As a data-driven organization, SFMOMA values the opportunity to listen to audiences and make evidence-based decisions. At the core of our partnership however has been our Visitor 360° – an ongoing year-round visitor research project that gives a complete, accurate answer to the ever-present questions ‘who are our visitors?’
Confidence in understanding visitors
The Visitor 360° is a 5-7 minute questionnaire designed to gather data from visitors specifically to understand the audience and monitor trends for the most useful KPIs.
The survey is included in a post-visit email throughout the year to account for seasonality. We weight the data to match visit flow, balance walk-ups vs pre-visit purchase, members vs non-members, adult-only vs family group visits. We apply a range of methods to ensure the picture we’re presenting is as accurate as possible.
Consistent valuable insight through times of change
Like many cultural organizations, the last few years have brought many changes for SFMOMA. In a time of uncertainty, consistent, reliable data is more valuable than ever. Throughout the pandemic and recovery, we’ve been able to track the response of the audience – who came back first, how safe did they feel, what had they missed – and now we’re able to see where visits are returning to pre-pandemic levels and where there is still work to do to re-ignite relationships.
For example, in 2022 we saw that two core groups seemed to still be ‘missing’ from the audience compared to 2019. The first was tourists, which is of course to be expected as general tourism to the Bay Area was still in recovery and there is largely outside of the Museum’s control. But the second was locals – specifically younger, Expression (shared experience and community-oriented) casual ‘drop in’ visitors. This gave SFMOMA direction on where to focus efforts most effectively to rebuild audiences.
Ability to evaluate the real impact of strategies
Because of course the museum has not been passively waiting for recovery to happen. They took the opportunity to reflect and renew their intent and make meaningful changes. They honed in on their commitment to their mission of Connecting People to the Art of Our Time.
But how do they know if (and how and why) it’s working?
Going forward, we can track the results of their efforts. Has the big Expression campaign to re-engage locals resulted in growth from this audience? Has local targeting connected with the audiences closest to the Museum? Did our new campaign actually invite in new audiences for the first time? Did this exhibition reach a more diverse audience as we’d hoped? How consistently are we delivering the outcomes we hope for visitors?
V360° is not just about having an accurate picture of the audience once, but about being able to confidently track changes and the impacts of action taken.
All images courtesy of SFMOMA:
Top: Gerhard Richter, Fenster (Window), 2002, The Doris and Donald Fisher Collection at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art © Gerhard Richter. Photo by Don Ross.
Middle: Photo by Henrik Kam.
NY Phil Case Study: Taking audience understanding to the next level
How MHM has worked with State Library Victoria to better understand its audience through Visitor 360° research, helping the Library develop a deep understanding of its visitors, and allowing it to tailor the services and activities it provides accordingly.
How MHM has helped QAGOMA to better understand their audience through Visitor 360° research, as well as a series of bespoke projects such as exhibition evaluations, formative studies and an in-depth study exploring QAGOMA’s market using Culture Segments.