Posts Tagged ‘Northwestern’

Northwestern Summer Session Revisited

Friday, August 5th, 2011

I love getting invited back! This was my second seminar at Northwestern’s stand-out summer session, which helps prepare some very talented young singers for their college careers.

    MUSIC 330-0, A Vocal Career Seminar
    1 week. M Tu W Th F 6:30 – 10pm

    In these classes you will learn to audition for an agent, an opera company in the US and Europe, and a musical theater company. We will find three pieces for you that will make you the most marketable and help you to perfect them. Also discussed: How to present yourself most effectively by clothes and grooming; creating a useable resume and bio; advice on the proper picture for your voice type; tax issues. Guest speakers include a New York agent for opera and musical theater, a tax specialist, photographer, stage directors. Class is limited to 12 singers and 30 auditors.

    Pamela Hinchman

Is there anything better than that in the performance world, too? When you perform a gig and get invited back, you know that you have earned the respect of your employer. That is the free market moving and working and voicing (pun intended) its opinion.

It was nice to see a few familiar faces and offer them something new on the second time around. We were able to dig a little deeper and help this group think critically about what it is they want and how to accomplish it.

And we had some fun too. That is part of Pamela‘s brilliance as a teacher: people learn more when they enjoy it!

Northwestern Summer Session is Win-Win

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Voice teacher and soprano Pamela Hinchman does a very smart thing. Before her teaching year starts up at Northwestern, she teaches a week-long summer seminar which is a fantastic win-win.

The singers get geared up for audition season and get loads of new information and experience. It is only a week-long commitment, yet it is a great line on their resumes (which can be difficult to fill while in school). The singers were excited about participating even as I arrived for my seminar on the final day of the session.

And for Pamela and the other faculty, this program is a fantastic opportunity to get to know several singers from their studios before the year starts. The session is also an excellent marketing tool for the school. Holding a week-long summer session (with a simple audio recording application process) is a great idea and I think other schools of music would do well to follow suit.

From Northwestern’s Website:

“In these classes you will learn to audition for an agent, an opera company in the US and Europe, and a musical theater company. We will find three pieces for you that will make you the most marketable and help you to perfect them. Also discussed: How to present yourself most effectively by clothes and grooming; creating a useable resume and bio; advice on the proper picture for your voice type; tax issues. Guest speakers include a New York agent for opera and musical theater, a tax specialist, photographer, stage directors. Class is limited to 12 singers and 30 auditors. To apply as a participant, send a resume and tape or CD of 3 pieces to Summer Session Office, Northwestern University Bienen School of Music, 711 Elgin Road, Evanston, IL 60201.”

This was the first seminar at which I delved into “push” versus “pull” marketing. I really saw some light bulbs go off so I will certainly address this in future seminars.

Push marketing is essential to our business in singing and we do it all of the time. We send application forms, sing auditions and learn excerpts to perform callbacks. These efforts are focused on landing a single gig. They represent short-term strategies targeted toward a specific customer.

In all of the frenzy of applications, pull marketing seems to fall by the wayside. Pull marketing is all about cultivating long-term relationships and working to fill out the value of what you offer. Offering to cover a role for free when you are singing chorus is pull marketing. Soliciting donors on behalf of your home-town regional company is pull marketing. Starting your own recital series is pull marketing.

Even small efforts such as these mentioned can make a major impact on your career. Pull marketing is more that just being a team player and good colleague, it is being a savvy business person and ultimately it is essential toward building a sustainable career.

A giant thank you goes out to Dorothy Byrne for turning me on to this concept and terminology! Among many other talents, Dorothy works with highly-successful singers to refine their marketing strategy. She takes a deep personal interest in helping singers and is a genuine force for good in our business.

Northwestern Seniors — Part 2

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

We met on a Saturday afternoon over at the library. Great facilities at NU.

I have now created an automated tutorial in the software. It is the first thing that the user comes to — a 27 step tutorial that takes about 5 minutes to complete. This was the first time I have gotten the opportunity to incorporate the tutorial into the seminar and it worked quite well. I have since tweaked a few questions, but all in all, it taught the fundamentals of databases quite well.

We were able to dive deep with this group. We finished by discussing how to integrate with Google Calendar using iCal and iPhone. I think we bought some time toward the end because of the new automated tutorial.

More to come.

Northwestern Seniors — Part 1

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

This was the first time I have separated the seminar into two different sessions — this took about 45 minutes and we had a good discussion of the landscape. We will meet again this weekend for the second portion. I was very excited to secure the multi-media room again for the training.

Another new thing: we compared the survey results from other groups with our group. I think people’s brains really sparked up when they were able to see how their group (Northwestern Undergraduate Seniors) compared with Roosevelt Masters, DePaul Masters, Chautauqua Voice students, and Sugar Creek Young Artists. Heck, I was really interested to see too.

While I don’t want to share the specifics, I will say that the group has a fairly wide range of experiences and by and large has established good professional habits for their “artistic level.”

Northwestern Masters Workshop in “Multi-Media Room”

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

We followed-up with a few Northwestern Master’s students in a great spot over in the Library. This time I plugged in directly to a high-resolution flat screen TV. So much better than projectors. Way to go Northwestern.

As with DePaul, we followed a highly structured tutorial to learn the skills and benefits of using a database.

It was a small group so we were able to address really specific questions which again was a great learning experience for me. One of the students had direct experience with FileMaker through a marketing research “day job.” It was thoroughly helpful for me both in learning about how people use Velvet Singer and also in brainstorming ways to reach more people. Thank you, thank you.

DePaul and Northwestern Plans

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

It is the last day of the year and I am thrilled to think of what 2010 will bring for as many singers as I can reach.

Over the holiday break I was excited to start locking in some dates and times with DePaul and Northwestern for January seminars. Great stuff.

I did some poking around and discovered that both DePaul and Northwestern have excellent “smart classrooms.” I think having desks, lights that dim, good sound, whiteboard, etc. will make for a much higher-impact and more efficient session.