PROMOTERS TO SELL MORE MERCHANDISE TO MAKE UP FOR LOST REVENUE
![]() ZZ Top |
Pollstar is reporting
that concert promoters are planning to make shows more affordable in 2011, after high ticket prices caused low
attendance throughout the past year. Promoters say they will push the sale of t-shirts and other merchandise to
make up for the lost revenue.
Acts such as ZZ Top plan on selling
tickets for as little as $10. “It’s time to give the value back,” said band manager Carl Stubner, “We’ll find
other
ways to make money.”
Meanwhile, not everybody will bring down their prices. Neil Diamond, for example, says that his
large scale
production prevents him from doing so. “As the shows get bigger, the expenses get
bigger, so it’s got to be translated somehow to the ticket price. If I just used the guitar it’d be a lot simpler, but then
I’d
have to put 50 people out of work.”
According to Pollstar, ticket prices in North America rose from an average of $26 in 1996 to $67 in 2008. That
number does not include order processing and convenience charges. When
promoters raised prices again, concert attendance dropped by 12% in the first half of 2010, in comparison to the
same period of time a year ago.
Promoters have promised that cheaper options will be available in 2011. “We know that if you lower the price, they’ll
come,” Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino told investors in November.






