Wave 10 | Spring 2024
March 2024 | 2,945 responses
Findings from the Spring 2024 wave of our Cultural Participation Monitor look at attitudes to heritage, trust and online reviews and recommendations, the impact of different event times and a wider range of cultural activities, including many that impact cultural place-making.
Key Findings
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Creative Places: Activities
In our latest wave of the Cultural Participation Monitor, we asked about a wider range of cultural activities to get a fuller picture of the sorts of things people do outside our usual arts, cultural and heritage scope.
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Creative Places: Changing Hours
We’ve been seeing a range of changing audience behaviours and attitudes since the pandemic, including shifting attitudes to event timings.
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Attitudes to heritage
We asked the extent to which people agreed or disagreed with a range of statements about history and heritage, to better understand the attitudes which people bring to their engagement. These results were surprising in a number of ways: neither consistently conforming to a traditional nor a progressive perspective.
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Interest in history and heritage
Heritage is broadly popular with the general population, with high proportions saying that it’s an interest of theirs.
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Use of social and digital by Audience Spectrum
Use of digital media and digital varies between Audience Spectrum, suggesting different potential routes to reach different segments.
REGULAR KEY FINDINGS
- Wave 10 | Spring 2024
- Wave 9 | Summer 2023
- Wave 8 | Spring 2023
- Wave 7 | Autumn 2022
- Wave 6 | Spring 2022
- Wave 5 | Winter 2021
- Wave 4 | Autumn 2021
- Wave 3 | Summer 2021
- Wave 2 | Spring 2021
- Wave 1 | Autumn 2020