Perfect Career Predictor?

by:

Joe Patti

Reflecting upon my use of Robert Pirsig’s Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance to discuss the definition of quality, I wondered if my support of his grading experiment might have been an early predictor of my involvement in the arts.

It seems to me that a person who valued insightful comments on their papers might be more likely to gravitate toward professions that provided more intangible rewards like esteem and self-actualization rather than high pay and material perks. On the other hand, I wonder if people who valued a specific letter or numeric grade over extensive commentary might be more likely to join professions with clearer remuneration.

I did a brief search for studies that might have examined this and didn’t find anything. I suspect the failure to do so is more a factor of not knowing what terms to use in a search than lack of research related to this topic.

About three years ago I included a Harvard Business Review article about the single perfect customer satisfaction survey question in an entry about customer service. (How willing would you be to recommend company X to a friend?)

I would be interested to know if there is any research out there that might support the dependability of using a single question to determine if someone in high school or college was disposed toward a career in the non-profit field based on what form of feedback they valued most on their assignments.

If there was a correlation between preferred form of feedback and profession, perhaps the perfect career path question might be: “What do you find more valuable in assessing the progress of your academic career, a letter/numeric grade or extensive written/verbal feedback?”

Does anyone know of research studies that might prove or disprove this notion?

The Bionic Theatre Manager

by:

Joe Patti

I have been away for a few days, thus the lack of postings on my usual schedule. My thoughts have not been far from arts management though so I offer up the following article on the dearth of qualified theatre managers which appeared in the January 2007 American Theatre. The article was scanned and posted by Brooklyn College so some portions of the text may not be completely legible.

Jim Volz echoes the concerns I heard at the Arts Presenters conference regarding succession planning. The primary aim of the piece is to examine the academic and non-academic paths to executive level leadership of theatres. There are a lot of people worried about the lack of highly skilled leaders coming up the ranks to replace those who retire or are lured away.

The shortage of savvy, experienced theatre managers is evidenced by the number of long time managing directors of flagship regional theatres…who have been recently been recruited away or have played musical chairs with other theatres. Oftentimes, there’s a demoralizing institutional toll (that’s seldom talked about) when management leaders leave their theatres; this definitely has a snowball (or avalanche) effect on the board and the remaining personnel…

…Tired of the turnover and dealing with what many consider the “two-headed monster,” many boards turn to an already beleaguered artistic director to run the whole show.”

While sexier areas of acting and directing lure many people of a theatrical bent away from management, the elements Volz and many quoted in the article blame for the shortage of quality managers is that other profit and non-profit endeavors promise better pay and quality of life. Though managers are hardly alone since actors, directors and technicians all experience the same scenario.

A debate that appears throughout the article is whether academic training is necessary for success. Like the Bionic Man I allude to in my title, people can’t decide what needs to be implanted by others to make you strong and what muscles one can develop by oneself. Everyone seems to agree that practical experience is an absolute. There is an implication in the comments of some (perhaps due to the way they were quoted) that academic training may not be necessary at all.

My personal view is that formal classroom training in legal matters-contracts, accounting, human resources– can avoid a lot of serious trouble in the future. Formal training in personnel relations and conflict resolution practices can avoid a lot of heartbreak and resentment in a field where high pressure, long hours and low pay can breed a great deal of both. I can speak from experience that instruction in writing and graphic design elements won’t make people into good writers. But unless you are possessed of talent and discipline, you probably won’t be offered a paid opportunity to hone your skills with experience.

It only makes sense that if you were teaching someone all these skills, you would place it in the context of theatrical practice with courses on that very subject. There is a high likelihood, after all, that a theatre manager may wear the hats of marketer, bookkeeper, personnel director, programmer and graphic designer. So in my opinion, an academic program with opportunities for good practical experiences can be a real value for a fledgling manager.

One thing that many in the article agreed upon is that managers of the future need to be possessed of management skills and artistic vision. Given that the article mentions managers don’t have the time to mentor subordinates or even each other and the report on the field that Neill Archer Roan presented to Arts Presenters said that managers rarely found the time to review and assess articles on the latest research and theory, the only place a manager is likely to acquire these skills is in a formal training program.

In reality, the proficiency that really needs to be acquired is flexible thinking. As students were taking classes to master the classes of an academic program, they should be constantly challenged to assess emerging situations in arts, entertainment in the world as a whole. The act of evaluation should be second nature by the time a student emerges from a program.

While I obviously think people should possess solid training in all the skill and knowledge areas I mention above, John McCann of Virgina Tech is singing my song in the article when he is quoted as saying-

Today’s focus is preparing folk to manage and lead yesterday’s organizations…The solution, McCann believes, is to “focus more on leadership competencies and less on functional management training-challenge young potential leaders to be creative, intuitive and open to new ideas.”

Your Acting Is A Little Transparent

by:

Joe Patti

Just this week I was thinking back to an article I did an entry on back in 2004 where MIT students were trying to create a system whereby the Miami Symphony would be conducted by a hologram of a conductor standing in Germany. Unfortunately, the article I linked to back then is no longer available. But I was wondering whatever came of that effort.

Today via Artjournal.com there is an piece on Discovery News about how an actor in Orlando, FL and actors Canada both performed onstage in Illinois via the wonders of the internet. The Floridian and Canadians appeared on screens and not as holograms, but it looks like technology and practice might be moving in that direction.

This isn’t the first time this sort of thing has happened. Back in June I did an entry about Play On Earth, an effort which had actors on three continents interacting with each other. “An object hurled in Singapore flies halfway round the world and hits a character in Newcastle,” reports a Guardian article.

Who knows, by the time the technology to create viable holograms is developed, efforts like the two mentioned here may have changed the whole dynamic of live performance — not to mention the definition of what constitutes “live.”

Technology Tip-Virtual Townhall

by:

Joe Patti

By some serendipity while I had my car radio scanning stations, I heard a story about a company offering the opportunity to hold massive conference calls.

A company called TeleTownHall uses voice over internet protocol connected to their technology to enable you to call up to 30,000 people in seconds. When people answer, they are asked to hold the line if they would like to participate in a townhall meeting. According to the website, 30,000 calls yields between 4-6,000 participants.

The service is marketed mostly to politicians and business executives, but it doesn’t take much imagination to see how it could be used to solicit feedback or survey your community in order to discover how you can better serve them. You can also limit the calls to patrons and donors or similar membership groups.

You can keep control of the thousands of voices you have invited via a web interface.

A Web-based control screen enables the VIP to see the name and location of every person they are speaking with, and to invite each person to ask a question or to raise a concern. As dialogue begins, everyone can hear both the VIP and the selected speaker. In addition to this feature, the VIP can choose to pose questions to the entire group, and tally the answers that the audience gives via touchtone response on their telephone keypads

When it is all over, you receive a report of who participated, who answered the survey questions and what the results were.

They bill the service as being affordable but given that their primary clients have people donating $1500.00 at a time pop, that may be a relative term. There is no mention of what their rates may actually be. This may be an exercise arts organization can do periodically as grant funding for surveying allows.