Access All Areas April 2018 | Page 18

APRIL | TRENDING World service: how relevant is radio across the pond? Access talks to three international festivals about marketing the airwaves vs social media T he festival marketing landscape is in a state of fl u , globally, with festivals picking their channels carefully. The ’s relationship with radio is not as foundational as the , where the local airwaves are highly infl uential in taste making. Laurie irby, co founder est orums points to Towns uare, a highly infl uential media, entertainment and digital marketing company with 31 radio stations. t harnesses these to market to its live events, that attract nearly 1 million attendees annually. The company uses its network of independent operators to promote their festivals. t has assets such as , L , and 1 1. and music festivals such as Mountain am, est and the Taste of ountry Music estival,” she says. Despite the pull these stations have, irby says the vast and ever increasing data that Live ation and G have on the market packs a powerful punch. These are ticketing and marketing platforms with a huge reach that goes to the heart of festivals. They 18 hold vast data and use analytics via a deep use of technology to understand the fan.” Bestival’s creative production manager Joe Elkins concurs that Big Data is vital for targeted marketing, but says Bestival is keen to support more traditional formats such as print and outdoor display, which he says play to the sensibilities of festival goers. The situation with radio, however, is nuanced. pple Music and potify dominate over local radio for 1 3 year olds. s a brand manager, I wonder if local radio is the best brand fi t, whereas our sister festival amp estival is totally diff erent. M radio is a lot better for the family audience,” he says. Digital totally changed the market. Outdoor and print feature more regularly in festivals than other industries, and there’s an emotiveness and old romantic spirit to those mediums. However, there’s no disputing that most of our money goes into acebook and social.” Niko Costas, lead producer & venue manager for the 1 undance ilm estival’s music and virtual reality space and event manager of women only alifornia based surfi ng festival upergirl Pro (pictured), says while radio is not a huge factor in undance, top radio is very infl uential in the . ” upergirl ro partners with iHeartRadio which streams local alifornia niche stations whereas potify has a much broader reach.” n anada, meanwhile. the more mainstream festivals rely heavily on top radio but the more niche events use university radio, which is infl uential as a tastemaker, infl uencing in what the audiences want to hear, says NXNE marketing sponsorships livia Diamond. he adds that attracting audiences re uires working together. e have a tonne of support from associations, we face challenges the does not have. e are geographically huge but do not have a huge