are -
PositioningTake home assignment
- To do this, everyone must understand
- Your offering
- Its benefit(s)
- The benefit(s) should be unique to the brand and
will distinguish it from its competitors. It
will have both functional and emotional values. - Reasons to believe
- The reasons why the consumer should believe that
the brand can deliver the benefit. - Brand personality
- The personality of the brand is shaped largely by
its advertising. It should permeate all forms of
brand communication in a consistent manner no
part of a brands communication should be out of
character.
53Take home assignment Compare
your distinctive positioning with positioning of
competition.
54 55Strong brands
- Brand is the relationship you have with your
customers, and - Its the relationship your audience has with
your organization, and your productions - Emerges from the experience they have
56Importance of Brand
- Makes you unique and different
- Represents a trusted promise, encapsulates a big
idea - Distinguishes your organization from its
competitors in the eyes of the customers. - Repetition implants the purchase idea in the
unconscious mind where purchase decisions are
made.
57Strong Brands
- Are unique and visible. They catch the eye and
stays in the customer's memory. - Can be emotional or image-driven (Club Med
transports me to a fantasy place) or factual
(Kraft Macaroni Cheese is the cheesiest) - Source www.artsmarketing.org
58Strong brands
59Example of arts brands
Joel HallDancers Center
60Developing Strong Brands
- Consistency in communication
- Positive experience
- Relevant to your audience
- Delight your customer!
61 62The attendance equation
- Benefits of the arts experience
- ( or ) the costs of the experience
- (including ticket price, parking, time spent,
effort, babysitter, etc.)
63The Experience Economy
- Starbucks enjoys profit and growth from their
mastery of the experience economy - Cost of coffee bean when harvested 0.50/lb.
- Value realized by Starbucks from selling cup of
coffee 230/lb.
AN INCREASE OF VALUE OF 46,000.
64(No Transcript)
65The Experience Economy
- Understanding your audience
- Your audience as customer
- Understanding the value that you offer
- Consistently delivering on that value
66Segmenting your audience
- Sub-segments by attendance
- One time
- Multiple/repeat
- Subscribers/members
- Groups
67Learning more about attendees
- Use surveys, questionnaires
- Report on subscribers single sales
patterns - Build a customer database
- Talk with audience members
- Conduct focus group
- Observations!
68Other ways to segment
- Attendees (one-time, multiple, subscribers)
- Arts usage (heavy, medium, light users)
- Age (generational marketing)
- Ethnicity
- Affinity
69Building audience
- Retention and renewal
- New single and group sales
- New services or products
70Key concepts in retention
- Audience knowledge - info from sales, surveys,
class registration - Recognition
- Belonging, sense of ownership
- Consistency
- Communication - curtain speech, mailing, telephone
71 72 - Specify your Marketing Goals
- What do you want to end up with?
73End results
- What will success look like? (define it)
- Why do you want this? (reality check goals)
- How will you know when youve succeeded? (define
measurable results)
74Examples of marketing goals
- Increase single ticket sales by ___
- Draw 50 people from Carol Stream area
- Book 3 additional contracted performances
- next season
- Update logo
75Turning marketing goals into Action Items
- Bus seniors to one concert
- Give a preview talk at the library
- Use paid ads in the newspaper
76Prioritize, Set Budget, Implement
- Prioritize Ways to Implement Goals and Set Budget
- How will you get the word out?
- What will it cost?
77Getting the word out
- Whats the best way to reach audience?
- Can we afford this?
- What can and should I pay for?
- What can and should I find pro bono?
- Do our goals require additional staff?
78What will it cost?
- How much time?
- How many people?
- How much money?
- How much of (what) other resources?
79Go where your target is
- not just where other artists are.
- Join local business organizations, womens groups
(barter)
80Reach your targetaudience with your message
- Take advantage of free publicity
- Who are your targets?
- What is your story?
- How can I get the word out?
81Free publicity opportunities
- Press Releases to Newspapers and Magazines
- Usually need to submit 2 - 4 weeks prior to
event - Use specific format
- Send information to local arts/entertainment
editor - Calendar Listings to Newspapers and Magazines
- Usually need to submit 2 - 8 weeks prior to
event - Send information to attention of the calendar
editor
82Also free
- Public Service Announcements (PSAs)
- to Radio Stations Cable/Community Access TV
- Check with individual stations for deadlines,
usually at least 4 weeks prior to event - Send to Community Relations Director
- Write copy as you want it read include
pronunciations
83More free
- Cultivate Feature Articles w/ Newspapers
Magazines - Write press release 6-8 weeks prior to event
- Call arts/entertainment editor pitch story
- Arrange interviews, as needed
- Photo Opportunities w/ Newspapers Magazines
- Call editor 4-6 weeks prior to event
request/schedule - Meet photographer on-site
84Still more free
- Internet Listings
- Growing number of websites w/ cultural calendars
- Listings are almost always free of charge
- Illinois Tourism site is an excellent resource
- Community Newsletters
- Business employee newsletters
- School publications
- Church bulletins
85Evaluating budget levels
- Budget is too high if you spend more than you
make in return. - Budget may be too low if
- not spending 15-25 of revenues on marketing
- not spending 61 to acquire new audience as to
keep old ones - Expect the unexpected
86Creating an Action Plan
- How to accomplish goals?
-
- And who?
-
- And when?
87Tests of a good action plan
- Highly detailed
- Agreed upon by all interested and responsible
parties - Measurable results
- Who
- By When!
- Accountability
88Action plan
89Ingredients for success
- 1. Clarify Vision/Mission
- What is it that you want to communicate?
- 2. Identify Target Market/Audience
- Who do you want to reach?
- 3. Specify Marketing Goals
- What results do you want to end up with?
- 4. Prioritize Ways to Implement Goals and Set
Budget - How will you get the word out and what will
it cost? - 5. Create Action Plan to Achieve your Goals
How to accomplish goals?
And who? And when?
90Contacts
- Arts Business Council of Chicago
- info_at_artsbiz-chicago.org
- Websites
- www.artsmarketing.org
- www.artsbiz-chicago.org
91Attracting your Audience MARKETING 101
- Illinois Arts Alliance Conference
- September 17, 2003
- Presented by
- Diane Mielnikowski
- dmielnikowski_at_msn.com