Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students

<p> After years of courting public audiences, academic art museums have shifted their focus back to their campus constituents. These changes have meant putting a premium on attracting and engaging university students. Museums have been successful in doing so through classes. Yet, what about st...

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Main Author: Hankes, Bethany
Language:EN
Published: Harvard University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1600318
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-16003182015-11-13T03:57:38Z Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students Hankes, Bethany Marketing|Higher education administration|Museum studies <p> After years of courting public audiences, academic art museums have shifted their focus back to their campus constituents. These changes have meant putting a premium on attracting and engaging university students. Museums have been successful in doing so through classes. Yet, what about students as active constituents outside of class? Students' limited free time is one hurdle in engaging students outside of class, but students must know about their campus art museum and its programs before they can decide whether to attend or not. Therefore a study of the challenges, and successes, in marketing these museums and their programming to students was undertaken. Specifically, 29 campus art museums in the United States were surveyed on their relationship with students, current marketing strategies, what types of media are used, and how these forms of media are evaluated. Survey results revealed challenges of limited staff time and the lack of an analytical framework for some marketing materials. Successes in marketing to students were limited, but positive comments and feedback from respondents exhibit several best practices for marketing to students. These include enlisting the help of trusted resources around campus, creating positive word of mouth among the student body, and engaging students in both the creation and marketing of programs. Additionally, best practices from civic museums, and reports on marketing to student-aged individuals, were drawn on in order to offer prescriptive advice.</p> Harvard University 2015-11-12 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1600318 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Marketing|Higher education administration|Museum studies
spellingShingle Marketing|Higher education administration|Museum studies
Hankes, Bethany
Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students
description <p> After years of courting public audiences, academic art museums have shifted their focus back to their campus constituents. These changes have meant putting a premium on attracting and engaging university students. Museums have been successful in doing so through classes. Yet, what about students as active constituents outside of class? Students' limited free time is one hurdle in engaging students outside of class, but students must know about their campus art museum and its programs before they can decide whether to attend or not. Therefore a study of the challenges, and successes, in marketing these museums and their programming to students was undertaken. Specifically, 29 campus art museums in the United States were surveyed on their relationship with students, current marketing strategies, what types of media are used, and how these forms of media are evaluated. Survey results revealed challenges of limited staff time and the lack of an analytical framework for some marketing materials. Successes in marketing to students were limited, but positive comments and feedback from respondents exhibit several best practices for marketing to students. These include enlisting the help of trusted resources around campus, creating positive word of mouth among the student body, and engaging students in both the creation and marketing of programs. Additionally, best practices from civic museums, and reports on marketing to student-aged individuals, were drawn on in order to offer prescriptive advice.</p>
author Hankes, Bethany
author_facet Hankes, Bethany
author_sort Hankes, Bethany
title Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students
title_short Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students
title_full Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students
title_fullStr Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students
title_full_unstemmed Loud and Clear| A Study of the Challenges and Successes in Marketing University Art Museums and their Programming to University Students
title_sort loud and clear| a study of the challenges and successes in marketing university art museums and their programming to university students
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1600318
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