Traditional 'loyal attenders' aren't returning post-Covid. How do we redefine what loyalty means in the face of today's social challenges?
Katy Raines, Founder and CEO of Indigo Ltd, considers what the future of loyalty might look like for cultural organisations and their audiences. In this blog, she reflects on what we mean when we talk about loyalty, what, if anything has changed, and what that all means for the future.
This content was first presented in February 2023 as part of The Future of Audience Loyalty, a panel event hosted by Spektrix. If you missed out, we've now published the full event online - helping you to explore what customer loyalty means for theatres, cultural venues and touring organisations in the post-pandemic world.
A typical ‘loyal’ attender?
If you ask any arts marketer who’s been around for a while to describe what a typical ‘loyal attender’ is, they’d probably paint a picture of a person aged over 65, who attends ‘classic’ work such as Shakespeare, Opera, Ballet or Classical Music, is fairly predictable in their behaviour (they probably plan and book in advance), and is likely to be highly ‘culturally literate’ – attending a range of cultural organisations, as well as being a member or donor of at least one or two.
But of course we know from our work on audiences during Covid that these are the very people who have NOT come back to theatres and venues in anywhere near the numbers, or anywhere near the frequency they were doing so before Covid, and have stated that they plan to attend LESS frequently in the future, not more.
Loyalty metrics
So let’s think about the metrics or numbers typically used to define loyalty: usually a combination of frequency (how often someone attends), retention / churn (whether they continue to attend) and recency (how recently they’ve attended).
The thing is, both frequency and retention have been declining for quite a long time now . The figures below show that we have had an increasing proportion of the audience each year only attending once , and hanging on to fewer of our audiences from one year to the next. This hasn’t happened just since Covid – it’s been on its way for 15 years.
So, on this basis I would argue that the conversation around loyalty doesn’t start with how we refine or launch subscriptions for people coming 5, 8 or 10 times per year, but how we move some of THESE low-frequency people from attending once, to 2 or 3 times per year, ensuring that, at the very least, they’re coming back the following year.
Sources:
2005, ‘The Leaky Bucket’, Katy Raines; 2016, Spektrix Benchmark report 2017; 2018 Spektrix Insights report 2019
Taking risk
A common way in which arts marketers talk about more ‘engaged’ audiences is the people who can be encouraged to try ‘more challenging’ work. We’ve been encouraged to ‘develop’ an audience member, who may be introduced to us via ‘safe’ work, such as panto, or rock and pop, so that they become fully engaged, and are willing to attend new writing or contemporary dance.
To me this is just daft. This doesn’t demonstrate loyalty, as people will attend things that appeal to them, which are likely to be similar and based on their cultural tastes and preferences. So if we only have loyalty schemes that are designed to encourage our definition of ‘risk taking’ we’re going to lose out on a whole bunch of audiences who’d like to do something else.
I believe there are four influencing factors from the past three years that may also affect how we view loyalty:
So all of this begs the question for me: how can we reward loyalty to our cause and our values in ways that matter more to, and are valued more by a younger generation?
So, given all of that, what does the future look like?
I believe that the future of audience loyalty in the arts:
THE FUTURE OF AUDIENCE LOYALTY
Katy Raines is the Founder and CEO of Indigo Ltd.
In 2022, Indigo Ltd worked with 58 organisations on the first Act Green survey, creating a benchmark of cultural audience attitudes towards sustainability.