social network
Artist, Film or Video maker, Performer, Creative – Your own social network
Just because you make Art or express yourself creatively doesn’t mean you’re completely different than the rest of the planet. Social networking technology and the business of getting what you do in front of those who may have an interest in it is similar to any other form of internet marketing in many ways. To begin with you need accounts..quite a few. If you have accounts on the short list to the right you’ve accomplished something. If you have more portfolio or video accounts, great!
This is the basis of your social presence and it should reflect what you’re trying to do as a creative. Sure you can put up some personal details and some background, but the content should reflect your goals and work you want seen.
Why have all these accounts? Well, if someone likes what they see they’re going to be likely to follow a link to your personal web site domain back to your blog or portfolio site where they can see more, right? In internet marketing terms this is called a funnel. The comparison is not entirely accurate because many, many people will never follow your posts back and of those who do not all will subscribe to your RSS feed or email list. You’re going to want them to do that to maintain contact with them. If these people really like what you do then they’ve filtered themselves and found their way to you and have accepted your invitation to read your feed or emails now and then…that’s the beginnings of keeping you and what you do on the minds of a community of people who find some value in what you do and that’s your goal, right?
As long as you’re posting useful and interesting content related to what you do and provide, those folks won’t be disappointed when they follow your links back to your domain. You’ll actually be assisting them to find work they’ve genuinely been looking for.
In this sense, technology has combined with creativity in one more way, in addition to whatever technologies you may already use to express yourself.
I personally believe that social technologies are becoming more and more inextricably linked to self expression. Some are using these things badly and some are being quite sophisticated about the use of these technologies.
Uses of these technologies by creatives for purposes of self promotion and finding and communicating with their audience does create some problems and there are ways you can misuse or not use this stuff as effectively as you might…more soon.
The Climate of Creativity
Recently, I’ve been having some discussions with mentors, and am realizing the Arts & creative expression, generally, is undergoing a radical paradigm shift. What do I mean by that?
One of my core personal beliefs is that the major cause for negative conditions in the world is based in failures of imagination, insufficient creativity and yielding to fear. Anything we can do to promote and facilitate more developed creative expression and innovation in all directions reveals new and greater potentials in every situation. It is only when fears and anticipating “lack” take over that human beings put all their significant energies into conserving what they have, and staying where they’re at instead of developing what can be created and developed.
The internet and the rise of social community sites and services is making individual access to a massive ability to promote our own work the norm. This may seem obvious, but I’m not sure it REALLY is obvious to many. Quite a few are simply going about business as usual without fully grasping just how to fully utilize these new tools. Many who are established in some creative field continue to do things the way they’ve always done. Reliance on gallery owners, show promoters, publicists/PR people, agents and managers as the primary mechanism for gaining and cultivating a following for your work is avoiding what the climate should be showing you.
Many have many reasons for avoiding these new tools, but often it just comes down to an unwillingness to step into something unknown. There’s a big problem with this and it’s called time.
Why is time the problem? What many just aren’t seeing is internet content, including social content and mainly video is heading straight for the one major appliance in everyone’s living room…the television. That puts ‘creatives’ and creative content dead smack in the middle of the living rooms of the world in a ‘one on one’ way. No agent, gallery owner or other middle man or gatekeeper is going to be between you and access to the world. Even the computer illiterate will be able to manage content coming through their TV.
The rapid acquisition curve of net enabled televisions is beginning to even dwarf the original acquisition curve of original televisions that took place in less than 10 years in the forties when television first began replacing radios in the home as the main broadcast receiver. The influx of color television was quicker than the original and my feeling is net enabled TV will dwarf that in how fast it becomes the norm.
What’s already clear is that the internet is a huge, vast “maw” with an appetite for information and content the world has never experienced before. As the mechanisms for delivering, discussing and providing feedback on that content continue to be refined, the audience and appetite for that content grows even faster.
Creative individuals expressing themselves in a manner that they’ve refined and worked on are, for the first time in history, at the top of the information stream. …but only if they take the time to learn to effectively use these tools.
What’s my evidence and why should you care? Browse around twitter and facebook for established fine artists, celebrities, writers, musicians who have name recognition from careers in the past 20-30 years. Look for names you know, who pop up now and then. A few are showing real interest in, and proficiency with cultivating their followings and using the social tools. The majority continue to rely on agents or publicists/PR firms to get themselves noticed and their work valued. Some with large followings are primarily broadcasting to their fans and not really engaging. These folks are accepting the position of continuing to prove, whatever their new projects are, why they are valuable enough to have the opportunity to express themselves to gatekeepers and management types. Some of these folks are top tier artists and they just can’t seem to grasp the importance of directly engaging with their community. When you can demonstrate a large following directly, you have a lot more leverage when it comes to getting traditional mechanisms to take notice. These mechanisms are in trouble and when an individual can move the needle on their own, that’s a big deal.
What is the “Climate of Creativity” and how does it impact you? Net content will soon be in every living room with a television. Every artist will be able to find and engage with anyone with any interest in their specific interest, story …their art. Sticking with using a 20th century mindset when it comes to getting your work noticed only means you keep yourself in a box of someone else’s making and minimizing your opportunities for more freedom or ability to pursue new creative opportunities.
Please add your thoughts in the comments below. I’m really interested in how you think this is going to evolve.