Pages

Monday, July 11, 2011

E-newsletter Frequency


Clint Watson, an American former gallery owner has a unique take on a way to evaluate your e-newsletter.

You can send your newsletter as often as you like...as long as you don't have more than 2 people unsubscribe for every 1,000 emails you send (.2%) [3]. If you lose more than 2 people out of every 1,000 emails, then you're either sending too often, or you've strayed too far off topic (such as discussing politics in a newsletter where people were expecting art). I sure wish I could remember where I first read the 2% number cited, but I can't, so I did some quick research, and came across these statistics from a 2010 Direct Marketing Association research paper that reports - those who email to their own "house" list have an average unsubscribe rate of .77%. So let's say, based on that research, we'll set an upper bound of 7/1,000 unusbscribers [6].

What I'm recommending is this: for every 1,000 emails you send, you pick a number you can accept to lose...it can be as low as 2 or as high as 7 - but it can't be zero (zero is unrealistic once your list grows past a certain size). Incidently,FineArtViews shoots for .2% (our current unsubscribe rate is .04% (4 out of 10,000)).

How to Measure Your Unsubscribe Rate

First of all, you have to know who unsubscribed. [4] Yes, that means you cannot and should not send your newsletters with your regular email program using the BCC field for all your subscribers. Seriously. Don't. Do. That. What you need to use is a tool made for sending email newsletters like MailChimp, Constant Contact, or Aweber. If you're aFASO customer, we provide an email newsletter manager automatically integrated with your website (and Facebook!) that tracks all this stuff.

The whole article is here.

Funding: Kickstarter

Kickstarter is an interesting site for creators needing funding. The link was provided to me by one of my students at Emily Carr Univeristy of Art + Design. The quote below is from their website.
Kickstarter is the largest funding platform for creative projects in the world. Every month, tens of thousands of amazing people pledge millions of dollars to projects from the worlds of music, film, art, technology, design, food, publishing and other creative fields.
A new form of commerce and patronage. This is not about investment or lending. Project creators keep 100% ownership and control over their work. Instead, they offer products and experiences that are unique to each project.
All or nothing funding. On Kickstarter, a project must reach its funding goal before time runs out or no money changes hands. Why? It protects everyone involved. Creators aren’t expected to develop their project without necessary funds, and it allows anyone to test concepts without risk.
Each and every project is the independent creation of someone like you. Projects are big and small, serious and whimsical, traditional and experimental. They’re inspiring, entertaining and unbelievably diverse. We hope you agree... Welcome to Kickstarter!

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Good News For Artists


From the Huffington Post on arts jobs and the future:

Over the next seven years, job growth in the arts will exceed job growth as a whole, the report states. In fact, according to the report, artistic careers for painters, architects and photographers are expected to increase by 11 percent by 2018, compared to the projected 10 percent total increase in the American labor force.

Due to long-term structural changes, there will be approximately 2,196,100 people working in artist occupations in 2018 compared to 1,977,800 in 2008, the most recent year with data available, according to the report.

Certain arts industries are expected to see especially significant jobs growth. Jobs associated with museums, such as curators, archivists and technicians, are expected to rise 20 percent, or "much faster than average employment growth."

For the full article, click here. Scroll down for a slide show on the ten arts jobs predicted bto be in high demand in the future.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Art Marketing Workshop in Vancouver

I normally do not advocate for people or services that I do not know, but I respect and trust Cam Anderson (one of the founders of Myartclub.com) and he wrote to me to recommend this workshop on visual art marketing. The presenter is American; he has run a gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona for many years. Cam has read his book and is very enthusiastic about attending the workshop himself (see his post here). The event is Thursday, July 21; 5:00 - 9:00; Holiday Inn on West Broadway; $60.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

iPad App Lets Anyone Create Designs with Vintage Type and Art on a Virtual Hand-Driven Printing Press


LetterMpress™, an app just released for the Apple iPad, gives users the hands-on experience of working with traditional letterpress wood type, art cuts, and printing press techniques. Every step of the letterpress printing process is replicated on the iPad for the authentic feel and experience of traditional printing techniques. Users select and assemble vintage wood type and art images, mix colors and ink the type, select paper, and hand-crank the virtual letterpress to produce graphic designs for prints, posters, books, invitations, greeting cards, photo albums and more.

The new app enables finished letterpress designs to be printed, shared via email, Photo Album, posted to Facebook, Tumblr and other social media, or output to graphics applications for incorporating into larger design projects. LetterMpress offers the flexibility and image quality for professional graphic designers, and is easy enough and enjoyable for beginners to use, too.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Professional Development Drop In Self-Help Sessions?

Writing Artist Survival Skills turned me into an “expert” on visual arts marketing when it was published two years ago. As a consequence of my new status, I received invitations to do workshops and make speeches in several south-western B.C. communities. It also earned my a position teaching professional development courses through the Continuing Studies department of Emily Carr University. And last year was spent interviewing a great number of artists for my new book, Making It, that has just been released.

These activities, together with my experiences running a non-profit gallery, have exposed me to thousands of artists who have taught me a great deal about the visual arts profession as it is practiced in this region of the country. The exposure and my new status of “expert” has also produced a demand for private consultations with me from artists seeking to advance their careers.

Most requests for a consultation began with a certain specificity—artists wanting feedback about a specific aspect of their practice such as their online marketing, achieving representation, pricing advice, etcetera—but my discussion with them would always lead to a discussion about their practice in general and I would often find that they needed to address many aspects and not just the specific issue first presented.

I find that contact with me often has artists experiencing their first real consideration of their practice as a business and it leads to further questions and concerns. I also very often hear artists despairing over the loss of contact with peers after graduation out of a training program. They miss the critical response to their work and a forum for discussion of career challenges. In the absence of the opportunity to get peer feedback, they come to me.

Now, after a couple of years of coaching artists, I know two things: I do not want to do career coaching, and artists can be very effectively coached by their peer. The challenge is figuring out a way for visual artists to help each other effectively and inexpensively, and when I recently got involved with an actors’ initiative, I was inspired.

My performing arts friends created a vehicle for themselves that provides an opportunity to hone their professional skills. They made a deal with a local restaurant: They provide a lot of customers to the restaurant on its weakest night in exchange for exclusive use of the space for their event. Their event involves individuals making an oral presentation, with no notes, to an audience of peers for feedback. I did it and it was fabulous and I noticed that the restaurant’s former worst night is now one of it’s busiest. So I got to thinking, what if my local community of visual artists could establish a mutually beneficial relationship with a space to serve our need for peer review?

Were less busy, I would poll/promote interest in a series of drop-in sessions that gave visual artists a chance to present their work for feedback about the work itself or its professional advancement. And, were there interest, I would be out seeking a site that might work for the sessions—a community centre, gallery or school. But I am anchored to my current work, so I wonder if CARFAC could somehow organize and promote an ongoing series of self-development sessions for visual artists here in Vancouver as an experiment? Were someone here in BC to take the lead in such project, I would certainly use all my resources to be of assistance; I just cannot lead the investigation or implementation.

I believe strongly in CARFAC and I wish far more artists were involved with the organization, so I wonder if membership might not grow if CARFAC could facilitate practical sessions such as I propose—free for CARFAC members, thinking that were this to become a popular service, it would drive CARFAC membership in this area. If someone (or a small team of dedicated workers) were to work with me, my monthly newsletter editorial to an estimated 60,000 artists, and my network at Emily Carr University of Art + Design can be a very effective tool for research and advertising.

Galleries are closing here, the economy is unstable, BC has some of the densest communities of artists in Canada, technology is changing our behavior, artists exist in isolation and visual art professional development resources are limited. How many reasons are there for artists to professionally assemble for shared experiential professional learning?

How can we help ourselves is my question and I have proposed one idea to address it. It may not be the best idea, but I am willing to work on whatever the best one is. Do you have a better idea? Let me, or CARFAC, know!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

(Not) Vancouver Riots


My first blog, which I have since removed, featured the work of lots of artists. This blog, would not focus on the work of artists, I decided. This blog is about the business of visual art. But I am providing this reference because of what recently happened in our city.

We had a massive riot downtown after losing the Stanley Cup hockey championships. The thing that went around the world as its iconic image, was a photograph of a couple kissing on the ground while all around them was chaos. The image was viral on web news sites. A kiss and a photograph of it (in the context of a raging riot) mesmerized people.

In London recently, Artist James Caulty re-imagines big events on a smale scale in his new series "Riots In Jam Jars." Caulty describes the purpose of the series as "[appropriating] the mediated and sensational language of our news and communication networks" that are adept at "focusing in on and amping up situations for instant consumption..." He continues, "these tiny acts of violence serve as snapshots of a greater and vastly more complex reality." Link.

When your art and news meet, things can go crazy for an artist—sometimes the link can be serendipitous; sometimes it is engineered.