5 Spectacular Marketing Insights From Cirque du Soleil On Customer Intimacy

Cirque du Soleil pro­vides an unpar­al­leled expe­ri­ence. How does it build aware­ness and authen­ti­cal­ly con­nect with fans, off­stage?

Lisa Lacy By Lisa Lacy. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Cirque du Soleil pro­vides a spec­tac­u­lar user expe­ri­ence. But, off­stage, how does it authen­ti­cal­ly con­nect with fans and pro­vide val­ue? One word: Access.

As expe­ri­ences grow more preva­lent in con­sumers’ expec­ta­tions and mar­keters’ exe­cu­tions, the live enter­tain­ment brand arguably has a huge advan­tage in that its very prod­uct is an expe­ri­ence. As a result, since its incep­tion in 1984, Cirque du Soleil says more than 155 mil­lion peo­ple in 300 cities have seen its shows. And, in 2015, the brand had 18 shows in pro­duc­tion and, on any giv­en night, about 20,000 tick­ets for sale. How­ev­er, at Adobe Sum­mit 2016 in Las Vegas, CMO Alma Der­ricks con­ced­ed the Cirque du Soleil prod­uct doesn’t nec­es­sar­i­ly trans­late to oth­er medi­ums, which some­times cre­ates mar­ket­ing chal­lenges. “There’s noth­ing like the elec­tric­i­ty on stage,” she said. So how does Cirque du Soleil use get clos­er to its fans? Here are five mar­ket­ing insights from Der­ricks.

1. Be Ready To Ask & Re-Ask Questions

Fur­ther, per Der­ricks, the live enter­tain­ment brand isn’t the new kid on the block any­more. At the same time, it is also under­go­ing a huge trans­for­ma­tion as a result in part of pri­vate invest­ment firm TPG acquir­ing a major­i­ty stake last year. “And what’s fas­ci­nat­ing is this inflec­tion point is a chance to re-ask all the ques­tions,” Der­ricks said. “Every­thing is back on the table again. Our brand is incred­i­bly strong on stage, but where we’re chal­lenged is what hap­pens beyond the lights and how to inter­act with you.”

2. Don’t Miss The Marketing Basics

Der­ricks not­ed it’s hard for a brand like Cirque du Soleil to sim­ply deliv­er an app or the like, so “giv­en the crowd­ed mar­ket, there’s a lot of basic block­ing and tack­ling as much as find­ing the next brand new thing. Some­times it’s about being in the right place at the right time.” That means Cirque du Soleil cap­i­tal­izes on tra­di­tion­al out-of-home tac­tics like taxi top­pers and mar­quis ads, as well as videos in taxis to cre­ate aware­ness and buzz. “Some things are not spec­tac­u­lar at all,” Der­ricks said. “We have both at our dis­pos­al.”

3. Have Smaller Conversations & Tell Stories

Der­ricks said the brand is hear­ing from its fans that they want to know more about the per­form­ers and what goes on behind the scenes. “Where we’re chal­lenged is sell­ing the con­cept of the show itself,” Der­ricks said. “The most rad­i­cal thing we can do is to be more inti­mate. I don’t know if we can be loud­er, but we can be more inti­mate and [and bring you] behind the cur­tain, which is a fas­ci­nat­ing new adven­ture for Cirque du Soleil.” So instead of try­ing to one-up itself and be bold­er or loud­er to cut through the prover­bial noise and cap­ture con­sumer atten­tion, Cirque du Soleil is instead dial­ing down the vol­ume – at least mar­ket­ing-wise – to con­nect with fans. “We’re turn­ing the vol­ume down in some ways and hav­ing small­er con­ver­sa­tions and telling sto­ries, which is new ter­ri­to­ry for Cirque du Soleil,” Der­ricks said. “The thing I real­ly think about is how to cre­ate close­ness and how we bring those back in and tell those sto­ries that are as excit­ing as what we do up in the air.” And that includes lever­ag­ing plat­forms like Snapchat and Periscope to offer pre­views and spe­cial per­for­mances, as well as Twit­ter to share images of pre-show per­form­ers in make­up and hash­tags to inspire chat.

4. Bring People To You

Anoth­er part of Cirque du Soleil’s mar­ket­ing strat­e­gy involves break­ing down the shows into their com­po­nent parts and con­nect­ing with audi­ences from there. “Look at how exquis­ite each ele­ment is – the dancers, musi­cians, wardrobe and make­up artists are all at the top of their game, so we have to focus on ways to tell those sto­ries and break [a show] into its com­po­nents,” Der­ricks said. As a result, the brand has begun exper­i­ment­ing with mas­ter class­es in fields like make­up and dance. “The idea for the mas­ter class came from a dancer in the [Bea­t­les Love]. She’s 23 and a busi­ness major and brought all these insights to table – ‘There are 75 dance stu­dios in Vegas, so imag­ine the audi­ence,’” Der­ricks said. “There is space in the world for peo­ple to come clos­er to us, so now we have half-day mas­ter class­es for aspir­ing dancers. They get to come on stage and go through the chore­og­ra­phy and have their fam­i­lies in the audi­ence and watch the show in a com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent way, which is a new way to bring peo­ple to us.”

5. Conduct Team Building Activities

What’s more, not­ing the cir­cus itself has changed dras­ti­cal­ly as tra­di­tion­al cir­cus­es includ­ed acts in which per­form­ers were relat­ed by blood and were there­fore very tight­ly knit, Der­ricks said Cirque du Soleil, which includes groups of per­form­ers with­out fam­i­ly ties, had to con­jure up its own unique meth­ods of fos­ter­ing trust. “Cirque du Soleil brought in tech­nol­o­gy and engi­neers and cir­cum­vent­ed this entire fam­i­ly unit thing that used to be the core,” Der­ricks said. “Your rig­ger is an engi­neer. The thing queu­ing you is a com­put­er. When we talk about trust, there’s a whole lot more than just a per­son.” As a result, Cirque du Soleil cre­at­ed Spark Ses­sions, or cor­po­rate expe­ri­ences for net­work­ing, busi­ness devel­op­ment and/or mile­stones, to get oth­er com­pa­nies involved and to help teach what it has since learned about trust and lead­er­ship, Der­ricks said, adding, “Peo­ple always want to know what our workman’s comp looks like.” But there are inter­nal ben­e­fits as well. Der­ricks said the ses­sions help Cirque du Soleil breathe new life into its per­form­ers as they are giv­en a fresh look at their own shows and are remind­ed of the intri­ca­cy of what they do. Fur­ther, Der­ricks said when you con­sid­er shows like the Bea­t­les or Michael Jack­son One, some of the per­form­ers weren’t born when the show­cased artists were pop­u­lar – or even still alive, so Cirque du Soleil per­form­ers have to find their own ways into the music and sto­ries, and these Spark Ses­sions help them do that, too.

Lisa Lacy

Written by Lisa Lacy

Lisa is a senior features writer for Inked. She also previously covered digital marketing for Incisive Media. Her background includes editorial positions at Dow Jones, the Financial Times, the Huffington Post, AOL, Amazon, Hearst, Martha Stewart Living and the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

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