By Gamal Hennessy
Last night I described the size and scope of nightlife venues and what they do to directly stimulate the economy. Today we’ll look at the other side of the equation and look at the economic activity of patrons in New York clubs.
Patron Population
All the venues and operators are useless without someone to actually serve. The 2004 Impact Study concluded that the attendance in New York clubs is more than 65,000,000 entries per year. Keep in mind that ‘entries’ is not a direct measure of the number of people who patronize nightlife on an annual basis, since club hopping and bar crawling could take one person to several venues in a night. A tourist might hit a club on her vacation in New York. A nightlife native might visit 50 or 60 venues in a year. Although total entries do not translate directly into 65,000,000 patrons, it is more than three times the amount of attendance at all 8 New York sports teams combined. 64% of nightlife patrons live within the five boroughs with each New York native visiting an average of 2.14 clubs per night out. The other 36% of all nightlife patrons came into the city from out of town and they visit an average of 2 venues per stay.
Cash Flow
Pre-Club Activity: Patrons don’t just magically appear on the dance floor at night. There are many activities that they engage in and spend money on before the night begins. The Study found that each native spent an average of $67 per person on these ‘pre-club’ activities including purchasing clothing, dining out and other activities. In addition, 82% of patrons used some form of transportation to get to the venue, for another $15 per person. So in total, each New York resident spent about $80 before she even walks inside the club. Tourist spending at non nightlife venues was even higher than resident spending. 86% of tourists people engaged in some other activity when they went to a club including dinner shopping, but also including hotels, theaters and sightseeing for an average of $90 per person. The out of town group also spent an average of $110 to get to and from the city and the venues they decided to visit, bringing their per person spending total to almost $200.
Liquor Purchases: The Study and the Zagat guide don’t estimate how much patrons spend when they are actually in a venue, but we can develop an educated guess. In our estimate, we’re going to assume that a person goes into a bar or club and buys four drinks; two for himself and two for the person he is with. I’m assuming a social unit of two, even though larger groups are just as common in clubs. I’m also assuming basic manners here, which means people not going Dutch. This might be overly optimistic in New York City, but in my experience New Yorkers can be very generous with alcohol, especially if they’ve already had a drink or two.
To keep things simple, I’m not including cover fees, coat check fees or bottle service, which would raise the numbers exponentially Let’s say each drink is $10. This is an average between the $5 beer and the $15 martini. That means in every club this guy goes into, our theoretical patron spends a total of $40. Let’s project that out to the total group. If there are 65,000,000 entries per year and only half of them pay for drinks then that’s 32,500,000 “drink entries” per year. If each drink entry is worth $40, then the estimated spending by nightlife patrons in clubs is 1.3 billion dollars.
Effect on the City
The amount of jobs, patronage and spending in nightlife might seem abstract until you put it in context. To place the numbers in perspective, we can look at the local film industry. According to the Mayor’s Office for Film, Theater and Broadcasting, local TV and movie production generates $5 billion dollars in economic activity for the city. In comparison, nightlife generates twice the revenue. The film industry has a government office to support and promote it. Nightlife has no such office despite repeated calls from operators to create it. If and when the city puts its full support behind the nightlife industry the benefit to the city could rise exponentially.
Last night I described the size and scope of nightlife venues and what they do to directly stimulate the economy. Today we’ll look at the other side of the equation and look at the economic activity of patrons in New York clubs.
Patron Population
All the venues and operators are useless without someone to actually serve. The 2004 Impact Study concluded that the attendance in New York clubs is more than 65,000,000 entries per year. Keep in mind that ‘entries’ is not a direct measure of the number of people who patronize nightlife on an annual basis, since club hopping and bar crawling could take one person to several venues in a night. A tourist might hit a club on her vacation in New York. A nightlife native might visit 50 or 60 venues in a year. Although total entries do not translate directly into 65,000,000 patrons, it is more than three times the amount of attendance at all 8 New York sports teams combined. 64% of nightlife patrons live within the five boroughs with each New York native visiting an average of 2.14 clubs per night out. The other 36% of all nightlife patrons came into the city from out of town and they visit an average of 2 venues per stay.
Cash Flow
Pre-Club Activity: Patrons don’t just magically appear on the dance floor at night. There are many activities that they engage in and spend money on before the night begins. The Study found that each native spent an average of $67 per person on these ‘pre-club’ activities including purchasing clothing, dining out and other activities. In addition, 82% of patrons used some form of transportation to get to the venue, for another $15 per person. So in total, each New York resident spent about $80 before she even walks inside the club. Tourist spending at non nightlife venues was even higher than resident spending. 86% of tourists people engaged in some other activity when they went to a club including dinner shopping, but also including hotels, theaters and sightseeing for an average of $90 per person. The out of town group also spent an average of $110 to get to and from the city and the venues they decided to visit, bringing their per person spending total to almost $200.
Liquor Purchases: The Study and the Zagat guide don’t estimate how much patrons spend when they are actually in a venue, but we can develop an educated guess. In our estimate, we’re going to assume that a person goes into a bar or club and buys four drinks; two for himself and two for the person he is with. I’m assuming a social unit of two, even though larger groups are just as common in clubs. I’m also assuming basic manners here, which means people not going Dutch. This might be overly optimistic in New York City, but in my experience New Yorkers can be very generous with alcohol, especially if they’ve already had a drink or two.
To keep things simple, I’m not including cover fees, coat check fees or bottle service, which would raise the numbers exponentially Let’s say each drink is $10. This is an average between the $5 beer and the $15 martini. That means in every club this guy goes into, our theoretical patron spends a total of $40. Let’s project that out to the total group. If there are 65,000,000 entries per year and only half of them pay for drinks then that’s 32,500,000 “drink entries” per year. If each drink entry is worth $40, then the estimated spending by nightlife patrons in clubs is 1.3 billion dollars.
Effect on the City
The amount of jobs, patronage and spending in nightlife might seem abstract until you put it in context. To place the numbers in perspective, we can look at the local film industry. According to the Mayor’s Office for Film, Theater and Broadcasting, local TV and movie production generates $5 billion dollars in economic activity for the city. In comparison, nightlife generates twice the revenue. The film industry has a government office to support and promote it. Nightlife has no such office despite repeated calls from operators to create it. If and when the city puts its full support behind the nightlife industry the benefit to the city could rise exponentially.
Have fun.
Gamal
Gamal
No comments:
Post a Comment