Access All Areas June 2018 | Page 50

JUNE | ME, MYSELF & I Colin Chapple AEG have been touring The Rolling Stones across the globe since 2013, it has taken several years to fi nalise the UK tour which shall see the band play to their audience across the UK. With London about to host its first All Points East, Access talks to AEG Live’s CEO All Points East (25 May- 3 June, Victoria Park) is a game changer because it has indirectly opened up two new locations in London.It means two very well admired and attended festivals, previously held in Victoria Park, now have new homes in Brockwell Park and Gunnersbury. All Points East is great for local authorities and stakeholders of Victoria Park, who went from having two separate, isolated events to having one over two weekends, which means less disruption, just one build and one take down period. This also means we can include local community off erings in the mid-week. The model for All Points East ‘s mid-week is focused on providing an exciting community-minded programme. We have a few dedicated staff members working year round to fi nd local catering, retail and entertainment options to support the event and the community. This ensures the park is accessible to everyone, because the last thing you want is a festival with a big shield around it. Being the size of AEG means we have suffi cient global support behind us to take a long term view on our events. We’re happy to invest in staff expertise, providing value for everything from technology, marketing, data, GDPR regulations and social media and put in the commitment to local investment. You have to be careful when planning such an event. Total costs are high, and you must sell the majority of the tickets or you will be in trouble. There’s a big change in how the festival market has developed, with classics like V Festival being rebranded after two decades as the 50 sponsorship dropped off , and now having to re-establish with a new identity as RiZE. Elsewhere, Victorius in Portsmouth has done amazing things outside of London, the team there have grown the festival at a phenomenal rate. The ideas surrounding what defi nes a festival are changing. Are they synonymous with camping, or are they about having multiple stages? It can depend on how clever you are at curating the event. Wilderness, for example, markets its great food and isn’t ‘headliner driven’. Field Day is all about the creativity too, that and the music, the food and beer. Reading Festival received criticism because people have a certain expectation as to the type of bands that will play. This year for their core audience they went off -piste, but then again it was very much a reaction to what people are actually listening to. There is massive audience out there for hip- hop and urban music. We are a London-centric business so we stick to what we know. We start with the customer journey, the service and the value at various price points. The old saying is location, location, location and its true. When looking at any site, appropriate transport links must be right. We have a lot of information and data on customer buying practice, their demographics, and their favourite acts, but that doesn’t always necessarily help when putting an event together. We would love to book a certain line-up, but the reality is you have to work within the artists’ touring cycle, if they are in Europe at the end of the summer it won’t help if your event is at the start of the summer.