subscribe!

Join the Impact Fan Club and receive the latest news and exclusive specials: Enter your email address below and click "Hit it."

(We don't trade email addresses with anyone. Ever.)

Email address

Email Format
html
text
mobile

 

December 2006 Archives

Impact has 3 shows in the Daily Cal's Top 10 of 2006!

posted by Cheshire on Wed, Dec 20, 2006
in News

We just found out that three of Impact's shows made it into the Daily Cal's "Top Ten Plays of 2006" list. They singled out this season's Jukebox Stories and Colorado and last season's Hamlet.

(By the by, only one other company had three shows on the list, and that's Berkeley Rep. Pretty nice to be ranked the same as the big kids on the block, no?)

Congratulations to the playwrights, directors, cast and crew on making such a winning year for Impact. Have a great holiday season, and we'll see you in 2007!

| Comments (0)

Reserved seats, plus free pizza and beer!

posted by Cheshire on Mon, Dec 18, 2006
in News

Want the best seats in the house, even if you show up five minutes before curtain? How about a free extra-large pizza and a pitcher of beer (or soda) to go along with that? How about all kinds of other perks? Become an Impact donor, and all these things could be yours. Not only that, most of your donation will be tax-deductible.

Please help Impact meet our budget and realize our dreams of securing comfortable seating and eliminating noise from La Val's during the show. For all the info about how you can make a big Impact, click here.

Thanks!

| Comments (0)

We Got What You Need

posted by Diana on Tue, Dec 12, 2006
in Other crap you'll like

Half Price JUKEBOX STORIES tickets NOW AVAILABLE online at www.tixbayarea.com!

| Comments (0)

It's Because We Love You, Dear Reader

posted by Diana on Tue, Dec 12, 2006
in

I'll give it to you straight: HALF PRICE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT 11AM FOR JUKEBOX STORIES! Visit the Theatre Bay Area 1/2 Price Online page for tickets. Starting at 11AM--limited number available for Thursday and for Friday. You want Saturday? Get on the horn and call 510-464-4468, homeslice, because tickets are going FAST.

| Comments (0)

TUNE IN ON TUESDAY

posted by Diana on Sat, Dec 9, 2006
in

Very Special Offer arriving in this space Tuesday morning! Keep your eyes peeled--our ALREADY DIRTCHEAP TICKETS might get a little dirtier.

| Comments (0)

Theatre marketing: what are we not doing?

posted by Cheshire on Wed, Dec 6, 2006
in Marketing

Marketing is a giant mystery. If there were one magical way to attract people to a particular good or service, everyone would be doing it. Since there isn't, everyone has their own hunches about what works and doesn't work.

This problem is especially true for nonprofit theatre, no matter how big, because resources are limited. For a small company like Impact, the problem is magnified since certain avenues aren't available to us.

Advertising, for example. Ad rates are geared toward much bigger organizations than ours, organizations with more to gain from that advertising. We were approached about a year ago by a publication we'd probably be interested in advertising in, but we found that the best deal we could get still meant that the smallish ad would have to bring in 10-15 people just for us to break even on the ad, and that was with a contract that would have required us to purchase five ads or so. A lot of commitment for such a risky return.

Then there are poster and postcard drops. We used to have a service put up our posters and drop postcards around town, but it cost us quite a bit, and we weren't convinced that we were getting an appropriate return. We went back to the old way of trying to do it on our own, but it really is much more difficult than it sounds. So we compromised: we rehired the service to take care of our posters, and we try to do the postcard drops ourselves. That saves us about half the money, but we're back to the original problem of trying to find the time ourselves or find volunteers willing to walk for hours dropping postcards here and there.

We're still not convinced that the posters are really doing anything for us, but it's so difficult to let go of the idea that a show has to have a poster. I mean, that's part of the romance and lore of the theatre! And yet, the cost of the poster represents about 40 audience members. Are more than 40 people coming to the show strictly because they saw the poster?

It's more than just seeing the poster, or at least we think so; it's the repetition of the poster, the postcard, the emails, the reviews, and whatever else we can do to keep awareness of the show forefront in the minds of people who would be inclined to see it. We're fairly sure there's a cumulative effect at work, and we want to reinforce it however we can.

And like every theatre company, we also rely on word of mouth, because it seems more and more that even great reviews don't necessarily translate into sold-out houses. In post-show speeches everywhere, small companies (Impact included) ask audience members to tell their friends if they liked the show, but wouldn't they do that anyway? By asking them to do so, are we supplying a necessary reminder or are we just sounding desperate?

I wonder, though, whether there's something big that we're missing. I realize theatre isn't nearly the only game in town, and it seems like just in the past ten years or so competition with other forms of entertainment has increased quite a bit. The natural inclination in terms of marketing, whether through advertising or developing social networks, is to do more, more, more. But what? What is it that we're not doing?

I guess the thing is that we're trained to believe that marketing can actually influence someone to do or buy something. We want to think that if only we employ the mysterious magical combination of marketing efforts, we'll fill up the houses. The flip side of it is that deep down, we also feel that we shouldn't have to resort to marketing; we think that simply making great theatre ought to be enough to generate great audiences. Neither mindset, it seems, is accurate. (Or maybe both are. Can you tell I'm at a loss here?)

Funny, I began this post with the simple intention of wanting to find out how you decide what to see. Is it advertising? Reviews? Word of mouth? Loyalty to (or subscriptions to) a particular company? Something else?

I still want to know those things. But I'm also interested in hearing your thoughts about the usefulness of marketing in general. You can either email me at cheshire at impacttheatre.com or leave an answer in the comments here.

(Well, if nothing else, at least I've finally written a post that reflects what I've wanted this blog to be about: longer thoughts on what it takes to create small theatre, in addition to the usual blog fodder of short news and other things we think you should check out. Hope you like the shift.)

| Comments (2)

Impact Pinup Girls on your desktop!

posted by Cheshire on Tue, Dec 5, 2006
in Downloads

pinup girl wallpaper

The Impact Pinup Girls are now featured in an exclusive desktop wallpaper calendar series, once per month. We're kicking off December with Alex -- this wallpaper will only be available until the end of the month, when we'll put up the January calendar, so grab it while you can!

| Comments (0)

« November 2006 | Main | January 2007 »