Your secret weapon for driving change

Struggling to rally support for change at your arts organization?

If your key stakeholders don't see the writing on the wall, driving change is an impossible task.

Like change expert John Kotter said, "Without an organization-wide sense of urgency, it's like trying to build a pyramid on a foundation of empty shoeboxes." 😳

What’s the best way to build that shared urgency? Cold, hard data.

Here’s some cold, hard data for you:

Since 1982, U.S. opera audiences have plummeted 77%. Classical music audiences in the U.S. have declined 65%. Other disciplines aren’t far behind.

Want to see how this played out over the decades? (Because it didn’t all happen in 2020.)

The National Endowment for the Arts has compiled forty years of attendance and demographic trends—and I’ve distilled that data into 40 pages of graphs for you.

What you find in this data dive may be unsettling. But sharing these stats with your board, team members, and donors is a crucial first step toward motivating truly impactful shifts in strategy.

Bring this deck to your next board meeting to showcase industry-wide declines, demographic data, and discipline-specific changes alongside societal factors in the United States.

Start building the urgency needed to drive meaningful change at your organization.

Because this project required such extensive research, there is a small fee to download. If you’re a BIPOC arts leader, please ask about the 50% discount code.

Get the data here

WHAT’S INSIDE:

Section I: Trends by discipline

  • Arts attendance overview 1982-2022

  • Art museums & galleries attendance 1982-2022

  • Ballet attendance 1982-2022

  • Classical music attendance 1982-2022

  • Craft fair attendance 1982-2022

  • Jazz attendance 1982-2022

  • Musical theater attendance 1982-2022

  • Opera attendance 1982-2022

  • Parks & monuments attendance 1982-2022

  • Theater attendance 1982-2022

Section II: Rates of change across the decades

  • 1982 baseline

  • 1982-1992

  • 1992-2002

  • 2002-2008 (Financial crisis)

  • 2008-2012 (Recession fading)

  • 2002-2012

  • 2012-2017 (Financial recovery)

  • 2017-2022 (COVID-19 pandemic)

  • 1982-2017

  • 2008-2012

  • 1982-2022

Section III: Demographic trends

  • Ballet audience demographics

  • Classical music audience demographics

  • Jazz audience demographics

  • Latin music audience demographics

  • Musical theater audience demographics

  • Non ballet dance audience demographics

  • Opera audience demographics

  • Theater audience demographics

Section IV: Societal factors

  • Trends in technology: Computers & smartphones

  • Trends in technology: Internet & social media

  • Trends in arts education

  • Demographic shifts in the United States

Bonus: Numbers nerd? See the spreadsheets