WHEN CHINESE CLASSICAL PIANIST Yuja Wang took the stage in a short, flaming-red dress and impossibly high black heels, it was obvious that this was no ordinary Thursday night at the Boston Symphony Orchestra. As she performed Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 2, the 27-year-old stood out in a sea of older musicians wearing black.
This high-energy concert was handpicked by the BSO for its new YoPro series, a ticket package targeting the type of young professionals the nonprofit hopes might one day become patrons. “Our focus early on is to develop relationships,” explains BSO managing director Mark Volpe. “We engage these people before they’re successful. It’s been our experience that as they get involved, start coming to events, and get to know the musicians, if things develop as they hope, they’ll share their good fortune with us.”
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So far this season, more than 100 young professionals have bought into the program, which will also include a trip to Tanglewood this summer and a Holiday Pops concert. After Wang’s concert was over, about two dozen migrated to a low-key reception downstairs in Symphony Hall, where they hit the open bar and mingled at high-top tables. I made my way around the room and found a mix of classical music fans and BSO first-timers, most in their 20s or 30s. And although they tended to hold jobs at many of the big movers of Boston’s economy — education, finance, medical research, nonprofits — the city’s tech sector was conspicuously underrepresented. Two Web developers I met at intermission had never heard of YoPro.
The scene was telling, and fairly typical. The BSO, like many major arts organizations in Greater Boston and beyond, is not targeting specific professions to find future donors. Instead, these institutions are courting a broad swath of younger people in hopes of filling their halls with lots of fresh faces and locking down loyalty along the way. By casting such a wide net, however, they could be leaving money from the tech community on the table.
This state’s innovation economy, which comprises fields as diverse as big data and biotech, is already formidable — and growing fast. The industry has added 50,000 jobs in the past eight years and now accounts for 38 percent of the Commonwealth’s workforce, according to a 2014 report from the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative. On top of that, these workers tend to have money to spend: The average industry salary in Boston is nearly $95,000, up more than 6 percent since 2011, according to a recent survey. But the challenge, experts say, is that this sector’s army of workers doesn’t always play by the old rules of giving.
“You have to do the right kind of outreach,” says Rich Miner, who knows quite a bit about art museums and even more about tech entrepreneurs. Miner was a cofounder of Android, the software startup bought by Google in 2006 (the Android operating system now powers more than a billion of the world’s smartphones and tablets). Today, Miner leads the Cambridge office of Google’s venture capital arm and is also on the board of overseers for the Institute of Contemporary Art, where his duties include counseling the museum on marketing. One big piece of advice: Find ways to target and engage the tech community. Museums are “alienating a big group if they don’t,” Miner says, “and would be missing out on a potentially large charitable group if they don’t, as well.”
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Essdras M Suarez/Globe staff/file
Google executive Rich Miner helps the ICA strategize how to connect with the tech community.
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SPEND SOME TIME looking at the donor boards of most big art and cultural institutions around town, and you’ll see lots of names from the worlds of finance, law, real estate, and other industries. But unlike those old-guard supporters, some of whom have given to the city’s cultural institutions for generations, few wealth holders from the new high-tech world have as deep a history with patronage, says Paul Schervish, director of the Center on Wealth and Philanthropy at Boston College. Many are transplants from elsewhere, without deep family or professional ties to the area.
It’s not that tech workers are stingy. In a forthcoming report for the Missouri-based Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, Schervish shows that tech entrepreneurs who go on to become philanthropic donors often believe an individual can make a real difference and that innovation is crucial to progress. These people, so used to being connected globally, are also well schooled on needs outside their own communities. “There are many more urgencies in the world that they are aware of,” Schervish says. “They want to talk about education, the environment; they want to talk about diversity and racial harmony.”
The ICA’s First Friday events are popular with younger patrons.
For some of these people, the needs of a local art museum don’t stack up against poverty in Uganda, and an evening at the symphony can seem a little passe. “The CEOs of some of these tech companies, they’re under 35 and they’re used to running a multimillion-dollar company, and then it’s like, ‘Go join a young professionals group’ — I don’t think so,” says Jeff Fagnan, founder of a philanthropic group of techies called Technology Underwriting Greater Good (TUGG). “They want to get their hands dirty, and I’m not sure that’s how they think about arts organizations from a philanthropic perspective.”
Fagnan, a partner at the Cambridge VC firm Atlas Venture, launched TUGG in 2006 to raise money for innovative nonprofits and social causes. He believed people wanted to make a difference with their time and money, but they didn’t know how. “We started TUGG because we saw so many people that raised their heads up 10 years after college when they got their companies going and said: ‘I want to give back. How do I give back?’ ” he says. Since its founding, TUGG has grown to a network of more than 10,000 tech workers, mostly in Greater Boston, with upward of 80 percent between the ages of 25 and 35.
TUGG hosts two big annual fund-raisers, including the Tech Gives Back service day, as well as a wine party that raised $300,000 in one night this year. The group also co-hosts more than a dozen smaller “microfederated” events, including road races, blood drives, and talent shows for “startup nerds” that net between $3,000 and $50,000 apiece.
One evening in April, four dozen teams paid to compete in a three-on-three basketball tournament that raised $8,000 for InnerCity Weightlifting, a nonprofit that aims to reduce violence by keeping kids off the streets. Over the years, TUGG has also supported causes such as the Latino STEM Alliance, the Science Club for Girls in Cambridge, and Future Chefs. In total last year, “tuggers” helped raise almost $1 million for more than a dozen charities.
Aram Boghosian
A charity basketball tournament was sponsored by nonprofit Technology Underwriting Greater Good.
That’s no small change, but some established arts organizations in the Boston area can collect more in a donation from a single patron; real estate developer Ronald Druker, for instance, gave $5 million to the MFA in 2011 for its contemporary art wing. Fagnan, however, is taking the longer view. “We value engagement more than dollar amount,” he says. TUGG’s approach is proving successful at drawing future movers and shakers into philanthropy long before some of them will make it big.
On the issue of community engagement, many arts institutions have initiatives that look beyond their core missions. The MFA runs art workshops for kids who are patients at local hospitals, to name one example, and the BSO has programs that bring music to underserved populations. “Our favorite gift is an unrestricted gift, but part of what we say to these folks is ‘If Mozart doesn’t float your boat, we invest millions of dollars in education,’ ” says the BSO’s Volpe. “We are a cultural institution, we’re an educational institution, and to a modest extent we do have a social services dimension.”
Aram Boghosian
“They want to get their hands dirty, and I’m not sure that’s how they think about arts organizations from a philanthropic perspective,” says Jeff Fagnan, founder of (TUGG).
In addition, the leaders of the BSO, the MFA, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and the ICA all say they recognize the importance of building strategic alliances in the tech community. The Gardner recently partnered with Google to become the first museum in the city that provides online visitors a complete virtual walk-through of its collection. And the ICA is working with IDEO, a global innovation and design firm, to develop a digital strategy aimed at broadening the museum’s audience onsite and on the Web.
The ICA has a headstart on some other institutions in connecting with the tech community. Director Jill Medvedow has been forming relationships with local tech luminaries since plans were being drawn up for the museum’s new waterfront home back in 2006. The ICA’s boards now include Miner of Google Ventures and Jonathan Seelig, a cofounder of Internet-content delivery giant Akamai Technologies, among others. Medvedow recently toldThe New York Times that new faces on the board helped grow the ICA’s endowment from $1 million to $20 million over the past 15 years, with nearly half of the donations coming from people younger than 50.
From Miner’s perspective, the ICA’s contemporary collection is something of an easier sell than other art museums more focused on historical works. But the museum also makes a serious effort to attract young people who are tech-savvy. An event series on the first Friday of each month features guest DJs, gallery talks, and specialty cocktails. “We’re constantly discussing how to get people in,” he says. “If they enjoy themselves, they’re sharing that over social media, and if they’re sharing, now we can engage with them.”
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Essdras M Suarez/Globe staff/file
Biogen Idec marketing team leader Deborah Glasser has a new appreciation for the MFA’s “Think Pink” exhibit after a tour with the curator.
HERE’S A BIT OF GOOD NEWS when it comes to that challenge of engagement: Miner says the Boston tech community is full of geeks who played in bands or took ballet lessons growing up; he remembers going to weekend art classes at the MFA when he was a kid. “You don’t need to get the entire population, but if you’re targeting that demographic, you’ll find the subset it resonates with.”
Case in point: New-York native Deborah Glasser, a 38-year-old marketing team leader at Biogen Idec who also collects African art. As a kid, “I got dragged around to every museum on the Eastern Seaboard by mother and father,” she says. “It was a very clear imprint on me. Since I graduated from college, every city I’ve lived in I’ve always made a donation to the fine arts museum.”
When Glasser moved to Boston she looked for a group that reflected her interest and also gave her an opportunity to socialize. She joined an MFA collectors’ group, the Friends of African Oceanic Art, and made lasting friendships, even though the group’s members were an average 30 years her senior. Then she learned there was an option for art aficionados her own age: the MFA’s Museum Council. The council is an unofficial pipeline of future trustees, with some 500 patrons younger than 45.
Glasser now sits on the council’s steering committee and has recruited several of her colleagues from Biogen (which matches their donations). “It’s a very different phenotype of person who works here than works on Wall Street,” Glasser says. “I think appealing to that same nature — where you’re spending your time and talents toward working for something for the greater good — is something that could be tapped into to unlock donations and continued support for these institutions.” A $300 annual donation is the minimum to become a council member, but she gives at the patron level, which means $3,000 a year or more. Memberships come with VIP passes and field trips to private collectors’ homes, as well as exclusive access and guided tours of MFA exhibitions, a perk she says has helped demystify the museum’s collection.
When Glasser first visited “Think Pink,” a current display of clothing, jewelry, and visual art, it didn’t really resonate with her. But that changed when she and some other council members joined a private tour with the exhibit’s curator. “It’s a bit like reading the Cliff Notes versus having a wonderful professor guide you through a difficult Faulkner or Bulgakov novel,” she explains. “You walk away thinking differently about the subject, and as a result, it takes on more meaning.”
At the Gardner Museum, director Anne Hawley makes the case that the art world is more relevant to the tech sector than it might first appear. “Museums — at their best — provide the models for what possible can look like and have the potential to inspire creativity and provide new ways of seeing the world,” she says. “That’s what art provides, what museums showcase: bold, creative acts of innovation.”
Whether Boston’s arts organizations can get that message across remains to be seen, says BC’s Schervish. “There’s a lot of money in Boston and the potential for philanthropy is dramatic, so that’s not the problem,” he says. “Museums and symphonies and so on are like wine: You’ve got to help people find a taste for them.”
Then, Schervish continues, donors need to see the difference their dollars can make — even for a cause that might initially seem low on the list of philanthropic priorities. He points to Harvard and its nearly $33 billion endowment. The university clearly is doing fine financially, but graduates keep giving. “There’s something there that people realize it did for them and it’s doing for the world,” he says. “That’s what every charity, to get money, has to show.”
Shannon Mullen is a freelance journalist. Send comments to magazine@globe.com.
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