Posts Tagged ‘Webinar’

Free Webinar: Live from CoOPERAtive Program, Saturday July 7th

Tuesday, July 3rd, 2012

I am really jazzed for the opportunity to teach another seminar this Saturday at Laura Brooks Rice’s program at Westminster Choir College, The CoOPERAtive Program. We will have a large group of some fantastic young singers and expect a good crowd to join in online!

    Business of Singing Seminar

    10:30 am – 1:00 pm EASTERN time
    Saturday July 7th, 2012

Laura was wise to open this up for FREE. Email bill@velvetsinger.com to reserve a spot and I will email you the seminar materials (slides, preparation assignment, etc.). Then at 10:30 am EST, click this link:

Business of Singing Seminar

CoOperative Program 2012
10:30 – 1:00 pm EST, Saturday July 7th

“The Greatest Hits”
Getting the Most Out of Your Plans

This seminar will utilize what I have found to be the greatest exercises and discussion topics to help initiate a new vision and optimism for your career. The goal for our time together is simple: to help you bring the same level of instinct, polish and joy to “the business side” of what you do as you naturally bring to your singing.

  • The Two Halves of the “Business of Singing”: Process vs. Tools. We will hit both the process (what, why, when) and the tools (how) during this session.
  • Artistic Business Planning 101. Why you need one, what goes in it, when do you revisit it, what do you do with it?
  • Approaching Your Business Plan from the Top-Down. What are the most basic elements of your story at this point? How can you make that story compelling and interesting to other people? How can we make this tap into your creative and fun side?
  • Business Plan Take 1. We will take some time during the session to get started creating your strengths & weaknesses list, goals, artistic interests and 1,5,10-year ambitions. Remember to bring your computers! This is when we will tie in your pre-seminar preparation.
  • Action Items. After going on that journey, jot down a few “action items” that require follow-up after the session. I will ask you to pick one action item and read it to the group.
  • Sharing Your Business Plan. You will identify three contacts to share your business plan with, and make a plan for when, what to share, and the specific reason why you are sharing with this person. I will also ask that you email me your results in a week’s time.
  • Resume Formatting. How to use MS Word to format a really nice-looking resume! Review the most common pitfalls I see and show you a better way.
  • Singer Resources. We will flip through a list of the most important technologies and web sites that each singer should know about and know how to use.
  • Velvet Singer 3.0 Sneak Peak / Feedback. I have been hard at work on a new version of my software, and I am excited to show some things off and get your take.

Wesminster 2011: Breaking New Ground

Saturday, November 19th, 2011

This fall we broke ground once again at Westminster!

Of all the places that I give seminars, it seems that Westminster Choir College of Rider University is consistently pushing me to break new ground. I know that the same is true for their faculty and students alike. It is just in the water over there. They consistently roll out new and effective initiatives such as their online offerings (including music theory, pedagogy and webinars) and they are pushing ahead on a successful capital campaign (see article on recent $3 million gift) for a new performance venue. That will make a huge difference to this growing school.

Saturday Seminar — Continuing Ed & Cross-Discipline

The office of continuing education, enthusiastically spearheaded by Executive Director, Scott Hoerl teamed up with Joyce Tyler of career services to bring me to town. They were excited to bring these new offerings to enrich the Westminster community!

Velvet Singer Business Plan Saturday Seminar


For the first time, Westminster brought me in for a Saturday seminar marketed to a continuing education audience of cross-discipline artists. The result was a tremendously successful dialog among a highly diverse group of musicians: a classical guitar player with heaps of talent and exposure, a folk/classical singer with an entrepreneurial spirit, a singer who performed with City Opera for over thirty years, a medical doctor with a budding new product.

I offered some straight presentation, we broke up into small groups and attendees shared feedback and creative new ideas. It was a fantastically collaborative day, so much so that the students requested that I put together a class contact list so they can all stay in touch.

And I was able to continue the dialogue with several musicians even after the session. I helped one young lady refine her marketing strategy on her website. She offers several “products” and I was delighted to help her think through how to position herself as a multi-threat, without being a jack-of-all-trades master-of-none.

Hats off to Westminster. Drawing continuing education students back into the university setting is no small feat, and Westminster does it better than most, offering graduate credits for a certain number of Saturday Seminars. In these economic times, developing new revenue streams for a university is a particular challenge.

New Seminar: Engineering Art — How Applying Science Can Propel Your Artistic Pursuits

I developed a new seminar for my session with Laura Brooks Rice‘s Graduate Audition’s Class that I affectionately call “Cool things I learned in Engineering School.”

Velvet Singer Engineering Art Pre-Game


In preparing for my seminar with Westminster’s graduate level Audition class, and in looking through the roster, I realized that many of these students will have previously attended both my organizational seminar and my business plan seminar. Many of these singers were present in 2010 when I presented to a large portion of the Westminster vocal department, and many of these singers attended The CoOPERAtive Program this past summer. So this was an opportunity to develop new material.

I began developing this new material a few months ago, by asking the question: how did I arrive at my current perspective, and how can I take a group of people down a similar journey? How can I show (ie. “show don’t tell”) them some of the principles I learned in engineering school and in the consulting world? How do I boil down my life experiences into two hours?

Certainly I would want to take them through some cool case studies and show them some powerful technologies. But I don’t want to overwhelm them or distort the bottom line message in a cloud of whiz-bang…

It could not have gone better! This group was engaged in the discussion and shared some very interesting insights into several very complex demos and fun games.

Velvet Singer Card Chicken Game


Students laugh playing a game I made up called “Card Chicken” modeled after the famous Prisoner’s Dilemma hypothetical, to demonstrate probability and uncertainty.

Being late in the semester, and having worked with so many of these singers before, I wanted the discussion to be part “Bill Nye the Science Guy” and part motivational speaker. Above all, I wanted it to be fun and encouraging. In fact, the second slide of my presentation was simply two words: Get Psyched. Why? Because you have the power to use your brain and understand where it is you are and where you want to go, as my not-so-beloved high school chemistry teacher used to say.

With that framework, I had a total blast picking some of the most compelling and interesting demos and case studies from my background that supported what I called my nine principles from engineering. Things such as:

  • Qualitative vs. Quantitative Research
  • Organizing / Sorting / Queries
  • Specialization
  • Decision Theory
  • Optimization
  • Synthesis and Reporting

We took a look at the NASA Challenge tragedy and the famous case study that Harvard Business School developed, as a way to show the power of displaying data in meaningful ways. And we also spent a good amount of time tinkering, exploring and unpacking the immensely compelling data loaded into Hans Roesling’s http://www.gapminder.org/world/ site. (If you haven’t killed two hours here, be sure you block out some time because it is going to blow your mind.)

The bottom line was to help these singers “get psyched” about their future. You absolutely can think your way into a career in the arts. There is no limit to what we can do when we have the proper framework, a deep understanding of the truth about where we are and tools to make it happen!

Westminster Gathers A Crowd

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Earlier this month, we kicked off our east coast seminar tour at Westminster Choir College. Everyone got involved to make sure that this seminar was a huge success. It was amazing to see the voice faculty (represented by Laura Brooks Rice), career services (represented by Joanne Lisa) and the office of the dean take such a large interest in what we were doing. They gathered quite a crowd of undergrads, masters students, alumni and faculty.

Velvet Singer SeminarMore important than the size of the session was the buzz that attendees felt going in. The atmosphere determines so much of what singers get out of the seminar, and Velvet Singer presenters only have so much control. When the singers arrive early to find school photographers snapping pictures and a flawless multimedia setup, the singers put on their thinking caps and get ready to be challenged.

Students at Westminster Choir College seem to possess a healthy sense of idealism and optimism. They generally feel fairly well-equipped for the real world and confident about their abilities to contribute. Their perspective also helped make this seminar unique. We stepped through our usual exercises to help brainstorm singing opportunities and they were very quick to offer creative possibilities.

What are you going to do differently?

These singers also seemed to have a very good sense of their priorities and goals. From Dissonance To Harmony challenges each participant to not only identify their top career priorities, but also to boil those down into a set of goals. Priority categories include:

  • Product Refinement
  • Differentiation
  • Innovation
  • Customer Relations
  • Sales & Advertising
  • Marketing & Growth Strategy
  • Stakeholder Communication
  • Reporting & Analysis
  • Planning & Forecasting
  • Risk Management
  • Operations
  • Financial Planning & Development
  • Cost Management

This group’s action items were some of the best of any seminar I have ever given. Singers really understood the value of moving 1) from priorities 2) to goals and then 3) to action items. It is not enough to stop working at a list of goals. What are the simple, tangible, concrete things you are going to differently as a result of this seminar?

Certified Instructor Program Launched

This seminar also represented a major milestone for Velvet Singer, LLC. This was our first seminar to incorporate the help of a Velvet Singer Certified Instructor, Mezzo Soprano Danielle Wright. Danielle introduced the concept of action items and prepared the singers that their proclamations should be:

  1. Succinct
  2. Measurable
  3. Specific
  4. Actionable

Maybe Danielle is also part of the reason that this seminar’s action items were among the best!

Webinar This Summer

Westminster College of the Arts’ Executive Director Scott Hoerl also shared some of his day with us. He has been instrumental in developing a series of Webinars for students and alumni and Velvet Singer is thrilled to become a part of this series starting in the summer of 2011 through The CoOPERAtive Program.

Thank you Laura Brooks Rice, Margaret Cusack, Joanne Lisa, Joyce Tyler, Scott Hoerl, Dean Robert Annis, Danielle Wright and all of the talented and intelligent singers of Westminster!