Posts Tagged ‘career advice’

What We Can Learn From “Survivor: Allstars”

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

As the regular readers of YII (and subscribers to the Mogul Mindset eBlasts) know, YII is a HUGE fan of “Survivor” and other reality shows. Reality shows are chock full of life lessons one can apply to all aspects of life, especially one’s career.

After all, what is your office but an isolated oasis where you are forced to coexist with other humans for long periods of time, doing the “civilized life” version of building shelters and starting fires and participating in immunity challenges? What is getting fired but being “voted out,” having your torch snuffed and being forced to make that long walk out with all of your belongings, often without so much as a parting word to those watching you go? You get the idea.

Maybe you work with ”Coach,” a ponytailed whackjob with a penchant for referring to himself as a “dragonslayer” and telling stories you’d have to be crazy to believe. Or a pint-sized schemer “Russell” who allies with everyone and is loyal to none. If you are lucky (in my opinion), you work with a “Boston Rob,” who plays hard, but almost always shows you the smartest move, if not the most ethical.

But in “Survivor: Allstars,” there is a gentler lesson to be learned. Some people do change. Even a self-proclaimed office “dragonslayer” can be reduced to a gaffawing teenager when faced with a romance or even a bromance with another player. A morally-challenged strategist like Boston Rob can become a provider, insisting on building fire for the tribe when no one else thought that there was a chance of success. And Russell… well, not everyone changes.

So as you travel your career path, allow for the possibility that a former villian can become heroic, but also the chance that whoever you made the alliance with had their fingers crossed behind their back. It’s the smart way to go.

Free “Entertainment Career Strategy” Call- Sign Up Open

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

There are still a few spaces open for the FREE one-hour “Entertainment Career Strategy” teleseminar on January 26th at 8pm EST/5pm PST.  The call is limited to 20 participants and subscribers to YII’s Mogul Mind eblasts (who always get special opportunities and bonus offers from YII) were given first crack at signing up to get expert entertainment industry career advice.

Here’s how it will work: Participants will email questions about their entertainment career goals in advance and, during the call, they will be provided with concrete, proven strategies and career paths to achieve them. 

Students, recent grads, or others wanting to transition from another industry (or get unstuck from their current entertainment job) will get their individual situations addressed, as well as benefiting from general information being provided, and the answers to other people’s career questions.

To sign up, email YII@yourindustryinsider.com with “free teleseminar” in the subject line and your name in the body of the email. Sign up is on a first come, first-served basis. 

You can send your career question later, but email now to reserve a spot!

Two Special Announcements

Sunday, November 29th, 2009
 
AN EVENT NOT TO BE MISSED!
On January 26th 8pm EST/5pm PST, Your Industry Insider will be having a FREE one-hour “Entertainment Career Strategy” teleseminar. The call will be limited to 20 participants, who will email in questions about their entertainment career goals and be provided with concrete, proven strategies and career paths to achieve them. Students, recent grads, or others wanting to transition from another industry (or get unstuck from their current entertainment job) are urged to attend this tele-event, to get their individual situations addressed, as well as benefiting from general information being provided, and the answers to other people’s career questions. Sign up will be in the next couple of weeks on a first-come first-served basis and subscribers to the Mogul Mindset eBlasts will get a headstart!
 
OUR FIRST eBOOK COMING SOON!
Also in early 2010, look for the release “Dream Jobs, Day Jobs, & Career Jobs: YII’s Roadmap to Working in Entertainment” the first of a series of Your Industry Insider eBooks designed to give readers the insider’s edge to getting where they want to go in the industry. Preorder is coming soon and subscribers to the Mogul Mindset eBlasts will get valuable free bonuses for early-bird ordering!
 
So if you know you want to take advantage of the free call OR get the book, make sure you  sign up for the Mogul Mindset eBlasts in the righthand corner of the sidebar!

What is the Mogul Mindset?

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

You may have noticed a box in the top right corner of the YII homepage that invites readers to sign up for Mogul Mindset eBlasts. In fact, a lot of you have already signed up! (Some have even gotten in touch to say how much you enjoyed the Jumpstart Mini-course that came with the sign up!)

Here’s a little background on the “mogul mindset” concept, followed by more information about the eBlasts themselves.

The term “mogul mindset” came from reading Virgin chief, Richard Branson’s autobiography, “Losing my Virginity,” and realizing that his mind worked in such a way as to make success on a global level almost inevitable for him.

Listed below are just some of the patterns of thought I identified that led to his amazing accomplishments and that I think anyone can use to maximize their chances of getting to the top of the Hollywood heap:

Ask “How Hard Could It Be?”  As a teenager, Richard Branson decided to start an alternative student publication. That idea became Student, a magazine which featured all of the English celebrities of the day, and ran for several years, ultimately with a circulation of 100,000 distributed throughout the UK. Later, he started a record label, Virgin Music, and then an airline, both from scratch.

Put One Foot In Front of the Other  When young Richard Branson wanted to start what became Student, without a pause, he made a list of potential contributors and advertisers, and called the local bookstore chain to see if they would stock the magazine. Later on, when considering starting an airline, he picked up the phone and tried to lease a jumbo jet from Boeing. And then he called a potential competitor’s booking line to see how busy they were. Step one, step two…

Don’t Let Fear of Failure Get In the Way of Success When you have big dreams, lots of people will tell you you’re crazy. And others will secretly- or not so secretly- root against you (and maybe even plot against you!) when you start to make progress toward your big dreams. Richard Branson was often torn apart in the press when he started forming Virgin Airways. If you think that stopped him, you haven’t taken a Virgin flight lately– but you could!

Stay True to Yourself- In Richard Branson’s case, this means pursuing businesses for the fun and adventure, and trying to remain above board even when the competition is being underhanded. It also means sticking up for himself in court- and in the court of public opinion- as when he had proof that British Airways was employing unfair- and even illegal- tactics to ruin Virgin Air.

The Mogul Mindset eBlasts are designed to convey bite-sized lessons from the bigwigs in this industry (and sometimes others) and provide a related call to action. Also included is a feature called “Don’t Be That Person” about actual missteps made by people climbing the ladder (so the savvy MM reader can avoid making the same mistakes), and the opportunity for subscribers to ask and get answers to their entertainment career questions.

So if you or someone you know could use a little motivation and/or education in their career, the Mogul Mindset eBlasts are just the solution.

YII’s Mogul Mindset eBlasts will provide a head start if you’re still in school, get you started on the right foot if you’ve just graduated, help you transition from another industry, or get you unstuck if you’ve hit a roadblock on the path to success.

Sign up today!

Photo used with limited permission: http://www.flickr.com/photos/halonfury/ / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Inside Scoop: Music Producer & Post House Owner/CEO Michael Perricone

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Michael Perricone started demonstrating his passion for music as a child, playing guitar and bass, and owned a sound rental company in his late teens before finding his niche as a sound mixer in the recording studio. Since then, he has covered a lot of ground in music and TV and film sound, as well as having some interesting sidelines. YII was excited to talk to someone who has mixed his passion for music with his entrepreneurial talents.

Current position: I am a Sound Designer and Rerecording Mixer, CEO of Lotus Post, a Music Producer & the Founder/Owner of OmStream.com.

College: I completed two years of junior college.

First job in the entertainment industry: Assistant Engineer at a Recording Studio. There were about 300 recording studios in Hollywood at that time and I applied to all of them. I figured out when the receptionist went to lunch at the one where I most wanted to work and I rang the doorbell at that time. I got to speak to the owner directly. That’s how I got hired.

Big break: My first job was the big break. I got to work with top people. My first session was with Alice Cooper. This thrust me immediately into a high-profile world.

Eureka moment: I had a PA (sound system) rental company for local bands, but the first time I went into a recording studio, I knew that’s where I wanted to be.

Career path: I started as an assistant and moved up to being a sound engineer there and then after a few years, became an independent engineer. I worked for Saban Entertainment, recording theme songs for their shows. And then I recorded independent music projects and did post sound design on a couple of TV movie projects for producer/director/actor John Schneider (”The Dukes of Hazzard”). I got a job managing a studio in 1984 and focused in on post-production in TV & Film and made the facility profitable. I also worked at Evergreen Studios as a sound engineer for orchestral score recordings.

In 1985, I co-founded a studio called Interlock (now Larsen Studios), doing mostly TV & Film post-production (and about 10 percent music). During the time I owned and operated it, we went from working on projects like “Mad Movies With the LA Connection” (low budget/low profile) to CBS’s “Touched By An Angel.”

After I sold it in 2002, I took a year off and produced a couple of albums (classical crossover) and then started doing some audio post-production again, but mainly I continue doing music post-production (mastering the music for DVDs), including doing ZZ Top: Live From Texas (the largest selling music DVD of last year.) I took over a studio in Santa Monica earlier this year, now called Lotus Post.

Other careers: Being in audio post is the last stage of making film and television. I wanted an opportunity to be on the front end. I was a journalism major in college and I wrote short stories, so I tried my hand at writing a pilot with a friend a few years back. We called 60 agents and managers. Two read it and both wanted to sign us. We pitched episodes of “Star Trek: Voyager” and ended up writing two, one of which was nominated for a Saturn award for writing. Also, we were story editors on a series called “Savannah” and then we got hired on “Charmed” (with the title of executive story editor) and worked on it for one season. We also wrote episodic freelance projects for Disney Channel and Paramount.

Another endeavor came out of being frustrated because the music I would produce was categorized so oddly on iTunes that it would be difficult to find. I started Omstream.com in 2005 as “iTunes for the conscious music market.” We now have over 10,000 titles on the site.

Describe a typical work day in your current position: As the owner of a post house, it might involve coming in, addressing a billing issue, starting a transfer of a session I did over the weekend (I still do mixing), resolving a disagreement between employees, following cables in the machine room to figure out how something was routed from the previous people, signing checks, working on another session. We just did ADR on a Jennifer Aniston film and also on a Lasse Halstrom film using a Skype Connection to NY. We recently finished a country music show for Freemantle (producers of “American Idol”) called “Can You Duet?”

Worst job (or day) in entertainment industry: Got caught in a political situation in one of our writing projects that ended with everyone hired by the creator of the series being dumped by the second season.

Best job (or day) in entertainment industry: When I opened Interlock. It was so exciting and fresh. I was young and not quite so jaded.

Best thing about your current job: I get to help shape and guide a business and make a difference in a business that can get pretty messy. I can work with people who believe in doing things without stepping on other people’s throats.

Worst thing about your current job: So far, there hasn’t been any “worst” thing. I haven’t had to fire anyone yet. It was challenging trying to raise operating capital to start a company in this economy.

Brush with greatness: My favorite brush with greatness was getting a one-on-one impromptu writing lesson from Ray Bradbury. He was doing commentary for a laser disc on “The Martian Chronicles.” I mentioned I had just started writing and got a 20 minute primer.

Secret of your success/advice to the newbie: Ignore anyone that says you can’t do it. Sheer determination wins out over everything else.

Next move: To build Lotus up to the point where it operates globally, because it is a global marketplace. To get to the point where I don’t have to be working it hands-on so much and I get to spend more time with my family.

You can check out Michael’s post facility here, his film and television credits here, and visit OmStream here. Read a profile of his wife, classical crossover artist Jahna, here.

You Have a Reputation

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Good, bad, or (most likely) somewhere in between, everyone has one.

Are you a loudmouth, a health nut, a hard worker, a partier?

In an increasingly freelance world where job security is becoming more and more scarce, having a good reputation is the key to having a healthy, lucrative, and growing entertainment industry career.

Make sure yours is a good one.

Work For Free

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

If you’ve never had a “real job” before and you’re either not old enough or not available or not able to get a paying position, work for free. Go to an office, a golf course, a community center, a museum, and ask if you can help out every Saturday, or Tuesdays and Thursdays after school.

It doesn’t have to be official volunteer work, though it can be. Or it can be at your mom’s office or your dad’s store. The idea is that it will expose you to the post-educational world, give you a taste of what it’s like to have a job, and teach you the ways of the work environment.

You will get an idea of what you like to do, what you can do, what you are truly good at. This is not something you can learn from reading a book or taking a class. There is no substitute for life experience here. 

Plus, since you are going to do an excellent job, when the time comes to get real work, you have someone who can vouch for you, who can recommend you to a potential employer and help you land that paying gig. Which means that even though this position didn’t pay you in dollars, you got something out of it. So it wasn’t really working for free, was it?

The Insider’s Guide To Getting Your SECOND Production Job

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

 

Congratulations! You’ve already gotten your first production job.

 

In addition to calling everyone you know in the biz to get job leads, if you live in Los Angeles or New York, you bought a copy of either the Hollywood Reporter on Tuesday or Daily Variety on Friday when they publish their production listings, and you found the movies in pre-production and in preparation in your area. 

 

If you live somewhere other than LA or NY, you contacted the local film board to find out about productions in town. 

 

You cold-called every single one, always being polite and friendly and not being thrown off by the sometimes abrupt phone manners of the production personnel on the other end of the line. You emailed or faxed your neat, well-written resume to everyone who said they might be able to use you and then you called to follow up until you heard a no or, finally, a yes.

 

How do you get your second production job?

 

On your first job, you follow instructions to the letter and do every single thing that is asked of you, you solve problems yourself if you can and notify your supervisor if you can’t, you jump in and help anyone who needs it, and you don’t complain ever to anyone. You make friends with the other crew members, especially the assistants in the departments you might want to transition into (the bosses are probably too busy to be your friend), and you stay in touch with everyone who might be able to hire you in the future and everyone who tells you they might know someone who can use you.

 

That’s how you get your second production job.

 

Photo by GarryKnight.

Dealbreakers: The Internet & You

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

 

Seriously, people, are you trying to tell me everyone hasn’t gotten the word about potential employers (and internship coordinators) doing searches to see what turns up on the web about job candidates? Or is it that we do not understand the types of things that may damage our chances in the job market?

 

Obviously, we know that if your Facebook or MySpace page is all about how you drink your face off six nights a week or offhandedly mentions that you’ve been trying out petty crimes in your spare time just for kicks, that would affect your employment prospects. 

 

Here are some other problem postings on public pages:

 

Describing yourself as “moody”— or having your friends describe you that way. Nobody – and I mean NOBODY- wants to knowingly hire someone who is moody. You wouldn’t either. Think about it.

 

Badmouthing or gossiping about your current or past employer or job. 

 

References to – or pictures of – your bad behavior on other people’s pages. The search engines are pretty sophisticated. Plug in your full name and see what comes up. You might be surprised.

 

So if you want to avoid unknowingly ruling yourself out for jobs, you have two choices – make your page private so only your friends can know that much about you (and get your friends to do the same for pages that reference you) or clean up the content.

 

Regardless, get over the moodiness or learn to hide it. That won’t fly in the work world no matter how good you are at your job.

 

 

Photo by Mikey G Ottawa.

Why You Shouldn’t Lie On Your Entertainment Resume

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

My resume bullshit detector is always on. Whether I am looking for an intern or an employee, the red flags stand out in glaring relief. And anyone experienced in the art of resume review has the same talent. Plus, the entertainment industry may seem vast to you when you are on the outside, but it’s really a small town where everyone knows everyone, if only by reputation.

 

For instance, no one is going to believe an intern was left alone to cover the desk of the president of Universal Pictures. We know all about her. She wouldn’t allow for it and you wouldn’t last for four minutes without your arm being chewed off because you weren’t dialing the phone fast enough.

 

So when I see a resume which says that you, as an intern, “covered president’s desk when her first assistant was on vacation,” I set it aside. In the round bin next to my desk. Or, if I am really interested in you based on other impressive items on your resume which look less suspicious, I dash off an email to the assistant to one of the other executives over there asking about you. If she confirms your story, I will be shocked. But most likely, she won’t.  And you just blew your opportunity to interview with me.

 

Rookie mistake.