The financial health, and subsequent viability and stability of nonprofits has been a topic of discussion for several decades (Baumol and Bowen 1965). Leaders of nonprofits need access to relevant analyzation methods to effectively understand their financial data and to successfully assess their organization's financial health. Through my research, I focused specifically on the impact that revenue structures, and revenue diversification have on the financial health and sustainability of professional, US based ballet companies, and how these financial health analyses have affected the "bottom line" or net income for each organization. The sample includes ten professional, US based ballet/dance companies with operating budgets ranging from $13 million to $46 million. Data from the sample organization's Form 990's for fiscal years 2017-2019 was collected, and analyzed, and presented with a theoretical approach that is based on industry analytical standards that include the Diversification Index (Chang and Tuckman 1994, 276), which is derived from the Hirschman-Herfindahl Index for measuring revenue diversification, and Tuckman and Chang's methodologies for measuring financial vulnerability.
Metrics
70 File views/ downloads
169 Record Views
Details
Title
Ballet Revenue Structures
Creators
Daniel J. Wellman
Contributors
Pamela Yau (Advisor)
Awarding Institution
Drexel University
Degree Awarded
Master of Science (M.S.)
Publisher
Drexel University; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Number of pages
158 pages
Resource Type
Thesis
Language
English
Academic Unit
Arts Administration; Arts and Entertainment Enterprise; Drexel University; Antoinette Westphal College of Media Arts and Design
Other Identifier
991018527109004721
Research Home Page
Browse by research and academic units
Learn about the ETD submission process at Drexel
Learn about the Libraries’ research data management services