Dear USUAF,
I am pleased to share the new report by The Conference Board and Americans for the Arts called
“Business Support for the Arts 2021: Art for Everyone’s Sake”, which is a short companion survey to our more in-depth
triennial survey of companies to learn about the hows and whys of their arts funding and what the prospects for the future hold. This pulse survey looks at corporate giving to the arts in our current climate and will help inform the next iteration of the
full study.
Links to Marketing and Media:
Full Report:
https://www.conference-board.org/pdfdownload.cfm?masterProductID=38590
Press Release:
https://www.conference-board.org/press/arts-social-challenges
Social Media Posts: The first in a series across multiple platforms from both AFTA and partner, The Conference Board.
Media Coverage:
Top Insights:
Insights and findings from
the report include:
62 percent of respondents are using the arts to increase diversity. Among them, most are supporting both organizations that serve communities of color and arts organizations led by people of color.
The top ways respondent companies are addressing racism through their support for the arts:
53 percent of firms are addressing the diversity of the arts organizations they fund, but only 10 percent
require diversity
before making a grant.
The top ways companies are helping arts organizations increase the diversity of the staff, leadership, and board:
“Companies that are looking to support the arts in ways that advance racial equality and other social goals may wish to join forces with other companies to increase their impact,” said Robert Schwarz, a Senior Researcher at The Conference Board ESG Center
and author of the report.
The outlook for arts funding over the next three years is largely stable.
Supporting the arts serves DEI and workforce goals. Still, the top reason companies support the arts is to strengthen arts appreciation in general.
The top three reasons companies fund the arts:
Nolen V. Bivens, President and CEO of Americans for the Arts, commented, “Building genuine partnerships between the arts and business communities based on shared values, vision, and core mission areas benefit every participant in the arts and culture ecosystem.
I am very pleased that 75 percent of businesses support the arts, and 62 percent use the arts to increase diversity, creativity, and innovation. It is clear that businesses are taking seriously their role in strengthening communities. The arts are a way to
do this. Businesses also use their support for the arts as a means to address key local issues such as education, the economy, and public discourse. When we support the arts, we are getting more than cultural benefits—we are also building healthier communities
that we want to live and work in.”
62 percent of respondent companies are planning to use the arts to help achieve diversity goals, such as exposing people to various cultures. They are also planning to use the arts to support community
enrichment and economic development goals.
Over the next three years, companies plan to use some or all of their arts program resources in an effort to use the arts to help meet their corporate citizenship goals in the following areas:
“We know from a
recent report by The Conference Board that attracting and retaining talent is the number-one internal priority for CEOs globally, and that racial equality is a top-two ESG-social priority for US CEOs. Given the role that arts can play in addressing both
those challenges, CEOs—including those whose companies have stopped funding the arts—should ask their corporate citizenship teams how partnering with arts organizations can help their DE&I initiatives by sparking conversations about different cultures, and
competing for talent by offering employees more creative outlets,” said Paul Washington, Executive Director of The Conference Board ESG Center.
_______________________________
Amy Webb
Senior Director of Business Programs and Partnerships
Americans for the Arts
One East 53rd Street, 3rd Floor
New York, NY 10022
T: (202) 712-2075
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