
Plan Your Work, Work Your Plan
 By
Peter Spellman
Scenario
1: A talented band wants a record deal but their gig schedule is
erratic and members' day jobs keep sucking their energies so there's
not much left for anything else. Scenario 2: A terrific songwriter
keeps churning out tunes weekly but they just sit in her notebook
while she dreams of someday recording them. Scenario 3: A singer
and producer team up and record two cuts for release but then realize
all the cash has gone to recording and manufacturing with none left
for promotion and marketing. Scenario 4: A music school graduate
with great promise sits in his insurance job cubicle and wonders,
" What went wrong?"
Sound familiar?
After fifteen years of working in artist development I've become painfully
aware of a tremendous amount of musically-gifted talent being squandered.
Some musicians progress in fits and starts--one step forward, two
back; two steps forward, one back...and so on. Others are just spinning
their wheels, stalled. Still others are going in circles. A few, perhaps
the most tragic, are spinning their wheels and going in circles.
What accounts for all this misguided effort? It could be many things:
a lack of talent, drug abuse, laziness, etc. But, more often than
not, musicians tend to get nowhere because of the absence of a map.
A map is a plan that points to your destination and lays out the best
routes to get there. Maps give us the "bird's eye view", the lay of
the land so to speak, so that our journey toward our destination is
discernable and deliberate, rather than haphazard and blind. Singer-songwriter
Kelly Pardekooper of Iowa city put it this way: "The bottom line for
me is that until I had a plan written down in black and white, I was
just swimming in the dark, I had no anchor for my boat, no Felix for
my Oscar."
Those planning to be doctors and investment bankers have a fairly
clear path to their respective destinations: four years of college,
followed by several more years of specialized study, and then onto
a"job". The requirements are clear; the maps come pre-packaged. Musicians,
on the other hand, don't usually have the luxury of a clearly-defined
"job" waiting at the end of their preparation. The musician's map
will have hundreds of potential paths, and will be as unique as the
life and talent it's guiding...
Read the
full article here.
Peter Spellman is the director of Music Business Solutions (www.mbsolutions.com)
and author of "The Self Promoting Musician: Strategies for Independent
Music Success" (Berklee Press). Music Business Solutions works to
help musicians, songwriters and industry careerists start and grow
a successful music business through vital information and creative
management strategies. |