Sherri Prentiss, new marketing director for the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra, did not see red when she had her first look inside Music
Hall.
She saw opportunity instead.
Prentiss, 35, former
marketing director of the Madison (Wisconsin) Symphony Orchestra, heads the
26-member department charged with filling Music Hall’s 3,516 red velvet seats
over 70 times a year (counting both CSO and Pops concerts).
The CSO’s first new
marketing director in 17 years, she arrives at what she calls “a really
exciting time to be part of this organization.”
Rose colored
glasses? The figures might give her
pause: Attendance at
Plans to refurbish
the hall are still being weighed, despite tantalizing speculation about updated
facilities, new patron amenities (food service, shopping), a new parking garage
and reduced, more comfortable seating.
As CSO music director Paavo Järvi put it at a pre-concert “Classical
Conversation” Nov. 3, “we have 1,000 empty seats and not enough leg room.”
Compared to the
Madison Symphony, a regional orchestra with 27 subscription concerts a season
and a 2,250-seat hall, Prentiss will have a lot more product to sell in
A graduate of
Northern Illinois University (corporate communications) with a master’s degree
in journalism and mass communications from the University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Prentiss worked in public relations and advertising before joining the Madison
Symphony staff. During her eight-year
tenure, subscription audiences more than doubled, subscription revenue more
than tripled and she created more awareness of the orchestra through ad-savvy
branding and e-marketing initiatives.
A native of
Chicago, whose German born mother kept the house full of classical music – “she
would spend all day on Saturdays and Sundays scrubbing the house to Mozart” –
Prentiss relates easily to Cincinnati’s German-influenced Midwestern culture. Music Hall impressed her at first sight. “The
grandeur of Music Hall is certainly something to behold. When you walk in there, you feel like you’ve
walked into someplace special. That part
of it makes up for a lot that may be missing by way of patron amenities or
comfort.”
She agrees,
however, that size does matter. “It’s a
big hall and I do feel that there is a lot to be gained by having a more
intimate experience with fewer seats.
There are world class acousticians out there who would be at the ready
to help us make sure that the acoustical integrity of the hall is maintained.
A crucial challenge for symphony orchestra
marketers in today’s world is to present the musical product fairly and
honestly. “The integrity of the product
is critical, but I do think there are ways of reaching and engaging people that
maintain that integrity.” Järvi’s new “First Notes” videos
screened above the stage before each of his Music Hall concerts, “is a great
example of that,” she said. “Here you
have a way to pull people in and education them, but do it in a way that is own
their own terms. It’s not intrusive,
it’s brief enough that if they don’t have time to get down to Music Hall for
‘Classical Conversations’ an hours before the performance, they can still
broaden their horizons within the context of those first couple of minutes
before the concert, then get to hear how it’s played out. They know what to listen for or what the
context is behind the piece.”
Prentiss, who lives
in an apartment in
“By features, I
mean ‘here’s the program, here’s the guest artist, here’s the box office
number,’ with very little description about what it’s going to feel like when
you’re listening to the music.” She
cited the CSO’s recent performance of Richard Strauss’ “Also sprach
Zarathustra,” best known for its two-minute introduction excerpted for the film
“2001: A Space Odyssey.”
“Yes, there’s
‘2001,’ but it’s also an expansive, free-flowing fantasia, which is how, I
think, one can begin to encapsulate the experience of listening to it. There has to be some value proposition for
the potential audience when they’re deciding, ‘am I going to the symphony
tonight? What am I going to feel like
sitting there listening to this music?’ Not just ‘who’s the guest artist and, oh, it’s
a piece by Strauss.’ There has to be
some other value proposition to entice you because if you don’t know what those
things are, you might not come.”
The other value
propositions could be “an escape from the mundane, or a way to have a romantic
evening out with your spouse or partner,” she said. “The music is, of course, the centerpiece,
including the guest artist and the conductor, but ultimately what people are
looking for is an experience. We are in
an experience economy, and that is changing the way we’re marketing our
product.”
Prentiss, who
played piano as a child but gave it up because she felt she had no natural
ability, is in awe of people who do and how they do it. She cited Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg’s
“electrifying” Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto and an Albinoni encore by violinist
Vladimir Spivakov that ended with him pulling the bow slowly across the
strings. “It just went on forever and
ever and everyone was collectively holding their breath. When he finally lifted the bow, the place erupted. Just talking about it makes the hairs on the
back of your neck go up.
Prentiss plans to do a lot of research – both
into people who come to concerts and those who do not. “The barriers to attendance as well as the
reasons for more frequent attendance are similar when you extrapolate them to
people with similar characteristics.
It’s the birds of a feather theory.”
Good research is
“very expensive,” she said. “We’ll be
looking at what we can do and what we won’t be able to do right away. Getting our research objectives out on the
table is important, then coming up with a plan to address them over a period of
time.”
(first published in The Cincinnati Post Nov. 13, 2007)