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ArtsManager > Blog > Posts > Why Ticket Prices Must Change
Why Ticket Prices Must Change

The central challenge facing arts managers is to fill the ever-widening gap between rapidly increasing expenses and earned income, primarily from ticket sales.  This gap continues to grow each year since the number of seats we have to sell does not increase but expenses do.

Unfortunately, the favored technique used to fill budget gaps has been increasing ticket prices. When we increase prices, typically at budget time, we hope that a small increase will not be noticeable and we need the added revenue to break even.  However, we have been doing this for so long that tickets prices are now too high for many people to afford regularly.  It is not unusual to see tickets for major opera companies cost $250 or more and the best theater tickets are now well over the $100 mark in many cities.  For two tickets to an opera you can now buy a computer and watch Leontyne Price and Joan Sutherland on YouTube for free!

No wonder so many people have stopped going to performances.  A recent study by the NEA showed that a huge number of people are getting their arts exposure on-line and fewer are coming to the theater. No wonder so many arts organizations are suffering.  Without audiences we receive no ticket revenue and the audience members we lose cease to donate as well.  The claim that the arts are irrelevant is getting difficult to dispute.

The arts are not irrelevant. I observe this every day during the Kennedy Center's free Millennium Stage performances that attract hundreds of audience members each night with minimal marketing.  Our annual Open House in September features performances on each of our stages all day, for free.  The most popular events? Ballet and the symphony, which conventional wisdom says are the most irrelevant of all.

If we want to keep, not to mention rebuild, our audiences, we need to rethink our ticket prices and to find other ways to balance our budgets.

We need to find productive ways to lower our costs. Cutting programming is not a good solution, but establishing creative joint ventures and reducing infrastructure are.

And we need to work actively and aggressively to increase fund raising revenue (by producing exciting work and marketing that work well) and use a portion of this revenue to lower ticket prices.

We do not need to lower the prices of all tickets, however. We find that the buyers of the higher price tickets are less price sensitive; they will buy at any cost.  That is why the premium price tickets on Broadway continue to sell.

But the audience members who buy lower price seats tend to be very price sensitive; reducing the price of these tickets should have a big impact on audience size.

If we don't, we will find ourselves with fewer and fewer people in our audiences, and an ever-smaller donor base. The arts will, at best, become the exclusive province of the elite, and to the vast majority of people, live arts will become irrelevant.

Comments

Re: Why Ticket Prices Must Change

I have read, with great interest, Michael Kaiser's reccommendations on maintaining or reducing ticket prices to concerts/live performances. I am in agreement, although I have to say that when we did that at the Vancouver Recital Society last year, our subscriptions still continued to dip. Perhaps they would have dipped even further had we not done so. In these strange times it is difficult to tell. I also completely agree with his theory about dropping the prices of the lower priced seats.

However, given that all of us struggle to deal with increasing costs, would not another consideration be the lowering of some of the inflated artists' fees?  I am not talking about high priced musicians who create a buzz and fill seats (I'm speaking about the realm of classical music), but rather those musicians still on the up and up who have completely unrealistic fees.  We all fundraise ourselves to the hilt but to spend the money we raise on so-called 'hot' musicians who's fees exceed $70,000 (and I'm not talking about superstars) is, I think, outrageous. Never mind, even the request to pay pro-rated first class airfare for someone's mother!

I have been at the helm of the Vancouver Recital Society, which everyone predicted would fail (because the day of the recital was said to be "over" in 1979...and I still wanted to present unknown artists) and I have been very fortunate to have built an extraordinarily loyal audience on trust.  It's not huge (no audiences for chamber music and recitals are). However, we have miraculously survived for 30 years without an accumulated deficit and very little government funding. It hasn't been easy and some years have been really tough, but like the little engine that could we are still chugging along.  And finally, there are of course, musicians and managements who are sensitive to the market they serve, but overall, increases still rule the day.
Leila Getz at 1/5/2010 5:09 PM

why change must price the tickets...

Why aren't the arts able to draw the attendance and sell tickets at the prices they need in order to survive? 

It isn't about lowering the costs! But rather about upping the rewards of what is “for sale,” empowering creativity, and how we need to quit talking about perceived barriers to what is free...our imagination.

Please look to the future, Mr. Kaiser.

Move the needle forward, without forgiveness...and hand the next generation (and this generation...and their parents!) an undeniable reason to buy your subscription tickets....or pay for a whole bunch of revisited-history-lessons-live-on-stage (which ARE important)...by helping them believe in the power of new thoughts, melodies, or dance.

Give Generation Y... and younger.... a real, yearning and compelling reason to bust a move on your stage, let alone want to pay to watch someone else!

Let them know that art is for art's sake; for the sake of creating a new sound, image, idea, or motion... and all that has yet to be imagined... and so free from all of the problems you talk about too often.

Let us all know that the arts are not a black hole of financial, commercial and perceived limitations tied to discussions of $250 tickets...and we'll all reap the rewards of a society and future that sees the world... not for how it is...but rather... for what it can be.

And oh, I can't believe you state (but sure...you don't agree or disagree) that more people are "getting their arts exposure online"! 

If your goal as author of this blog is to whip your readers into a frenzy with intentional trickery, noting semi-spiteful observations of passive "arts" participation and the irrelevancy of the arts, well OK, at least you got me heated! 

But hey, come on...an ink-and-quill-Jeffersonian approach would almost seem a better and more imaginative use of your time to get your points across.

The arts are experiential, mind-blowing, determined efforts of receiving or creating. 

Period.

You know that and so do I.

So stop dumbing-down your great public outreach experiment and start giving us all reason to read, re-read, and pound our fists with excitement as you spit out what we need to hear and believe in...something pure, new, and hey..."creative"...that pushes the arts forward like a shot to the moon.

Your words can create.  They have to create.

If you want just about the same results you've been achieving for last couple years...you seem to be right on track by thinking, saying, and doing just about the same things. 

With respect,

Chris Guerre
Chris Guerre at 1/14/2010 4:20 AM

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