Thanks for this report!
Merry Kay Shernock
381 VT Rte 12 NO
Northfield, VT  05663
 
(802)595-3972

--------------------------------------------
On Mon, 2/24/14, Alan Winston <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: Re: [Organizers] booking as a team?
 To: [email protected]
 Date: Monday, February 24, 2014, 6:17 AM
 
 The Palo Alto, California Contra
 dance has a programming committee with six or so members.
 
 The two main approaches to booking staff here are
  - send out a 'call for dates' to local callers and
 musicians; if they're interested in playing they let us know
 when they're available, and then
    a program is assembled, working in chunks
 of three months at a time.
  - Track out of town people who are coming to the vicinity
 for dance camps, etc, and sometimes solicit them for
 off-cycle (we're usually Saturday,
    but can have a special Monday) dates, or
 participate in tours or mini-tours where out of town people
 play local-ish dancers over a week or weekend.
    There's usually more lead time on this
 than on the other approach.
 
 I'm the "booking coordinator" for the committee, which means
 I send out the call for dates, collate the responses, and
 make a proposed schedule out of that.  I circulate the
 draft schedule to the rest of the committee for responses;
 they might notice things I haven't.  (I don't always
 get to our dance because I'm gigging elsewhere or have some
 non-dance thing going on, so it's good to have other eyes
 and ears who can note when bands or callers have off nights,
 show improvement, etc.)
 
 Another committee member tracks the out of town people more
 closely.  Another committee member organizes our
 American Dance Week and assembles pre-and-post Dance Week
 gigs.
 
 To keep from getting all our hands crossed, we communicate
 on an email list, and we've recently taken to using Google
 Calendar to track dates that have been booked ahead of the
 regular booking cycle.
 
 This produces a lot of email but everybody on the committee
 is generally aware of what's going on.  (It doesn't
 work so well when trying to figure out goals beyond our
 defaults of enjoyable evenings and nurturance of new talent,
 and I'd actually like a bit more face to face than we get,
 but it does work pretty well for divided responsibilities
 without a lot of conflict or confusion, and it's less work
 for me as booking coordinator than if I were trying to also
 regularly woo out of town bands and callers.)
 
 
 Whether anything like this approach would work for you
 depends on personalities - this is Silicon Valley and we're
 all fairly techy - and your particularities of booking.
 
 
 - Alan
 
 
 On 2/23/2014 9:52 AM, Dana Dwinell-Yardley wrote:
 > Hi all,
 > 
 > I am training to be the booker for the Montpelier, VT,
 dance under the
 > guidance of long-time booker Cindy Taska. We are
 considering adopting a
 > team approach to booking -- in case something happens
 to one person, to
 > share the load, to share the knowledge, to allow for a
 balanced booking
 > perspective, etc.
 > 
 > We're finding it difficult to figure out how to share
 the job in a way that
 > doesn't create more work for both people, though. Does
 anyone else book for
 > their dance as a team, or do you all have one person
 doing your booking?
 > 
 > Do you have any other booking tips or "best practices"
 of booking, things
 > you do that are essential to making the whole process
 work well, while I'm
 > asking?
 > 
 > Thanks for the shared wisdom!
 > Dana
 > 
 
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