chapter twelve visitor research

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chapter twelve visitor research 199

How can you develop and grow your event audience if you don t know anything about it? Building a picture of who attended the event, where they came from, how they found out about it, what they enjoyed and if they will return is essential when developing marketing strategies. In addition, if your event is funded by public money or commercial sponsorship it is likely that this kind of information will be required as a condition of support and often you ll need it to make your case in the first place. 201 chapter twelve visitor research Research needn t be a complicated, expensive or scary undertaking. The key is to focus on what you actually want to find out (i.e. what is the research question?). Next, ask yourself if the skills required to carry out the research exist in-house or if you need to commission an external organisation or consultant. Bear in mind that the result of independent research is generally thought to be more reliable by external parties than that carried out by the organisation itself. Professional consultancy is worth considering but if your budget is too tight and you don t have the necessary in-house skills think about approaching a local college or university. Relevant departments may be able to incorporate the project into student s coursework under the guidance of their lecturer. If you plan to undertake or commission the research yourself, make sure you seek appropriate advice to ensure that your methodology and questionnaire will provide reliable results. Some things to think about: > What do you want to find out and why? > Who will use the information (e.g. yourself and the management team, funders, sponsors, etc)?

202 > What research has been done already? > Is there any secondary data that could inform your research? (Note: primary data is your own data collected from attendees, individuals, groups, etc; secondary data is data collected by someone else e.g. population statistics, etc). > What methodology will you use to collect the data? (Think about sample size and reliability). > Sample size the statistical principles informing probability calculations are outwith the remit of this book. However, as a rule of thumb, the sample should be no less than 100 and there s often little need to exceed 500 (of course depending on the size and range of the event). > Reliability of sample how will the sample be drawn and will it provide a balanced representation of the audience? > Closed questions provide quantitative data i.e. information that you can count and easily process in-house. This includes numbers and percentages of attendance, demographics, patterns of attendance, etc. > Open questions provide qualitative data i.e. information that elicits more personal responses, yet can be difficult to process and interpret in-house. This includes opinions, thoughts and recommendations. The most common way to find out about event audiences is to carry out face-to-face interviews or self-completion questionnaires at the event itself. To give you an example, below is a basic questionnaire designed to be implemented face-to-face. WARNING: your questionnaire should be specific to your research question and situation it is not suggested that the following questionnaire format is appropriate to your event. Time of Interview: Date of Interview: Interviewer Name: Enter prompt Hello, my name is, I work for the [insert name] event. Can you spare 5 minutes to help us develop the event further? All respondents will be entered into a prize drawn to win [insert prize]. 1. Where do you live? (please tick) [insert host town] go to Q6 England Overseas (please state) Other [insert host region] go to Q6 Wales Other Scotland N. Ireland Please state your postcode: 2. Is the Festival the main reason for your visit to (state town) today? Yes? No?

3. Describe the nature of your visit I m a day visitor (i.e. returning home today) go to Q6 I m on holiday 4. If on holiday, tell us about your holiday length and type a) State the number of nights: b) State where you are staying (tick): (insert host town) Other (insert host region) Other Scotland c) State type of accommodation (tick): B&B/Guest House Hotel Self catering Camping Friends and family 5. If on holiday, did the festival play a part in your decision to holiday in this area? Yes No 6. Tell us about your party/group a) Including yourself, how many adults are in your party: M F b) How many children (under 16s) are in your party: M F c) Who is in your group? Friends Family Work colleagues Other d) What age are you? 17 24 25 34 35 44 45 54 55 64 65+ e) Gender of respondent (don t ask!, just tick): Male Female 7. How much do you estimate that your PARTY has spent in total today on Event admission fees. Shopping and gifts. Food and drink. Other local activities. 8. How did you travel to the festival today? (tick all that apply) On foot Hired car Train Cycled Chartered coach Bus Private car Ferry Air Other, please specify 9. How did you hear about the festival (tick all that apply) Newspaper advertising Newspaper editorial TV Magazine advertising Magazine editorial Internet search/links Distribution racks Posters Festival website Mailing Radio Tourist office Word of mouth 10. Attendance Patterns How many times have you attended previously? (circle) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Would you like to return to the event? Yes No Would you return to the area for a visit or holiday? Yes No I live here Will you recommend the festival to friends and family? Yes No 203 chapter twelve visitor research

204 11. Tell us how you rate the festival in respect of the following (please tick) Excellent Very Good Average Poor Very N/A Good Poor 1. Overall festival experience 2. Management 3. Programme 4. Advance publicity 5. Venue 6. Time of year 7. Activities for kids 8. Value for money 9. Ticketing 10. Catering/food 10. Information at the event 12. Any other comments: All respondents will be entered into a PRIZE DRAW to win XXXXX. Please supply your details to enter. Name: Address: Postcode: Tel: Email: If you would like to receive information about next year s event you can opt in to our Mailing List. Your information will not be passed on to any other organisation and you will only receive information about this event (tick): Yes No Thanks

206 Some More Research Tips General > The offer of a Prize Draw can be a useful inducement for respondents to take part. > Don t miss a trick: offer all respondents the opportunity to join the event s mailing list in order that they can be kept up-to-date with future programme announcements and offers, etc. > Take care over the layout of the questionnaire. For clarity, number questions, use tick boxes as appropriate and leave enough space for any required responses to be stated. > Leave any personal questions to the end of the questionnaire (e.g. age range, contact details, profession, etc) some respondents may be put off if they are asked to answer such questions at the outset. > Ensure that you do not pose leading questions. > Ensure that you structure your questionnaire to avoid confused responses. For example, if you are directing some of the questions specifically to visitors to the region, ensure that locals are directed to bypass these questions. > Make sure you do a test run. Always pilot the questionnaire on a few friends and colleagues to ensure that it s easy to complete and doesn t contain any errors or misleading questions. Before you carry out the research ensure that you have thoroughly addressed how the data will be processed. Test your sample responses on the software that you will use to process the data. For interview-led questionnaires > Ensure that your interviewers are fully briefed, well-presented and very polite. > Provide event tee-shirts and/or identity badges for each interviewer to wear so that they can be easily identified. > Think about where interviewers will be situated within the event site/venue. Attendees should not be approached on entry. > Don t start the interviewing until at least an hour or more into the event otherwise event attendees may not have had the necessary event experience to provide valid responses. > Think about how you will reach your intended sample size give the interviewers targets so that they know how many interviews per hour they are aiming for.

> Make sure that there is a safe place where all completed questionnaires can be stored throughout the event. > Ensure you have plenty of blank questionnaires ready. 207 For self-completion questionnaires > Think about timing. When and where will attendees be offered the opportunity to take part remember you want to maximise reliable responses. Is it appropriate to place the questionnaires on venue seats or in participant packs; should questionnaires be distributed during an interval, in the café area, on exit, etc; should you set up specific research stations across the event site where attendees can take part? > Think about ease of response. Do you need to provide large, well-marked boxes around the event site/venue for questionnaires to be returned; should you provide an envelope with a freepost address? > Ensure you have plenty of pens available. chapter twelve visitor research TOP TIP Remember, at the very minimum you should be thinking about where your audience/participants come from a simple request for a postcode at the time of booking, or via a competition mechanism, can provide essential demographic information in terms of the pull of the event and the success of the marketing.