So Eric really believes in this. I tried it a while back and emailed it to all my friends and NO ONE followed me...
So here it is for you all. Hope Eric is right....
http://twitter.com/jodisc
So Eric really believes in this. I tried it a while back and emailed it to all my friends and NO ONE followed me...
Theatre Artists do us a tremendous favor.
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Here are all of the links and topics for posts from SPNM:
Overview
Inspiration
Capacity
Leadership
Scale
Strategic Service Vision
Mission and Strategic Triangle - Legitamacy & Support / Organization / Mission
Value Chain
Market Research
Measuring Impact
How do you define the impact of theatre? It seems easy to quantify the work of other non-profits. But what about the arts?
In nonprofits we a talk a lot about assessment and measurement. “You need to do an assessment of your thinking before you invest!”
In business you need to be ahead of the curve. You need to manage situations – be in a constant state of awareness, assess how things affect your organization, and have the ability to act (create change). You are in a constant state of assessment. But can you assess a situation without some form of quantitative analysis.
I can hear everyone screaming – well Jodi, just count the number of people in the audience and you will know how you are doing, but I just don’t think that is actual analysis of whether or not we are fulfilling our mission. Seating capacity has its place, but it comes in later.
So how would you do an auditable analysis of the Playhouse’s attempts to fulfill its mission? What data do we need to tell our story? And how do we get it? How do we add evaluation to the planning of programs?
You can evaluate the process or you can evaluate the impact.
So how do you audit the results?
First and foremost, we can measure outcomes through the audience’s future participation in more Playhouse events. The number of events an individual attends reflects a deeper experience and more engagement. If an individual participates in play club, talk-backs it reflects a deeper experience and more engagement. If they bring their children to the playhouse for education programs it reflects a deeper experience and more engagement. If they donate money or time to the theatre they are having a deeper experience and are more engaged. And yes, if they are deeper engaged they will bring friends of like minds and seating capacity will increase.
Next, we can measure if we are adding to the theatrical canon by the on-going life of plays and musicals we develop and premiere.
We can watch the progress of our education programs participants. We can see if they apply the skills learned in theatre programs to other areas of learning and life.
But if we just count seating capacity without the assessment of audience experience and engagement aren’t we are measuring the effectiveness of marketing and public relations not the effect of the programming.
So, how do you evaluate in the impact. We need to identify what we need to learn about results to assess impact. We need to know the intended impact and search for the unintended impact. We have to talk with people before and after they attend performances or education programs. We have to discipline ourselves to track audience and participants for several years.
In practical terms to plan for such assessment, our staff (the entire staff from interns to, well, the Artistic Director and I) need to know WHY we are producing a particular play or why we are offering a particular education program. The staff needs to decide what we want the experience to be for each “client” from first contact to follow-up contact. The entire staff needs to participate fully in all aspects of programming and be able to talk about the programming if intimate detail and with great knowledge. If the entire staff is not fully versed in the programming – the audience never will be.
So with our crazy busy schedules what should we do? It is pretty obvious. The staff should talk about what we do with each other. We should talk about the community we live in on the local, national, and global level. If we have to schedule these discussions until we learn to do it organically we better start scheduling!
Labels: actors, audiences, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
So, back at work, Monday morning. How do I keep the inspiration alive?
So, I am back home, already have been to the theatre. I feel tremendously inspired after having one of the best weeks of my life. Of course the information was not new. But when you live it every day, it is nice to step away and look at it from a different angle.
For all nonprofit programming, a balance portfolio is necessity. Safe bets mixed with risk taking.
If your day is 100 percent efficient you've failed. Self imposed lobotomy.
Brain-spasms can be answered in a flexible culture. .
Efficiency in the extreme stifles agility to react and learn.
Organization can locked in by its own set of rules.
I don't know is a great answer!
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Labels: actors, audiences, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Labels: actors, mission, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
We talked a lot today about learning as well. A leader should orchestrate the process of learning not dictate it (see things to work on above). But you have to be a rapid learner (see positives above).
What is the question to which this process is the answer? What is the decision process (the weighted criteria)? Exploration, invention, and noticing are longer processes and more ambiguous. It's all about pacing.And finally we ended the day talking about formulate non-profit strategy, in the road from mission to programming there is an interim step a platform/theme.
Which brings me back to a question I have written 10 to 20 times in the last two days.
WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF RELEVANT? Practical not literal.
Won't you be glad when I get back from Harvard!
Labels: actors, leadership, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, strategy, theater, theatre, vision
In July 2008 I particpated in the Harvard Business School's Social Enterprises Executive Education program Strategic Perspectives for Nonprofit Managers (SPNM). It was one of the best and most transforming weeks of my life.
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
I am off in a few minutes for an Executive education seminar at Harvard. I have spent the last week complaining about how much reading there is to do to prepare and how a week out of the office will create so many issues when I get back, but I have to be honest, I love these kind of things. It is a great opportunity to free your mind from the office day to day activities and THINK.
Last night was opening night. The show went well.
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre
Several months ago the Playhouse's new website had its official debut. Each time I visited, I was haunted by the link in the upper right hand corner of the screen labeled "Playhouse Blog." I tried several drafts for an initial entry. Only one that I had the confidence to share with our marketing director (it was all about all the wonderful teacher I had that helped me discover a career in theatre).
Labels: actors, musicals, nonprofit, plays, theater, theatre