Monday, October 1, 2012

Getting the Most Out of Gen Y

This week, the TRG team is contributing to the Arts Marketing Blog Salon on Americans for the Arts' ARTSblog. This article by Amelia was originally posted as part of the salon, which previews the National Arts Marketing Project (NAMP) Conference in November.

Photo by David Wellbeloved
For decades, the arts industry has chased new audiences, especially younger audiences. Today, that chase is directed at the largest population under 30 years old in human history.  It’s little wonder that Gen Y (born 1981 – 2001) is a hot topic for arts marketers.
 
As a data-informed member of Gen Y, here’s a take on my generation of arts consumers.

We curate our lives. For as long as we’ve been consumers, we have always had access to Google and Amazon. Search is our way of finding out anything and everything we want to know. We are the generation of the long-tail. This means we have had access to more variety of art, music, performances, and consumer products than any other generation in history.

Because we have access to virtually everything, we take pleasure in exploring the original and local and not just mass-market products and experiences.  The data backs this up; an Edelman Digital study found that 40% of Gen Y participants preferred buying local, even if it meant paying more than a mass-market product.

Beyond buying local, the exploration of everything available in the marketplace has led to a culture where we curate our lives. The rise of personal curation – selection of exactly what we want from all that’s available – is evident in the recent popularity of Pinterest. 

We spend on what we value. Gen Y is often characterized as cheap. There’s good reason for our cost-consciousness. Gen Y paid much more for college than previous generations and now has record levels of student debt. We face an unprecedented labor market that has offered us more unemployment and underemployment than under-30s of nearly any previous generation.

In light of our generation’s thriftiness, the Edelman study’s spending metric suggest that a cheap price is not our only motivation to buy. Warren Buffet once said, “Price is what you pay, value is what you get.”  Price and value are connected for Gen Y.

The research suggests that ticket price, while important to Gen Y, won’t always make or break their decision to attend.  Reliance on tactics like using Groupon or deep discounting can get Gen Ys in the door. But offering cheap tickets is no silver bullet for audience building at good ROI, especially for a group of consumers who could be your patrons for a very long time. In fact, building value perception and loyalty among this generation will be key to getting them to come back.

We give. Gen Y not only spends on what we value, we also value giving back.  Most Millennials (57%) say that they had volunteered in the past 12 months, according to the Pew Research Center’s Millennials: A Portrait of Generation Next. That’s the highest percentage of volunteerism of any generational group alive today.

And, surprise! We are already donating, a characteristic TRG’s ongoing study of consumer behavior generally finds among the most loyal patrons. The Millennial Impact Report, released earlier this year, reported that 93% of surveyed Millennials gave to nonprofit organizations in 2010.

In TRG’s initial study of generational giving to arts organizations, we found that among the small numbers of Gen Y patrons, there were donors.  Their median gift was 20% more than that of Gen X patrons in their early 30s and 40s.

Finders, Keepers
TRG loyalty study finds most Gen Y patrons among first-time or lapsed ticket buyers in a behavior category we call “Tryers.” As audience members, Tryers are the least loyal patron group and most vulnerable to churn.  Most organizations lose between two-thirds and 80% of their first time buyers after that first attendance.

It all comes back to developing loyalty. Gen Y might require different messages and media, but the objective is the same: once you’ve attracted them, hang on to them. You can only turn a Gen Y-er into a life-long attendee and donor if you get them to come back.

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