AMS Planning & Research Corp.

In This Issue

Welcome!
Location, Location, Location
Building Success
Once and Future Gems
A New Facility for Houston's Fastest Growing Community
Our Changing Audience
The Community's Arts Educator

Welcome!

Hello and welcome to Insights, the electronic magazine of AMS Planning & Research!

Insights was designed with you in mind. As a valued client or industry colleague, you are the inspiration for this new publication.

The foundation of our firm is service: to our clients, our colleagues, our industry and the communities around the country we hope benefit from the work we do together.

For nearly 20 years now, we've striven to serve our clients and our industry with rigorous and innovative planning and research services. We've learned a great deal from this work, and together with many of you, are examining and working to develop responses to many of the challenging trends and developments affecting the arts, culture and entertainment fields.

With the ease of web communication, we saw a new opportunity to be of service by sharing with you our understanding of, and experience with these trends and developments — our 'Insights' if you will — in the hope they can be of use in your own efforts.

You'll notice perhaps we don't call this a 'newsletter.' Our intent with this magazine is to go beyond the news, providing accurate, insightful and above all useful interpretation of the 'news' of our industry and how it may affect you and those you work with. And because we know many of you receiving this publication are those making the news, we invite you to join us by sharing your own learning, views and experiences as a contributor to Insights in the 'Views from the Field' section. In this way, we hope to help build a network of leaders committed to the role of the arts, culture and heritage in our communities.

Finally, we'd be remiss if we didn't take this opportunity to thank you for your continued support and confidence. Our client relationships are truly reciprocal, and we often learn as much as we're able to share. With this publication, we hope to return the favor!

Steven A. Wolff, CMC
Principal

Robert H. Bailey
Principal

Insights

Location, Location, Location
Designed to serve their burgeoning urban population, many of the new and existing cultural facilities we work with are located in dense urban areas. However, as populations have moved outward from their city's urban cores, civic leaders have examined how best to bring needed services to these new population centers.Transportation infrastructure planning could serve as an interesting example regarding a city's cultural services. more...

Building Success
Regardless of the venture — be it the production of a new play, the commissioning of a dance work or, at the largest scale, the development of a major new arts facility — we've come to acknowledge that the ultimate success of any endeavor is often founded on just a few key factors. From an analysis of our work in the arts and cultural sector, five factors in particular seem associated with those projects which proceeded most smoothly, were most effective and had the greatest impact. more...

 

About AMS

AMS Planning & Research Corp. is the nation's most experienced arts management consulting firm. For 17 years, our consultants have provided counsel, planning and research services to hundreds of arts and cultural organizations across the country and throughout the world. Founded in the belief that arts, culture and entertainment enhance people's daily lives and the communities in which they live, we promote successful cultural ventures by working in partnership with arts and community leaders to better understand their industry, customers and environment, and with that knowledge develop innovative and sustainable business practices.

Our services include:

Cultural Facility Feasibility
Business Planning & Strategy
Audience & Market Research
Community Cultural Planning

Client Experiences

Once and Future Gems
We often think of historic theaters as ''gems'' (a prize, treasure, precious stone) because these buildings once stood out among other structures in their neighborhoods and often served multiple purposes: sources of pride for the community, gathering places, spaces where the talented artists of the day would contribute to the livelihood of neighborhood activity by sharing their talent. Despite this once-treasured status, many of these buildings are now literally falling down. more...

A New Facility for Houston's Fastest Growing Community
A recent (and unscientific) survey of friends and colleagues reveals a stereotypical image of Houston, America's 8th largest metropolitan area, identifying the area with suburban sprawl, uncomfortable humidity, and a sports-crazed populace. Others might point to the Houston of world-class cultural institutions (its Museum of Fine Arts, Symphony and Opera, in particular), iconic skyscraper architecture, and fine restaurants serving much more than country-fried steak. But few have noticed that Houston's fastest-growing minority group — recently estimated at 10% of the population — is composed of Asians and Asian-Americans. more...

Latest Research

Our Changing Audience
Recent research we've conducted for several regional theatres and performing arts centers suggests both subscribers and single ticket buyers cite flexibility as a key component of their decision-making process. However, flexibility is defined in very different terms by these two groups of buyers. more...

Views from the Field

"We're interested in your insights and perspective! Click here to share your thoughts on these and other industry issues with our clients and colleagues."

The Community's Arts Educator
The dramatic decline in public school mandated arts programs over the last two decades is an often discussed theme at Industry conferences and conventions. As a national management consulting firm, our work has afforded us an opportunity to witness this decline and its effects upon arts organizations around the country. What we see are more and more arts organizations — among them museums, performing arts companies, community cultural facilities and performing arts centers — responding to this decline by introducing extensive education programs that target both school groups and families. more...

 

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