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Resumen

Creativity is today defining boundaries of cultural industries in Europe and out of Europe. Creativity does not include only performing and visual arts but also material culture, tangible and intangible heritages, education, television, knowledge intensive industries, advertising, etc. The creativity can be both for-profit and not-for-profit, too. Taking into account multiple features and strategies of creative entrepreneurs, the debate among lecturers, policy-makers and researchers is never ending. While the boundaries of the concept ‘culture’ are vanishing into ‘creativity’, main strategies of cultural and creative entrepreneurs are evolving, too. Above all, revenue maximization and diversification are leading the not-for-profit creativity out of the contemporary crisis of resources and funds. Thanks to a k-means clustering we investigated 2012s costs and revenues of a sample of the USA creativity: museums, symphony orchestras, theatres, universities and public televisions. Four main profiles emerged according to performances of marketing, fundraising, investing and other financing. Bigger clusters are the marketing expert and the revenue diversifier with loss. The revenue diversifier of a less crowded cluster is the most profitable and the most solvent, instead. The fundraiser is not the most crowded cluster but he profits by the second highest gain of the sample.

Título de la serie
Eurasian Studies in Business and Economics
Volumen
2
Editorial
Springer Science and Business Media B.V.
ISBN-ISSN
23645067 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85138784752&doi=10.1007%2f978-3-319-22593-7_31&partnerID=40&md5=180d717a3afa55b2c54b794710a0776f
DOI
10.1007/978-3-319-22593-7_31
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