In this series, Spektrix demystifies and unpacks the benefits of dynamic pricing for the arts to help leaders make informed decisions.
Think back to the last time you set pricing for an event. Where exactly did that price come from? How cumbersome was the process? And, how responsive was it to the needs of your customers?
Now is a good time to think strategically about how your organisation can build confidence in setting prices – dynamic pricing can guide this.
Dynamic pricing utilises multiple data points to empower users as they set prices. You’ve likely encountered the term in headlines and on the lips of industry colleagues, for better or for worse, with a lot of attention given to a few public examples of how dynamic pricing can be misused. However, customers and arts organisations alike can reap the benefits of dynamic pricing guided by principles of flexibility, trust, and fairness.
At Spektrix, we understand that this topic needs to be approached with care and that it might not be the right approach for every organisation. Our priority, as always, is to support the theatres and organisations in our sector – and the best way we can do that is to give you as much information as possible so that you can fully understand the opportunities available to you.
You don’t have to go it alone. Our team is here to advise and facilitate conversations with our dynamic pricing partners and sector experts. So, what is the power of dynamic pricing in the arts? Let’s get the wheels in your head turning on how this strategy could make an impact for your organisation.
The first benefit of dynamic pricing is that it’s, well…dynamic. It changes, it reacts. In this day and age, flexibility, wherever you can find it, is key to adapting to the needs of your audience.
A successful fixed pricing model requires that you make assumptions about audience behaviour and accurately predict trends – easier said than done. Audiences have been drastically changing or falling away in the turbulence of recent years, with factors like Covid, the cost-of-living crisis, and lack of funding all playing a role. With so much happening outside your venue’s doors, it can be difficult to benchmark and easy to second guess yourself as you set prices.
“Price tickets too high, and venues remain half-full; too low, and potential revenue is lost. Dynamic pricing automates price adjustments—both up and down—within a set range. This enables swift reactions to demand fluctuations, better sales predictions, and revenue forecasting. The automated nature of dynamic pricing reduces manual interference, yet with human oversight, adjustments can be made swiftly when conditions change unexpectedly.”
— Pal Danyi, PhD, Chief Development Officer, DynamO
Unlike a fixed pricing model, dynamic pricing works when demand isn’t as expected, and even helps create, steer, and predict demand. It can accelerate slow sales, or it can maximise profits for a smash hit. In fact, DynamO reports that adopters of dynamic pricing strategy have seen “immediate revenue growth by 15-20%.”
Instead of stumbling backward from the impact of an unpredicted development, you’re poised on your toes, nimble and ready to move in the right direction.
We’ve all heard horror stories of big-name concert tickets skyrocketing to unfathomable prices. And with the deep relationships felt between arts organisations and their patrons, it’s understandable that conscientious leaders fear exploiting or intimidating their audiences in the same way.
But, as Digonex Director of Marketing Kelly Degenhart puts it, those stories are “the exception, not the rule.” When done with intent, dynamic pricing actually bolsters those customer relationships and supports an audience loyalty model centred on your patrons’ core needs and values.
Your pricing strategy should not be a trust fall – closing your eyes, setting a price and hoping your customers will respond.
The first step to any truly trusting relationship is paying attention– and in business terms, that means collecting data. One of the most powerful benefits of dynamic pricing in the arts is that it charges you up with information, providing tons of data points and reports for your team to put to use.
When you back your decision-making with real, actionable data, you develop strong reasoning that is mutually beneficial for the needs of you and your customers. You’re better able to understand how your customers behave, who your most loyal base is and exactly how to tend to their needs.
Just like with any tool in your toolbox, you can make conscious decisions about how you want to use dynamic pricing.
"Box office teams particularly value the pricing strategy feature. It allows them to set a primary objective, whether it's to fill up the seats or optimize revenue, and the pricing adjusts dynamically to align with that goal."
— Bence Marosi, CEO, DynamO
You can, and should:
While a dynamic pricing model may be enhanced by technology, it is all still completely within your control.
Communication and transparency are critical. Include explicit information about your pricing policy in your terms and conditions, and don’t hide the price ranges. Meanwhile, make sure your sales and front-of-house teams fully understand the model and can properly explain it when questions arise.
Trust is a muscle. The more you communicate, set expectations, and follow through for your audience, the stronger your relationship will grow.
Maybe you’ve been here before: it’s the week before the show, demand wasn’t what you expected and you haven’t sold enough tickets. So, you desperately send out a quick promo offer to your email list to try to fill up those empty seats.
This can be an effective band-aid, but when we stop to think about this, is it really fair?
Dynamic pricing opens up the opportunity for savings to everyone from the start, with clear purchase pathways for a greater variety of audience segments. It gives you greater control over the values behind your pricing policies.
Your customers all have different motivations for choosing their tickets and when to buy them, including:
A fair pricing model caters to all motivations so you can get the value proposition right. But with a fixed pricing model, you can only cater to one small group at a time.
The continuous stream of data you’ll be building with your dynamic pricing partner will provide you with more comprehensive information about your audience and what their individual motivations are. In addition to data directly related to revenue, you’ll take in behavioural metrics as well. From there, you’ll start to discover opportunities.
Some customers, for instance, love a deal and would take advantage of less expensive tickets – branching out of their usual programming or attending on off-peak nights. Others might always prioritize coming on a weekend or seeing a particular act.
With more of this data in hand, you can reach your audience in a more holistic way. Aim to create incentives for each type of motivation to reward a greater array of your audience.
Early booking and audience loyalty bring major advantages to your organization, creating greater and more predictable revenue. But reactionary price drops can easily undermine those efforts if audiences think that they can receive the best price by holding out.
Let’s go back to our example from above. Ultimately, those drastic last-minute deals wind up penalizing the members of your audience who book early – your most enthusiastic supporters. But with dynamic pricing solutions, you can generate demand and be highly intentional about what behaviour provides access to the best price.
You can see it best in this chart provided by Spektrix client Bristol Old Vic, the oldest continuously running theatre in the English-speaking world and a hotspot for cutting-edge theatre. The theatre began its dynamic pricing strategy in 2018 and immediately saw results.
In the blue line depicting average pricing across all organizations, you see that as time progresses and discounts roll out, the price of tickets is going down – meaning that the earliest bookers are receiving the highest price.
With Bristol Old Vic’s dynamic pricing model in yellow, we see that the cost is increasing with time. By setting their pricing strategy this way, they’re ensuring that their audiences are not getting penalized for the good behaviour of booking early.
Your customers will understand this too. Think about booking a plane ticket. If you book your flight the night before, you probably would expect to pay more because you’re booking at the last minute.
When patrons know that they can consistently get the best price by booking early, you’ll shape their behaviour and drive up demand – all while supporting those early bookers in kind.
Plus, as we continue to think about audience motivations, you can start to see where dynamic pricing overlaps with other loyalty models, especially as you throw altruistic motivations into the mix. Having the data to understand your customers’ motivations is key to subscriptions, memberships, pay-what-you-can, or other flexible pricing models. Once again, you have more control over how your organisation’s values are reflected within your pricing policies.
Dynamic pricing can be a solution for benchmarking prices and growing confidence in setting prices. It supports theatres and arts organisations by helping you to understand your audience better and build an impactful audience loyalty strategy.
Now that you understand the benefits of dynamic pricing, you’re ready to dig in a little deeper to determine if it's the right fit for your organisation and how to implement it. Spektrix and our partners are here for consultation and advice. Let’s continue this conversation.
Tom Nolan (he/him) is the Head of Global Ecosystem at Spektrix.