Clients

Colleges and grad schools. Art museums and zoos. Ballet companies and film festivals. At Slover Linett, we've found that the connections among these forms of intellectual, aesthetic, social, and emotional engagement are more important than the differences between them. Deep down, the educational and cultural organizations we work with are all about human transformation.

We see those connections every day in our research and evaluation work. What we learn about the narrative involvement of ballet audiences can help a science museum plan for its new building. What we discover from university alumni about social networking can help an art museum rethink its membership program. The cross-pollination enriches each study, and our clients benefit.

But you're probably interested in one of those sectors more than others. So we invite you to explore the menu bar above or use these shortcuts to jump to the section of our client list you're looking for:

Museums

Performing Arts

Higher Ed

Other Nonprofits

 

Museums

Brookfield Zoo

Chicago, IL

Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, OH

Cool Culture

New York, NY

Delaware Art Museum

Wilmington, DE

The Field Museum

Chicago, IL

Grand Rapids Art Museum

Grand Rapids, MI

Hyde Park Art Center

Chicago, IL

Lincoln Park Zoo

Chicago, IL

Louisiana Children's Museum

New Orleans, LA

Milwaukee Art Museum

Milwaukee, WI

Museums in the Park

Chicago, IL

National Museum of American Jewish History

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Seattle Art Museum

Seattle, WA

Smithsonian Institution

Washington, DC

Walker Art Center

Minneapolis, MN

Walters Art Museum

Baltimore, MD

 

Performing arts

 

Higher education

 

Other nonprofits

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January 16, 2012 | Peter

In the arts, audience-centered business models start with the art, not the business

 »

In my last post, I asked where the consumers are in the Colorado symphony’s new “customer-driven” business model and promised a few examples of ways arts groups are getting audiences into the picture a little more creatively. It’s about not thinking of them as consumers or audiences in the first place, but as collaborators.

More »