NEW YORK, NY.- The largest ongoing tracking study of attitudes and behaviors among U.S. cultural audiences, Culture Track, will reveal its latest findings today at a special presentation held at The TimesCenter, 242 West 41st Street, New York. LaPlaca Cohen has conducted the Culture Track study six times since 2001, helping U.S. cultural organizations understand the evolving needs and desires of their audiences, existing and potential.
Arthur Cohen, founder and CEO of LaPlaca Cohen, will present the key insights and findings from Culture Track 2014, a quantitative and qualitative surveyconducted this year in partnership with Campbell Rinkerof 4,026 culturally engaged people, age 18 and up, from all 50 states. Following the presentation, Danielle Mattoon, culture editor of The New York Times, will moderate a panel discussion about the implications of the findings. Joining her on the panel are Maxwell L. Anderson, director of the Dallas Museum of Art; Stephen Bruno, president of marketing of The Weinstein Company; Rebecca Eaton, executive producer of PBSs MASTERPIECE (including Downton Abbey and Sherlock); Jordan Roth, president of Jujamcyn Theaters and founder of Culturalist.com; and Julie Taymor, director of film, opera and theater.
Among the highlights of Culture Track 2014:
Visitation on the rise: The percentage of people who visit museums and attend performances has risen since 2011 almost across the boardincluding increases for visual arts, classical music, jazz and musical theaterthough with decreases for dramatic theater, classical dance and opera.
Frequency of attendance in decline: The individual rate of attendance, however, has dropped since 2011, with about half of respondents continuing to attend cultural activities once or twice a month, but only 15% attending three times or moredown from a previous 22%.
Blurring boundaries: Audiences think of culture in broad terms, beyond the confines of traditional disciplines presented by museums and performing arts organizations, with almost 80% of respondents defining a visit to a public park, and 64% defining food and drink experiences as cultural activities.
Need for shared experience: People value cultural activities as opportunities to spend time with friends and familya benefit that they rank second only to general entertainment or enjoyment value (83% and 93% respectively). In choosing which activities to attend, they make decisions based on personal invitations and friends recommendations (83%, 81%) almost as much as on topic (90%) and cost (86%).
Not attending solo: In fact, 28% of people overall state they will not attend if they have to go alonea figure that rises to 43% among Millennials (ages 18 to 30).
Greatest barriers to entry: Perceptions of high cost and unappealing subject matter remain the two principal reasons for choosing not to attend an activity.
The truth about social media: Despite the high value that audiences place on personal recommendations and the company of friends and family, social media in general is still catching up as a source of information about cultural activities, used by 20% of all respondents, compared with television (36%), newspapers (28%) and radio (27%).
Millennials driving the social media charge: But this pattern varies by age. Social media is the most-used information source among Millennial audiences (38%), only about 15% of whom turn to newspapers to learn about whats going on. Among Gen X audiences (ages 30 to 49), 25% rely on social media for information, compared to 24% for newspapers.
Transitional moment for technology: Not surprisingly, for cultural consumers of all age groups, ownership of smartphones has skyrocketed, up 35% from 2011. But only 20% choose to use their smartphones on-site at cultural organizations.
The selfie moment: Of those who use smartphones on-site, the two most popular activities were taking photos (68%) and sharing photos (47%).
Need for redefinition of loyalty models: Traditional loyalty models continue on a steep decline, 85% of visual arts audiences do not own any memberships, and 90% of performing arts audiences do not hold any subscriptions.
According to Arthur Cohen, These findings reveal audiences that are restless, curious and culturally promiscuouseager for new experiences they can share in person with friends and family. We have also learned that people rely above all on their emotions to tell them what those experiences might be, outside of traditional definitions of culture. If something enriches their senses, if it enlarges their world, and if they can do it in company they like, they are open to it. This is challenging news for institutions that are trying to retain the loyalty of audiences, but good news for organizations that are willing to listen to what the public has to say.
For the full study, visit
www.culturetrack.com .