Better Is Always About Tomorrow

by seanlow on May 15, 2013

Nobody wants to believe that the way you do things is actually better than the way it has always been done.  The status quo sticks for a reason – inertia of the known is crazy powerful.  Raised eyebrow, too good to be true is the default mindset, especially for creative businesses.  As far and fast as we have all come, many of the business models and practices are still dinosaurs.  Price first, art second.  When you come along thinking of ways to offer better, more focused value, it just feels strange.  Art first, price second.  For any of you who have practiced anything for a long time (yoga, sports, crafting), when you are shown proper alignment or technique it does not feel right.  Dysfunction over function.  The familiar over the not-yet-understood.  Your creative business is no different, both to you and your customers, especially when everyone else is working in the same old dysfunction.

Think about the RFP process many of you face for just about any project – event, graphic, interior design, etc.  Many times those asking for the proposal are not really educated about what they want and so they make it about stuff not art, price not concept, technical over emotional.  Simply, because they see scarcity (i.e., value) in stuff not good ideas, they do not know the right questions to ask.

Today, “How much will you give me for my money?” is absolutely the wrong question.  The far more relevant question is: “What will you create for my money?  What is your vision?” and the even better question is: “How will you move me and my audience with my money?”  Yet the old guard is the old guard, they still control the proverbial keys (for now) and changing their mindset is like moving an iceberg.  So rather than fighting the tide you play the price/line item game in the name of getting the business and the bar remains lower than it ought to be – for everyone.

However, the point today is not to meet the needs of your clients, it is to make them look like superstars.  Anyone can meet their needs.  Therefore, you have to be in it for the long-haul, working harder to climb into your client’s minds than their wallets.   Along the way, you just have to accept that many, many people will be actively rooting for you to fail, ahem, even if your success will be theirs.  Such is the nature of fear and shifting value propositions underlying all creative business.

If you want to be known as the artist that can envision the desires of your clients and bring them to life, then you have to charge for that vision.  When the price for design has always been zero or next to zero, saying it is everything can be a head scratcher.  Also, telling a client you are willing to put your money where your mouth is by taking a small deposit until you can demonstrate how good your ideas are is something your 50% deposit brethren will laugh at.  Everyone wants to say they are that good, few are willing to prove it, to be judged before the client has no other choice but to keep going.

Believe in your art, your artistry, your process.  Your victories will be one at a time, to those that matter.  Your model may never scale, even be noticed as a viable alternative to the old guard.  Until it does.  Creative business is about relationship, celebrating a shared vision and moving people to another place.  Technology has made all the rest – being the cheapest, the most efficient, the biggest – irrelevant, noise even.  This, to me, is a fundamental truth that is only going to become more obvious.  Better is always about tomorrow no matter what happened yesterday.

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You Just Know

by seanlow on May 7, 2013

“This ‘telephone’ has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.” 
A memo at Western Union, 1878 (or 1876).

At the time, Western Union was the one of the world’s largest corporations and Alexander Graham Bell was having issues with his patent for the telephone.  He wanted to sell it to Western Union for $100,000.  The above quote was their response.  A few years later, Western Union’s president said he would consider the patent for the telephone a bargain at $25 million.

World history is littered with these examples — where someone says that they just know the answer for the future.  Except they do not and their vision is clouded, ironically, by the size of their own (mis)perceptions.  In some form, we all suffer from the same myopia.  Our worldviews, our history, our bias, our neurosis, all blind us from what is other even while we swear up and down that it does not.

There is no such thing as a straight line in creative business.  Any investment you make – website, new office, new computer, new promo video, new employee, new anything offers you absolutely no guarantee of success.  The past might help you go one way or another, but it too is no arbiter of success.  So dispel yourself of the magic bullet.  There is none.  What there is instead is the willingness to be wrong, to put out your best work without expectation and stand tall for what you believe in.  If you view success and failure by the number of projects you book, you just lost.  Instead, view success with how many people get it (i.e., you, your art and your creative business).  Everything else will follow.  And if they (clients, media, employees, colleagues, etc.) do not get it, that is on you, not them.  Work harder to communicate the underneath, the meaning between the words, what is not plain to see.  Ethos is never obvious.

The beauty of not knowing the future is that you actually do not know.  That said, a car with no brakes at the top of the mountain is not one you want to be in.  The right car is the one that comes from your core and that of your art and creative business.  I say it over and over and can never say it enough – be relentless and uncompromising in what you stand for and apply it everywhere.  If there is even a sliver of a disconnect in how you operate and what you stand for, fix it.  Designers design, producers produce, artists can be both but never at the same time.  Question everything in the context of today, what matters to you now, not so much for the right answer but for happy.  Such is the difference for creative business: if there is no happy, you will die.  Value happy at zero at your own peril.

The future unfolds of its own accord.  We will all be wrong at some point.  Focus on what you really care about, who matters today and the outcome will satisfy you.  When you set a vision of what you want your future to be it is almost always too small.  A million dollar client? Twenty projects?  Five employees?  Even though you cannot imagine it does not make its possibility any less so.  Just ask Western Union.

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A Changing World

April 29, 2013

Living through an era of transformation is remarkable.  We shatter long held prejudices, biases, any kind of “isms” daily.  There will always always be a long way to go, but the road traveled so far is crazy.  A quick observation from news of the past several days. Today, the celebrity press is all over Michael [...]

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Don’t Stay Lost Too Long Revisited

April 24, 2013

Tis the season.  Almost every creative business owner I talk to is either incredibly busy or is about to be.  Spring has sprung.  You are in it, projects are in full swing and you are struggling to keep up with it all.   As much as you would like to think about strategy, what you next [...]

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2013 Top Ten Tips For Creative Business

April 19, 2013

Next month I will be attending and speaking at Tendencias 2013 in Cartagena, Colombia.  I could not be more excited.  Having participated in several events in Mexico, I can only say that I am amazed at the depth and significance of the event market in Latin and South America.  We in the United States have [...]

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The Long Burn

April 15, 2013

Creative business demands relationship.  The telephone is your second best sales tool, face-to-face is best.  You build to the end not just to yes.  Working on how this interaction goes from the first moment all through to the finish is everything.  I do will always be a subset of this day forward. Seth Godin had [...]

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Decisions

April 8, 2013

The hardest thing in the world is to decide, to commit, to risk being dead wrong.  Most of us want to have some sense that what we are choosing for ourselves, our art and our creative businesses is going to work out. It is why change is so hard.  Usually, something has to be either [...]

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Understanding Risk

March 27, 2013

For creative business, risk abounds and, to the extent you are asked to absorb it, you need to get paid appropriately.  What is risk?  Not odds of success (like rolling the dice in Las Vegas), neither a safe or chancy bet.  Rather, risk is the acknowledgement and categorization of factors outside of your control that [...]

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Redefining Success

March 19, 2013

Businesses evolve.  Clients change.  Strategies shift.  What was yesterday is gone, today is a new day and tomorrow is unknowable.  It is the nature of things.  In a perfect world, we would all let go of the past instantly, embrace today’s reality fully and allow the future to unfold in its own accord.  The multi-billion [...]

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Rising Tide Carries All Ships

March 15, 2013

On Monday, I presented a talk on The Perfect Egg at Event Solutions Idea Factory 2013 in Las Vegas.  The conference is terrific and offers a wonderful cross section of all that is going on in the event industry.  This year there was a general feeling of “whew, the worst is behind us, business is [...]

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