Is Michael Kaisers ARTS IN CRISIS 50 State romp nothing more than a book tour?

August 26, 2009 • One Comment

I have been following up on the newspaper articles and summaries from Michael Kaiser’s tour, and I am beginning to wonder if it wouldn’t have made more sense to send a free copy of his book to every arts administrator.

Back in early July when the tour was announced – I wrote the following post.  I state again that I think Kaiser is brilliant and one of the great leaders in the arts, and his book Art of the Turnaround is a great, inspiring read.  I also know firsthand he is a fabulous speaker and can really energize a room.

So, I was a bit disappointed to read articles from Charlotte to Madison that seemed to be summaries of the book.  I really do hope the discussion is going further, because it is desperately needed.  But if the discussion isn’t going to dig deeper than the book, what’s the point?  Now certainly one can hope the local conversations are happening and not being reported on, but is that what we really need documented?

So, I am waiting on pins and needles for Andrew Taylor of Artful Manager’s in-depth report on the Madison stop, where Taylor served as an on-stage facilitator.  He gave a teaser here.

Here are some articles from that stop (thanks to Taylor for pointing me to 77 Square Arts):

The articles seem to reinforce that Kaiser is using Art of the Turnaround as a base but don’t report it going further which leaves so many issues on the table locally and nationally.

More from my July 1 post on Kaiser – you can read in its entirety here:

I think the reason the Arts in Crisis initiative hasn’t taken off as much as the Kennedy Center thought it would and the reason why sadly it probably never will is that a lot of organizations don’t have the necessary leadership.  Not that the leadership makes bad decisions (there are certainly plenty that do) but simply there is a lack of organizations in the field that have quality, committed, and trained key leadership at the artistic, management and board level.  They might have two out of the three, mediocrity in all three or more likely one bending the others to his or her will.   Many organizations have to reach a crisis point to do anything about this – all of the organizations Kaiser has “turned-around” were in critical danger.  Kaiser took organizations that were lost and turned them into survivors.

Kaiser in his book insists that someone must lead (it is actually rule number one), that organizations in trouble “suffer from a diffused leadership.”  Don’t mistake this as a dismissal of the relationship between artistic, management, and board for one almighty, all powerful leader who all else must bow to.  Quite the opposite.  It is about BALANCE and ALIGNMENT between artistic, management and board leadership.   It is about trust, authority and responsibility for the art, vision and health of an organization being placed in the proper hands.

Today, the companies that I observe being innovative, growing, thriving or changing the landscape seem to have some version of this balance and alignment. Those that are on the cusp of bankruptcy seem to have leadership that is unbalanced, in conflict and sometimes at war with one another.    But most of the companies are in that middle area.  They aren’t on the at the risk of closing and they aren’t highly successful, they just are open.  As much as these company would benefit from Kaiser’s work or the work of several others out there (there are a lot of great thinkers and workers out there), those companies don’t seem to have leadership who will or can pull themselves up above the day to day to look at the bigger picture so they will simply stay flat, mediocre, unbalanced, or on the brink, choose your phrase, but they won’t reach the potential of the impact they can have.  I am not saying this is wrong.  It just simply is.  In any industry there is going to be a continuum of size, success, and quality – it is key to the ecosystem of the industry.   However there is a lot of room for improvement across the field the “top of the continuum” is not toppling over no matter what criteria you use for placement.  I do think if/when we have more quality leadership structures at more arts organizations we will see an increase in arts participation and the modern renaissance of the arts will flourish!

McLennan and Taylor – are we selling tickets or building community? Good Question

July 28, 2009 • No Comments

Last week there was some interesting discussion around Doug McLennan’s post on diacritical Pay Attention! If Selling Tickets Is Your Business Model, You’ve Got A Problem about the “Attention Economy” and Andrew Taylor’s response What, exactly, do you sell.  I think this discussion is a great companion to yesterday’s post on recovery consumer trends.

McLennan kicked off the discussion by addressing the shifts from manufacturing to transportation to experience to attention economies.  McLennan states “In the infinite choice marketplace, ideas and products only get traction if they get noticed.”  He notes as usual that the arts are behind others in addressing the shifts:

If you believe your business model is the classic consumer transaction (I make the performance, you buy the ticket) then you’re done. Sorry. That’s a Manufacturing Economy mindset, and while it worked when choices were limited, now that you’re competing in the infinite marketplace offering 8000 or 8 million choices, it’s increasingly unlikely that your “audience” is going to choose you as often as they did in the past.

In the Attention Economy it isn’t enough to be the best orchestra or theatre or dance company. People aren’t comparing you with other orchestras or theatre or dance companies; they’re measuring whether classical music or theatre or dance is something they want to choose at the moment. They’re deciding whether they want an active or passive experience; they’re trying to determine what level of social encounter they feel like today. They’re weighing whether they want a predictable, known, comfortable quantity or whether they want to be adventurous and try something new. They’re figuring out whether they want to learn something and are willing to work for that or whether they’re looking for pure entertainment that costs them little. Price matters – if it’s going to cost, it’s got to be better than the free alternative. It doesn’t matter that there are 47 varieties of spaghetti sauce on the shelf in front of me if what I really want is pesto.

The choice is bewildering. Paralyzing, even. You can’t compete with such overwhelming choice with a consumer transaction model, no matter if you’re the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Metropolitan Opera or the Guthrie Theatre.

The responses to the post address key issues – power imbalance between consumers (audiences) and manufacturers (arts orgs), stepping beyond marketing, the inevitable focus on the bottom-line and traditional earned revenue ideas, institution-building over creation of art, relevancy (perhaps the word that appears most in this blog) to our communities, and the need for human to human live connection in addition to virtual communities.

Andrew Taylor of Artful Manager (another daily must read) quickly posted his response addressing a key point that the audiences we have had for years and the work we have produced may be outdated or holding us back:

The deeper challenge for arts organizations is that they DO sell a product, even as they DON’T. That is, an important segment of any arts audience doesn’t recognize the complex bundle they’re seeking when they buy a symphony or theater ticket. They’ve come to use that event as a placeholder or proxy for that bundle, without even knowing it. To this core group (often the most passionate about the art form, the most loyal buyers, the most committed donors) the bundle IS the product. And as you innovate around the delivery or context of your creative work, you challenge their passionate connection to the discipline’s tradition.

It’s not necessarily a generational divide, although generation cohort likely plays a part. But rather it’s a challenge of serving multiple audiences with widely varying interests and expectations.

McLennan posted a follow-up Ticket Sales, Business Models & Community – Five Ideas To Build Community the next day expanding on the thought that community (as exemplified by social media) is key to building relationships and elevating an organization above the plethora of choices available to fill their time.

This all circles back neatly to yesterday’s post on consumer trends because community is the key to addressing all of those trends as well.  The strength of the performing arts is in bringing people together to share something, we create community by creating art.  This has to be applied to how we run our organizations and how we interact with the world around us.  We MUST define and enact how we will do this in the near and distant future.  We cannot cling to the old ideas or methods.  It is up to the current generation of leaders and those rising in the ranks to take charge and re-center our institutions large and small.

Post recovery consumer trends via HBR and what they mean to the Arts

July 27, 2009 • No Comments

I spend a lot of time reading business journals, nonprofit studies, seemingly unrelated non-fiction because I actually find that these sources inform my thinking as much as if not more than traditional periodicals and studies of the arts.   In last month’s Harvard Business Review an article, Understanding the Post Recession Consumer did an interesting analysis of current and future consumer trends. For days after reading the article, I found myself jotting down notes as to how the articles key points related to the arts.

I was especially intrigued because I often feel the arts are behind the rest of the working world in realizing or adopting new trends even though I know this can’t be true considering the creativity and intelligence in the field.  Perhaps we just don’t do enough analysis – who has time or the money – or we just don’t realize the trends until after they happen – see the note about time and money.

So what happens if we steal a page from corporate America and look at what consumer trends are?  We have to keep in mind of course we aren’t selling shoes – wouldn’t that be easier?  Of course this means looking beyond a single ticket sale or donation.   We have to look at our institution as a whole (Doug McLennan and Andrew Taylor addressed this nicely last week – as my next post will cover).

But back to consumer trends and Understanding the Post Recession Consumer…the researchers note a methodology of assessing past recessions, consumer surveys and other impressive details that I will not enumerate so I can get to the meat of the article:

Four key trends are being accelerated by this recession: consumer demand for simplicity, a call for ethical business governance, a desire to economize, and a tendency to flit from one offering to another.

Four other important trends are slowing: green consumption, a decline in respect for authority, ethical consumption, and extreme-experience seeking.

So what the hell does that mean for the arts?  Well, good question.   First we have to understand the accelerating trends:

A demand for simplicity.

Downturns are stressful and typically increase people’s desire for simplicity. Even prior to this recession, many consumers were feeling overwhelmed by the profusion of choices and 24/7 connectivity and were starting to simplify….  The recession is accelerating this maturing trend. Consider the rise of edited retailing (consumers are offered limited collections of coordinated product choices), a growing demand for trusted brands and value, an increasing desire for advisers—ranging from social networks to product ranking web sites—that can simplify choicemaking, and enthusiasm for less complicated, more user-friendly technologies.

If consumers are really searching for simplicity and are turning to their peers to help them eliminate choices, are the arts positioned to address this need?  We should be, after all what is more simple and natural than a community gathering to share an idea or experience.

Are we the “trusted brand” in business terms?  Have we built the relationships that are necessary to make us vital to our audiences?  Are we producing and creating relevant art that provides a valuable experience for our community?  Many an organization is a cornerstone in their community, but I have to wonder if each art organization pulled five random names from their databanks, called them and asked one simple question, “would you recommend to a friend that they participate in our programming,” what would the answer be?  This might inform us about the quality of the relationship.  Another key component for the arts is that the organization must be trusted to produce art that reflects the community, both large and small.  This often rests in the trust that the community has in the leadership of the organization.

As arts organizations we build as much of our brand on our leadership as our programming, and many have reaped the benefits of engaged, charismatic, community-building leaders, but some  leaders have become absentee in the day to day or aren’t even members of the community the organization interacts with.  Of course there are organizations this can work for if the leadership is at the top of their field and the organization is aligned with the idea that the artist’s association is enough, but it seems more and more like attendance is not mandatory for many of the field regardless of their stature, and we are falsely elevating many of the artist’s stature simple because they don’t want to be tied down to the institution.  Is this really helpful in creating a brand for the organization or is it serving the brand of the artist?

Many organizations are utilizing social networks – they have a facebook page and twitter account, the key is of course what are they communicating with these platforms?  Some are presenting additional perspective on their work or insights about the process of creating arts.  But some are simply offering another discount offer?  It is important to really assess what we have become in our communities and than strategize about how and what we are communicating in response.  We have to move away from just sending out the message and skipping the conversation – how else will we build trust?  A few months ago I addressed the idea of trust and trust issues, and each day this becomes the absolute key to surviving and flourishing – after all isn’t the basis of every relationship trust.  It is precisely this idea of trust that will prevent Eric Dillner from ever successfully running Milwaukee’s Skylight Theatre.

Which brings us to the next  consumer trend:

Call for ethical business governance or a focus on the boardroom

Like the simplicity trend, the focus on the boardroom has been building for years, spurred by notorious governance failures at companies like Enron and WorldCom early in the decade. The huge, taxpayer-funded bailouts of badly managed businesses will accelerate this trend, with two important effects: Government intervention will intensify, and the consumer backlash against companies with unethical or ineffective governance will worsen. The growing interest in the boardroom builds on an older instinct, the public’s well-established reflex to punish companies for unethical labor or customer practices is potent

From bloggers to print media, we are seeing more and more stories about arts organization’s leadership salaries and boardroom antics.  It is not just the new I.R.S. 990s that are searching for examples of quality leadership.  It is easier to attack nonprofit governance over corporate giants.  Frankly, some of the salaries at the top are ridiculous when compared to others in the organization, and I am not one who thinks that because you work in nonprofits you have sworn off having a livable or prosperous wage; however all one has to do is look up on Guidestar the gap between key leadership (and development directors) and the middle manager/department head level, to see the discrepancies – often double in scale.

Those in the performing arts are familiar with the arguments about performers pay usually falling far below livable wage and again out of scale with staff positions.  At this point it doesn’t matter who is right or who is wrong, the arguments and discrepancies are no longer internal or private.  We must take control of them as we must also deal with the issue.  As our consumers become more and more educated and are looking for simplicity, why bother with an organization embroiled in any kind of controversy.  Perhaps more prevalent and obvious is a board out of control or an organization without a clear sense of purpose, mission and vision.

Lack of strategy is visible to the outside world.  It is time arts organizations realize that scattered programming (often grant-driven), stop-start initiatives, inconsistency in quality, and endless changing/cancelling of events makes it very clear that there is no clear identity for the organization and no relationship to the community.  When this happens, it is the board and leadership that has failed the organization.  The board, as keepers of the long-term vision as well as fiscal trustees, should work WITH leadership to center, and the board should properly govern the organization.  Too often a board is entrenched in the day to day (they shouldn’t be at all) or kept at bay by the leadership so the result is that they are ineffectual, and therefore they are not governing.  Too often drastic changes must be made in the board make-up or membership that go ignored.  Better to act, right the organization, and deal with the fall-out rather than damage the organization, drag it off course, or worse – and this is what often happens – trap the organization in a cycle of repeating the same tasks and conversations over and over with no action or forward movement.

Trend number three is no surprise as a result of the severe recession.

Discretionary thrift or a desire to economize

Some consumers have no choice but to be thrifty. Increasingly, though, many affluent consumers are economizing as well, even though they don’t always have to. This is a relatively new trend, having emerged in the final three years or so of the prerecession boom. Our research among more affluent consumers has revealed mounting dissatisfaction with excessive consumption….Initially, many of these newly frugal consumers were reluctant to admit their attraction to thriftiness, concerned that others might see them as dull and austere. But the recession has made discretionary thrift acceptable—even fashionable….Recoveries typically unleash pent-up demand, and we expect that people will celebrate this one by buying a few indulgences and replacing their aging durables. But, as President Barack Obama observed on his way to the G-20 summit in March 2009, even the famously gluttonous United States is unlikely to reemerge as a “voracious consumer market.” Many postrecession purchases, we suspect, will be less extravagant versions of the originals. The discretionary thrift trend should regain momentum over the long term as consumers continue to find personal and practical satisfaction in it.

After all those discussions about whether discounts were bad and not don’t matter.  We can’t deny that we have trained our audiences to look for a deal – as has every other industry.  The entire field is rethinking/restructring the subscription model and bulk ticketing to address package price points and advance ticket sales (here are my thoughts – halfway down the post – on throwing out the model).

We also can learn to better state our value and help our donors, as well as community leaders, understand the continuing effects of the organization– education programs, quality of life, community improvement, economic impact, etc.

But if discretionary spending is going down, we do need to address ticket prices (at least in the performing arts) and continue exploring delivery methods.  This does mean addressing costs and business models.  We have to assess whether the expectations we, artists, and audiences place on production and the institution are realistically attainable – notice I didn’t say cut.  Each organization needs to assess what it’s financial model should be and what it can be.  We also have to understand the perception of our company, most arts organizations don’t have discretionary funds to spend so can’t we turn the eye on ourselves and take a look at what our consumers might be seeing.

This of course brings us to the final rising trend:

Mercurial consumption or a tendency to flit from one offering to another

In the prerecession boom, consumers became agile—and fickle—shoppers. They could instantly find a profusion of brands or products to meet their needs but would just as quickly abandon any choices that somehow fell short. They have brought this increasingly erratic loyalty into the recession…. The instantaneous spread of word-of-mouth through online social media has only accelerated the trend.  Technology- and social-network-enabled shopping strategies will allow this trend to pick up steam well into the recovery and beyond. Exactly what consumers buy may change, but their facility in navigating the options will prove durable—as will their readiness to shift allegiances.

Perhaps the most obvious and the scariest of trends.  The arts have many competitors for attention, support, and funds, and if allegiances are going to shift rapidly do we have strong enough bonds to supporters and the staff to maintain and grow the bonds.   The arts rely more on loyalty then one would assume from the discussions in blogs and print media.   This lesson is learned over and over again when a company has veers off path and the audience feels betrayed or a move into a new building causes huge upsets amongst subscribers regarding their tickets.  Audiences and long-term donors demand loyalty from the organization, and we rely on their loyalty to help our cash flow, create word of mouth, and simply to show up.  As these bonds fade, what can we as arts organizations rely on?  What new models will we have to create?  We know about the fly-by-night audiences (the choosers) who show up when there is a good review and then disappear until the next one.  If we are not focusing on maintaining the allegiance or an alternative, can we survive in between the hits?  Already we have seen the attempts to address this – star casting, event/festival programming, etc – but what are the achievable adjustments (sacrifices?) that we can make to bridge the potential losses of our most loyal and repetitive customers.

We need to understand what activities pull people away.  It is not as simple as saying what is our competition.  We need to know what the competition offers.  How the experience compares to ours and how they are similar.  We can’t simply declare all entertainment, the internet and the world our competition.  We must focus on the immediate draws and the true alternatives first.  Perhaps this will even lead to further evolution of our programming.

What goes up must come down?

And what about those declining trends: green consumption, a decline in respect for authority, ethical consumption, and extreme-experience seeking?

How do they affect the arts?  Declines in green and ethical consumption present a concern for price and ease out-weighing the supposed “good for you and the world.”   The kick-back was going to happen with or without the recession, after with all of the products labeled organic, energy-efficient or some other qualifier that lets the consumer know they are doing good well shopping and the increasing high prices for said products there was bound to be consumer revolt sooner or latter.  I know I have bought every organic cleaner, as well as, organic food (for the dogs and cat too).  I drive a Prius – which I love.  But we are embracing being “green” and internalizing it into simple day to day tasks, we waste less, recycle, and conserve water.  The articles researchers felt that that green consumption had stalled and would take off again post recession while ethical consumption would recover at a much slower rate.

“When people are focused on feeding their own kids and keeping a roof over their heads, concern about children in other parts of the world, or about animal welfare, drops on the list of priorities.”   It is this idea that many in the arts are struggling with, after all, when it comes down to feeding hunger or the feeding the soul, hunger will always win.  Of course we need both, but base human instinct will take over in times of trouble.  So how do the arts acknowledge this but still voice their value so that when the trend reverses the arts are not lost in the vast number of options?  We do only what we can do, focus on creating great work that is relevant.  We take a serious look at how we run our businesses.  We partner with and assist other groups in our community who are addressing the more immediate needs.  The institution becomes an activist in its community and serves the community in an unselfish way.  We can use our own education programs and community libraries as a example.  We all know that the programs that work in schools are the ones that enter into an equal partnership that addresses the needs of the students over the needs of the organization and shows educators the utmost respect and appreciation rather than condescending attitude.   We have all seen the amazing way that libraries have become the living rooms to many communities and have embraced technology and have maintained being a resource to the community.

As for the decline in respecting authority (“the decline of deference”), this has to be the one thing the arts can immediately turn into an opportunity.  After all the arts traditionally question authority and challenge the norms!  And the downward trend in extreme experience seeking has a companion effect of an increased local presence and awareness that surely we can capitalize on.

When I look around at several of the organizations out there and read the wonderful thinking that is happening out in the field, I have to believe that we can clearly address these trends.  Awareness is half of the battle after all.

Interesting articles about theater, nonprofits and arts from the last week or so – for some reason lots of funny ones!

July 15, 2009 • No Comments

 

 

Time Out’s Adam Feldman on the Nixing of press as Tony Awards Voters http://tinyurl.com/m8p7oj
WSJ’s Wealth blog: Wealthy women are nearly twice as generous as their male counterparts http://bit.ly/17Z9Aa
Report Identifies Characteristics of Sustainable Nonprofits http://bit.ly/IeAOb
Brantley on London musicals: "Dress ’em to the teeth, or strip ’em down to their skivvies." http://tinyurl.com/mtq2zg
Broadway stages hit operatic heights – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/CYx3
After six successful seasons, Darko Tresnjak steps down-Adrian Noble to lead Shakes Festival http://bit.ly/1apEPv
Equity wants cats to return to West End – to combat the rats and mice! |The Stage #theatre http://ff.im/-524vr
Hot off the press: "The Economy Issue:" http://bit.ly/s6Ffj
London’s Daily Telegraph discusses HAMLET http://bit.ly/RpQGj
Time Out NY suggests Palin attempt a Broadway career now that she’s no longer governor. http://bit.ly/EJZRR
Time Out NY suggests Palin attempt a Broadway career now that she’s no longer governor. http://bit.ly/EJZRR
New at Women & Hollywood: Women Matter at the Box Office http://tinyurl.com/kqdrud
Why the arts are essential to helping youth understand the world’s complexities. http://bit.ly/E9DyD
Commence Swooning: Daniel Craig, Hugh Jackman Team Up for Broadway http://bit.ly/SW034
National Endowment for the Arts Distributes $29.8 Million in Stimulus Funds http://bit.ly/1DXYHA
Shakespeare Theatre Company to Furlough Employees Because of Economic Woes http://bit.ly/eNKnk
Foundations Trim Staffs After Assets Slide Lower http://bit.ly/1VCn6c
WSJ to beef up arts/culture coverage with a NY-centric slant. Battle with the NYT is on: http://is.gd/1qzbE
WSJ to beef up arts/culture coverage with a NY-centric slant: http://is.gd/1qzbE
California, Michigan and South Carolina hardest hit by economy, says AP – http://bit.ly/3TJ7NZ
James Gandolfini removed audacious audience member from the stage at "God of Carnage" http://tinyurl.com/ry6oem
NYTimes on philanthropy and kids – http://ow.ly/gvZi 
Tweetraising: The Potential For Charities On Twitter – http://is.gd/1oKGb
Recession adds to challenges for suburban arts – http://shar.es/GFgg
Give & Take: Are Tax-Exemption Challenges Heating Up? http://tinyurl.com/pxcamp

This week’s interesting articles and blog posts!

July 5, 2009 • No Comments

 

 

    From the papers and websites:

     

  • Now, Sarah’s Folly – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/Gj5o

  • Female playwrights find it’s still a man’s world — Newsday.com – http://shar.es/GvPV

  • ‘Girls Night,’ Bachelorettes plays – WSJ.com – http://shar.es/G7al

  • Summer tourism to NYC down sharply. Tourists forgoing Broadway for less pricey atttractions. http://tinyurl.com/n6zegy

  • Mayor Michael Bloomberg – A public insurance plan will help heal a broken health care system – http://shar.es/cj5u

  • How Not to be Hated on Facebook – TIME – http://shar.es/cjaT #fb

  • BackStage on the amazing Bernie Telsey http://bit.ly/EkA1b w/actors Telsey tales-note 1st one http://bit.ly/tQGlP

  • City’s Funds For Film and Television Tax Credits Run Out http://bit.ly/DeLkn

  • Critic Peter Marks says that the power of the critic "theater, like most politics, is local," http://is.gd/1lpVZ

  • Bravo, Sarah Jessica Parker launching art-themed reality series http://bit.ly/ayTQZ

  • Playbill profile of MCC Artistic Director Bernard Telsey’s double life as a casting director – http://bit.ly/11dlAF

  • Kaiser on Arts in Crisis http://bit.ly/hQfwE H

  • Nonprofits Employ Tougher Measures as Downturn Deepens http://bit.ly/18ud9h

  • Twitter Revamps Following and Followers Pages – http://bit.ly/LFlWJ

  • Male Nonprofit Executives Earn 27% More Than Female Leaders, Study Finds http://twurl.nl/hfkofm

  • Kennedy Center to Spread the Knowledge http://bit.ly/1gwGiq

  • Productive but Neurotic New York – Crain’s New York Business – http://shar.es/5W13

  • Charles Isherwood of the NYT on the NT Live Phedre http://bit.ly/lbi00

  • It’s official: T.R. Knight is headed to Broadway http://tinyurl.com/nqz2vz

  • Guthrie Theater Wraps Up Highly Successful Kushner Celebration http://tinyurl.com/mdxv5f

  • Recession Taking a Toll on Nonprofits, Bridgespan Survey Finds http://bit.ly/LMxYt

  • Facebook Could Create a Revolution, Do Good, and Make Billions – NYTimes.com http://ow.ly/fYGc

  • Variety – interesting business/creative model for the musical "Ella": http://bit.ly/OpU1z

  • Bard Stars Esparza, White Help Raise $1.3 Million for Public – Bloomberg.com – http://shar.es/74rL

  •  

     

      From the Blogs (For a daily update check What’s being talked about on the Blogroll regularly.  It is updated several times throughout the day.  Follow me on Twitter to receive a tweet whenever it is updated.)  If there is a blog I am not following and I should please let me know.  You can see the blog roll by category here.:

       

       

      • *’Bums on Seats’ * "PR folk are always asking how… from Hannah Nicklin – Blog

      • The Huffington Post says The Skylight is following… from Artsy Schmartsy

      • Be careful what you say from The Mission Paradox Blog

      • Acceptance Video for the ITBA’s Citation for Excellence from Flux Theatre Ensemble

      • On Theatre Etiquette from Theatre Bay Area Chatterbox

      • July 1, 2009 – Can we practice empathy together? from SEE Blog

      • Paneled on July 8th! from Parabasis

      • What? A Panel About Theatre Blogging? from The Playgoer

      • Ohio Theatre Update from The Playgoer

      • Here’s how to solve the arts funding crisis  from Stage: Theatre blog | guardian.co.uk

      • Have we seen the last of the looooong running musical? from PRODUCER’S PERSPECTIVE

      • Women Actors Make Way Less Money Than Men from Women & Hollywood

      • Valuing Cultural Diplomacy and Engagement for the arts from ARTSBLOG

      • Creative risk pays off for the Guthrie from Carolyn Jack

      • Gender Bias Gets Confusing! (But Poetic) from Parabasis

      • My last e-mail to Emily from The Hub Review

      • Microphilanthropy from Createquity.

      • Thinking Bigger with your Vision, your Board and your funding from For Impact Daily Nuggets

      • Are Nonprofits Good At Social Media? from The Agitator

      • Is Michael Kaiser a Demigod or Merely Superhuman? from Clyde Fitch Report

      • As Mayoral Control of Schools Lapses, Will Arts Education be affected from Clyde Fitch Report

      • On Quality, Value and Criticism from Flux Theatre Ensemble

      • Goodbye and Thanks from AmericanTheaterWeb

      • First Rehearsal to the Third Power from Steppenwolf Theatre Company Blog

      • Free, Says Gladwell: Such a Little Word… from Clyde Fitch Report

      • How is Tony Voter turnout? from PRODUCER’S PERSPECTIVE

      • Gentle Persistence from A Small Change- Fundraising Blog

      • Gender Bias in Theatre — Digging a Little Deeper from Women & Hollywood

      • The “Turn-A-Round King goes National from off-stage right

      • The 500th Post: 16 Nonprofit Marketing (and Life)… from Katya’s Non-Profit Marketing Blog

      • Truth, beauty, trust from The Artful Manager

      • Around the horn: Thriller edition from Createquity.

      • Are Audiences Lemmings or Thinking Lemmings? from Clyde Fitch Report

      • Today’s Must Read from Parabasis

      • O, malignant and ill-boding audience! from Struts and Frets: Kris Joseph

      • I’m lost, but I don’t think I am the only one from off-stage right

      • A Balancing Act from The Halcyon Blog

      • Broadway (officially) lends T.R. Knight ‘Tenor’ role from Entertainment Weekly’s Ausiello Files

      • Why Every Nonprofit Is Accountable For A Vision from SPURspectives

      • And then it’s gone… from Theatre Aficionado at Large

      • How convenient are we? from One Producer in the City

      • Women Directors Breaking Through in Theatre from Women & Hollywood

      • Is the Curtain Closing on Live Theater in America? from Culturebot

      • Jerry Lewis, Marvin Hamlisch taking ‘Nutty Professor’… from Culture Monster

      • A ‘West Side Story’ for the Twitter set from Culture Monster

      • Saving Arts Programs? There’s an .App for That. from ARTSBLOG

      • What You Do Isn’t Worth Paying For: The Message Google… from Technology in the Arts

      • What You Do IS Worth Paying For, We Just Can’t: Non-Profit… from Technology in the Arts

      • New York Arts Fund Offers Cheap Rent to Charities from Give and Take

      • Femme Fight from Blank New World

      • Rock and a Hard Place 3: What Actors Want from a poor player

      • Theatre as Case Study? from Parabasis

      • Fisking Emily Glassberg Sands from The Hub Review

      • The Impact of Giving Circles from Nonprofit Law Blog

      • Politics Of Online Ad Targeting from The Agitator

      • Considering the Creative Ecology from The Artful Manager

      • Keeping The Passion Alive While I am Away from Butts In The Seats

      • Question For My Inside The Arts Family from Butts In The Seats

      • Rehearsing opposites from Struts and Frets: Kris Joseph

      • Breaking the ’5th Wall’… from NEA New Play Development Program hosted by Arena

      • Engaging Dissent from NEA New Play Development Program hosted by Arena

      • I Want To Make Something Really Clear from Parabasis

      • A Good Post From David Dower from Parabasis

      •  An Open Letter to Roundabout from Theatre Aficionado at Large

      • Box? What Box? from Entrepreneur The Arts Blog

      • The Norman Conquests – Table Manners from Everything I Know I Learned from Musicals

      • TWITTER’S TIME HAS COME from Jane Fonda

      • Twitter Guide Book… from Mashable!

      • Theatre is about more than comfy seats | Matt Trueman from Stage: Theatre blog | guardian.co.uk

      • How to Lose Your Audience in One Easy Step from Theatre Bay Area Chatterbox

      • How Broadway Talks to its Audiences Using Social Media from Mashable!

      • North Shore Music Theatre was disaster waiting to happen and the fall-out gives a bad name to theater everywhere.

        June 21, 2009 • No Comments

         

        If anyone ever wonders why theatre leaders have a bad reputation or why nonprofits are treated like the step-children of business, just look to the mess that is North Shore Music Theatre and you can easily see where the misconceptions and stereo-types come from.

         

        North Shore is the perfect example of a bloated organization that had poor leadership and made the wrong decision with every step they took.  Hopefully the story will be a lesson for theatres who are facing difficult financial and artistic decisions.  They say hindsight is 20/20, but the signs of trouble seemed to have been evident for quite some time.

        Theater fell to a medley of misfortune By Geoff Edgers, Globe Staff  |  June 21, 2009

         

        When Barry Ivan took charge of North Shore Music Theatre, he thought he knew what to expect. For 12 years, he had been a steady guest director at the 54-year-old Beverly institution, marshaling dozens of dancers and scores of singers in eye-popping musicals like “West Side Story’’ and “Les Miserables.’’ Just before taking the top spot in 2008, he had directed the biggest-grossing show in the 1,750-seat venue’s history, “High School Musical.’’

         

        All that turned out to be the easy part.

         

        Less than a year after Ivan became artistic director and executive producer, the theater postponed its 2009 season, leaving thousands of loyal subscribers in the lurch. Last week, North Shore announced it was $10 million in debt and would close for good….

         

        At its peak, the theater drew more than 27,500 subscribers and some 300,000 people a year, making it the largest regional theater in New England.

         

        The closing has led to finger-pointing and recriminations, with those loyal to former theater head Jon Kimbell accusing Ivan of poor management and blasting his decision to abandon the organization’s proven holiday-season winner, “A Christmas Carol.’’ But a closer look at the theater’s financial health in its tumultuous final years, which included a devastating 2005 fire and a staff revolt under Ivan, reveals that myriad factors played into the collapse….

         

        It was after 11 p.m. on a summer night in 2005 that the electrical fire started. Lights and sound gear melted; the stage and orchestra pit turned into a soggy, charred mess. The run of “Cinderella’’ was cancelled. The year looked lost.

         

        But Kimbell, whose 25 years in charge saw dramatic rises in attendance and subscriptions, decided he couldn’t just cancel the season.

         

        “Had I closed the place down it would have been impossible to renovate the theater and keep the staff employed,’’ he said in an interview last week from his home in New Hampshire. “I had to keep producing.’’

         

        He accepted an offer to put a pair of North Shore productions into the Shubert Theatre in Boston. He also decided to make improvements to the theater’s in-the-round regular home. Insurance covered some of the work, but the upgrades ran an additional $1.5 million, Kimbell estimated.

         

        The theater then lost $1.5 million more as a result of shows that had to be canceled, according to board chairman David Fellows, a venture capitalist.

        Some theaters could survive that. But North Shore never had an endowment to protect it during down times. When it struggled, it borrowed money.

         

        An endowment is not an insurance plan.  A fire is not an excuse to drain an endowment even if you have one! Why  didn’t the theatre have a capital campaign to cover its losses and additional expenses?  If it did and couldn’t raise the money, why did they do renovations that weren’t covered by the insurance money?   The fire was in 2005.  The debt should have been retired in 3 years or less through a campaign. 

         

        Still, Kimbell’s era would be marked by great growth. Since arriving in 1983, he said, he had boosted the organization’s budget from $1.3 million to more than $14.5 million, its subscriber base from 7,000 to 27,500….

         

        Ivan, whom Kimbell termed a friend after working with him for 12 years, knew the theater had financial problems when he took the job, he said. But it wasn’t until he had started that he recognized their extent.

         

        The information, however, was readily available in the theater’s public filings. North Shore, which had deficits in 2005 ($492,184), 2006 ($107,856), and 2007 ($621,240), had an accumulated liability of about $4.6 million in mortgages and other notes.

         

        Kimbell said the debt was not his fault. His $252,473-a-year job called for him to oversee virtually everything on stage, but not the business side of the organization.

         

        “I haven’t been responsible for the finances of North Shore Music Theatre since something like 1990,’’ he said.

         

        Fellows, the board chairman, doesn’t necessarily blame Kimbell or his successor Ivan.

         

        “No, but more to the point, I don’t hold Barry responsible for that,’’ he said.

         

        Despite its existing debt, theater leaders decided that borrowing more was their only solution. The slumping real estate market foiled that idea. A bank appraiser pegged the 22-acre theater property at $4.9 million. Already owing $5 million, the theater couldn’t borrow from a bank.

         

        Fellows’s wife, April, did loan the theater $400,000, using as collateral a house the theater had for actors staying in town.

         

        Note the previous quote talks about boosting the budget – but from the filings it wasn’t a balanced budget!  I don’t know anyone who would have a problem with raising expenses.  And when did the audience decline begin? 

         

        Also, if the title is Executive Producer or Artistic Director, you ARE responsible for the finances of the organization.  I simply can’t believe Kimbell wasn’t aware of the constant borrowing.  It had to be brought up in a board meeting or some context.  It is part of the job.

         

        It’s nice that Fellow’s is so forgiving of everyone’s behavior (although note that his wife’s loan is secured by the theatre’s property, so she will be paid back when others won’t be).

         

        The great plan Ivan came up with seemed to revolve around raising funds that were more than double what had been raised by the organization in previous years and High School Musical 2 selling at astronomical levels (equal to the previous production).  It’s not surprising that it didn’t work.  This wasn’t a short term issue, this was years of borrowing and poor decision-making.

        When trustees sat down on Dec. 19, the day after opening night, they realized they had a budget buster on their hands, according to Fellows.

         

        The theater went into survival mode. There were 57 layoffs, and the theater stopped taking subscriptions for the 2009 season, though $2.5 million in renewals had come in, much of it money that patrons are not likely to get back.

         

        North Shore kept on just three staffers, plus Ivan, his salary reduced from about $240,000 to $96,000.

         

        In the middle of a devastating economic downturn that shook many nonprofits, the theater tried to raise $4 million to put on another season. Then it lowered its goal to $2 million.

         

        Late last week, a few days after the board announced it had given up, Fellows headed to the theater with a checkbook. He met with the three remaining staffers and wrote out checks for the electric and phone bills.

         

        Looking back, did he regret anything about the way the theater operated over the last year?

         

        “No,’’ Fellows said. “With the economy being what it was, this was unwinnable. I can’t think of anything – knowing what I know now, going back over it – that we would have done differently.’’

         

        Laying off 57 people is not survival mode.  That is shut-down mode.    In the comments section of the article (which are well worth reading) a savvy reader noted the following: 

         

        Looking at Guidestar.org, I see that for the 2006 season, NSMT had $10,446,776 in program revenue and $1,787,948 in donations

        This notes that the decline in budget and sales had begun long before any action was taken.  And the $4M fundraising goal was ridiculous even if a good economy. 

         

        How on earth can the board chair not regret the way the theatre operated in the last year?  What about the last 5 years?

         

        North Shore’s failure is not because of the current economy its because of years of poor management and it lead to the theater not being able to withstand a slight breeze, let alone the gusts of a tough economy. 

         

        It is a sad situation.  It is unfair to the community and industry that the situation was allowed to happen.  Unfortunately, it is the third example this week of bad leadership, between North Shore, BoarsHead and Skylight Opera Theater, it is a pretty embarrassing week for nonprofit theatre.

        Recent articles about the arts, theater, etc. from the last two weeks

        June 18, 2009 • No Comments

         

        A LINK TO A MUST READ POST FOR EVERYONE IN THE ARTS!!! @createequity http://tinyurl.com/mzdl62

        Nonprofits gird for long battle – Crain’s New York Business – http://shar.es/Wk9N

        How Twitter’s Staff Uses Twitter (And Why It Could Cause Problems) – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/WqUN

        Competitive Advantage Is Fleeting (And It’s Okay to Admit It) http://bit.ly/nsMAE

        Company has employees volunteer for charities, pays them, takes tax deduction http://tr.im/nXpv

        Declaration of Arts Ed Rights – http://shar.es/f39I

        The evolving hybrids in corporate structure – The Artful Manager – http://shar.es/2NWv

        Roundabout announces $10 Birdie tickets, sponsored by Bank of America http://bit.ly/l1IBT

        The Columbus Dispatch : Cultural groups tap audiences via social networking – http://shar.es/2Uqe

        Beleaguered City Opera Tries to Hold Off the Ultimate Finale – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/29lH

        Helen Mirren in "Phedre" live broadcast #fb http://shar.es/29gt

        North Shore Musical Theater to Close – http://bit.ly/j3cVq

        NEA reports decline in arts audiences for 2008 | Culture Monster | Los Angeles Times – http://shar.es/rtXO

        Obama Plays It Safe With the Arts – WSJ.com – http://shar.es/fNth

        Obama and the arts, Part 2 http://bit.ly/11njer

        Obama and the arts, Part 3 | Culture Monster | Los Angeles Times – http://shar.es/fNXP

        Tonys boost Broadway box office – Entertainment News, Tony Awards, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/roU7

        Interesting study on gender and Twitter use: http://bit.ly/tg2XE

        Making Art Pay For Art – http://shar.es/r1h4

        The Revolution is Tweeted, Does it Matter?  http://shar.es/r1iu

        Jonathan Demme to Direct for MCC Theater – ArtsBeat Blog – NYTimes.com – http://shar.es/rgem

        Arts, Briefly: Broadway’s New Season Takes Shape http://bit.ly/12rzoO

        NYT reports giving last year fell by largest percentage in five decades: http://rde.me/Y6

        The Associated Press: Amid meltdown, charitable gifts in US fell in 2008 – http://shar.es/fNov

        Charitable Donations Fell by Nearly 6% in 2008, the Sharpest Drop in 53 Years http://twurl.nl/ijbq6x

        Shrek the Musical Comes Closest to a Perfect Social Strategy for Broadway Musicals, http://bit.ly/e0Dz3

        Merce Cunningham plans his retirement – Crain’s New York Business – http://shar.es/f1hc

        Laura Benanti and Steven Pasquale have found happiness on and off stage! http://bit.ly/uPGCp

        Roger Freidman trying to stir it up with Michael Riedel http://bit.ly/69H5Y

        Three sign on for ‘Pillars of the Earth’ http://tinyurl.com/nf5wf2

        BroadwayRadio’s This Week on Broadway podcast post-Tony discussion is now available! http://tinyurl.com/ndsn83

         

        Learn your lessons well. Arts organizations should focus on the art at all times, not just in turbulent times.

        June 15, 2009 • No Comments

        Can we learn enough from current times to not get caught off-guard during the next downturn?  Or is the more important question, how do we learn enough from current times so that our organizations are on the right course in the future?  In other words, how do we right the ship so the next wind doesn’t blow us over?

        Let’s finally be honest, many of us weren’t prepared for the economy to get this bad – personally and organizationally.  And some of us still have our heads in the sand or clouds about what is happening, how long it will last, or where we are on the spectrum of the current economy.  My personal feeling is that for the arts, the bumpy road is still ahead and we are just beginning to see some of the challenges of a new fiscal reality.

        That’s right, not a downturn, a new reality.  Things will get better but they will never be the same.  Perhaps we don’t even really know what they were in the recent past.  Certainly many organizations were not on solid fiscal ground or as healthy as they could have been prior to October of last year.

        But the economy’s largest effect on the cultural institutions and artists hasn’t really had much to do with money.  Instead it has simply divulged some major cracks in the foundation of the country’s arts and culture ecosystem.

        I also firmly that social and economic situations ebb and flow regularly.  We live in a constantly shifting cultural landscape and always have.  Technology, science, and knowledge have a greater effect on culture than economics.  The fundamental problem we face could have been exposed in many ways, a major world war, a deadly pandemic, or natural catastrophe could have opened eyes as well.  It was just that the collapse of the world economy that struck first.

        So what are we learning, what is being exposed, now that our eyes are open, what do we see?  And more importantly what do we do about it?

        I think the last 30 years made us forget the roots of cultural and arts experiences.  We veered away from the true importance and fundamental need of story-telling and expression – whether we were guided to more commercial enterprises or towards building architectural castles that organizations couldn’t run, many of us are off-course and some of us are lost in the wilderness.  The basic concept of why we create art in the first place has been lost in the muckety-muck of running an organization.  We have to re-center ourselves and our organizations.  If the art is at the center of everything we do and every decision we make our organizations will flourish in our communities.  If we think of the art first we will be able to right-size our organizations.  If we put the art out in front we will know what tools and tactics we should use to communicate about the art.  If we talk about why we create art in our specific communities we will create a dialogue with our friends, neighbors, and audiences that will inform the art we do.

        Yesterday, I posted about a theater that fired the artistic director because the board was going to make decisions based on finances.  The board president commented that he knew the business side of the organization and not the theater side.  I emphatically stress – the business is theater.   They are one.

        Everyone in the arts needs to remember the business is the art.  We need our board members to understand this clearly or get off the board.  We need our donors to know this is our priority.  We need our communities to know this is at the heart of each and every step we take.  Most importantly we, artists and administrators, MUST get back to the art, all of our energy and decisions must come first from the art.  Of course this is eventually filtered through the mission, then through our communities needs, and then through a fiscally responsible and sustainable process of execution.

        The best thing we can do to prepare the upcoming challenges, the new reality we are in, and future shifts we will face, is get back to the absolute basics.  I know this topic has come up before, but it can’t come up often enough.

        Ironically, while catching up on my emails this afternoon, I stumbles upon the following Management Tip of the Day from Harvard Business Publishing.  I hope folks take a moment and think about the fact that if the leading publisher in business theories and practices is telling us to focus on “what the point of our work is” perhaps we should listen.  This is how we will flourish in the modern renaissance that has already begun.  Let’s not miss the opportunity.  In this day and age, I don’t think we can afford to blow it.

        From Harvard Business Publishing Management Tip of the Day, June 9, 2009:

        Leadership to Prevent the Next Recession

        There is debate about whether the recession could have been prevented and what role business leaders played in creating it. However, the more important question will be: what have we learned? Here are three rules the recession has taught leaders to follow:

        1. Prevent problems. Business culture focuses on problem-solving, but true leaders need to figure out how to avoid problems in the first place.
        2. Keep two lists. One list is what motivates you and the other is what worries you. Know yourself before you tackle your business and you will be a more effective leader.
        3. Focus on the “so what?” Leaders need to know what the point of their work is. To create stakeholder value? Keep customers? Make the world a better place? Post-recession, what should the ultimate goal of your organization’s work be?

        Today’s Management Tip was adapted from “Three Rules for These Times” by Alan M. Webber – Read the full post and join the discussion

        If you are reading this post via Facebook Notes, please click-thru to Off Stage Right and be counted (and keep reading other posts).

        Completely forgot to post last week’s interesting articles! Sorry

        June 1, 2009 • No Comments

         

        LAByrinth Gets New Leaders http://bit.ly/wSz7O

        TIME’s The Future of Twitter – http://is.gd/KxqB

        Harvard Business School’s New "M.B.A Oath" http://tr.im/mVpb

        Quality too good to pass up – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/XQXL

        Tunesmith takes on "Minister’s Wife" Variety – I hear great things about this show. http://tinyurl.com/mj8q9x

        Hold the Interview | forimpact.org GREAT LINK to Chip and Dan Heath article – http://shar.es/XAGh

        Tips on Filling Out the Governance Section on the New Form 990 (IRS) http://bit.ly/KqeW0

        10 Ways to Think About Social Networking And The Arts (the zen of "free" as a strategy) http://bit.ly/1Dpo5

        Babes in Broadwayland: How Old Is Old Enough? http://bit.ly/ymtpi

        White House Officials Discuss Plans for Social-Innovation Office http://twurl.nl/zbxpum

        Shubert teams with NYC and Co. – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/0mLz

        Stephen Belber: ‘Is it better to write for Hollywood?’ – Los Angeles Times – http://shar.es/0nSL

        Broadway embraces web community – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/mLLj

        Conference Committee report is out on HB2649. Stripped as promised by Rep. Smith. (link at @jimonlight http://is.gd/KPrS)

        A few articles from last week you may have missed!

        May 24, 2009 • One Comment

         

        Forget the Ingénues; Cue the Grown-Ups http://bit.ly/39V6I

        Broadway coming to a screen near you, in 3D http://tinyurl.com/r6zhe6

        L.A. theater etiquette … for the uninitiated http://bit.ly/HFCbC

        4 Ways Social Media is Changing the Non-Profit World – http://bit.ly/Urf1w

        Counting for Tonys- Bloomberg.com http://shar.es/amou

        Reading "Harvard’s Role As a Nonprofit"- http://bit.ly/MIbnN

        Opposing a Tax, Broadway Added a Fee http://bit.ly/qeyH9

        Report from the recent White House briefing for arts advocates – http://bit.ly/VfNaZ

        Prospecting: Donors Show Rising Confidence in the Economy http://tinyurl.com/otr9fg

        Philanthropists Set Spending Deadlines (Wall Street Journal) http://bit.ly/140Fxr

        The Social Data Revolution(s) http://ow.ly/89Tc

        Producer Redoubles Effort to Sell a Triple Comedy http://bit.ly/qjBTe

        Building Sustainable Revenue Models. http://twurl.nl/itfoyu

        TONYS AT A LOSS FOR WORDS – New York Post – http://shar.es/V9m

        Tight Times Loosen Creativity http://bit.ly/149ucW

        Slow transition for Intiman – Entertainment News, Legit News, Media – Variety – http://shar.es/fPX

        The Politics Of Free – Why Giving "Stuff" Away Is An Interesting Business Model http://bit.ly/mPVm1

        Survival Strategies for the Arts | Blue Avocado – http://shar.es/ffb