CHAPTER

Preparing to Manage

2

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The short course on preparing to manage artists is this: get some education, get some experience, build a network, find some clients, and then go to work managing. This chapter includes details on some of those steps, but it also includes a deeper look into the realities of the business, and the character of the relationships that a manager develops in the industry. And, most importantly, it will help managers understand the realities that have an impact on their effectiveness at advancing the careers of artist clients.

MANAGEMENT IS PART OF A BIG BUSINESS

Managing artists in the music business is done within the context of the general business environment, which is influenced every day by the economy, technology, politics, social and cultural factors, the price of energy, and international tension.

Likewise, the practice of artist management is done within the environment of the music industry, which deals with issues such as illegal file sharing, shrinking market shares, competition by other entertainment media, and rapidly advancing technology. For example, Chris Anderson’s disputed idea of The Long Tail (2008) suggests to the music business that the industry is moving from being one that is hit-driven to one that serves countless niches of appetites for unique music. Anderson’s theory is fueled by the speed of the development of technology and the speed of its adoption by consumers of music. Alternatively, Anita Elberse says in the August 2008 issue of Harvard Business Review that her research demonstrates that entertainment continues to be driven by music and motion pictures that are defined as hits that have broad appeal to consumers. Her 2013 book, Blockbusters, goes even further to say that having huge hits is the only way that a company can assure itself of long-term success.

To underscore Elberse’s point, an artist manager whose artist is also a songwriter and writes a song for someone else that sells 250,000 as single downloads and album cuts, earns only $1,700 US for the manager and $9,675 US for the songwriter. To some, collecting writer royalties for the sale of a quarter million copies of a song is a huge hit but the reality is considerably different. We’ll look closer at how the math works for songwriting in a later chapter.

Several years ago, Live Nation was researching ways to expand its business and discovered that artist managers and booking agents globally earn a combined $10 billion, which is a substantial source of income within the music business (Leeds 2006). Agents and managers are responsible for connecting artists with career income, and both earn a percentage of the economic activity they generate for artists and for themselves.

The International Federation of Phonographic Industry provides its 2013 annual estimates of earnings by the music business from a global perspective (see Table 2.1), showing its broad impact as well as areas of opportunity to managers of artists’ careers.

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The range that an artist manager typically earns is 10–25% of the earnings of an artist with the average being 15%. However, if no artists under contract with the manager are earning enough to cover their own expenses, the reality of when commissionable money flows as income to the artist can be a shock to new managers if they’re not prepared for it. Recording royalties from large labels can be two years or more from the release date, assuming the album earns enough from artist royalties to pay back advances paid by the label to the artist. The sale of tickets to performances can be minimal to nonexistent at first, but it can often become the quickest regular income source for self-managed bands and artists as well as those with a personal manager. Earnings from publishing royalties can be impressive but slow to develop if the artist is new to songwriting. So a new manager should be prepared to finance his or her own management business for three to five years. There are other ways to enter the business of being a professional artist manager, which are discussed in this chapter. Meanwhile, a more detailed analysis of a manager’s compensation is presented in Chapter 6, where we examine the contract between the artist and the manager.

ACQUIRING THE KNOWLEDGE

The aspiring artist manager needs a basic understanding of the entire music industry. Without it, the manager will never know about opportunities that he or she has missed on behalf of artist clients. Earning a degree in business is very useful—especially one that emphasizes marketing, brand management, and salesmanship. Earning a degree with an emphasis in the recording industry can give a graduate a very broad, contemporary look at the business that many active players in the industry do not have. A degree in law is helpful, as is a masters in business administration, although an undergraduate degree in business gives the manager a good general working vocabulary and understanding of the business world, which helps in effectively managing artists.

Aside from the classroom, an especially effective way to acquire knowledge is to work for an artist management firm. Opportunities at management companies are limited, so a very basic, entry-level position may be the best that is available, but the experience will permit the aspiring manager a place to develop a hands-on understanding of the artist management business, and help build that important personal network of industry contacts.

Another option is to seek an internship or apprenticeship with a management and production company that is willing to put the aspiring manager on the road for a season of touring. Many of the basic issues that a manager regularly handles come up on a tour, and one can get a good education about management issues by being in that environment.

For the self-managed artist or group, finding a willing and committed mentor can save the manager a lot of time. The school of hard knocks is a great teacher, but most artists don’t have the time to make the mistakes, recover from them, and learn from them. A mentor is someone who understands what the manager is trying to achieve because they have “been there and done that” and the aspiring manager can learn a lot of shortcuts based on the mentor’s experience in the music business.

UNDERSTANDING THE NATURE OF ARTIST MANAGEMENT

Any business is primarily providing a form of customer service to a target market, and artist managers must keep a good working definition of the customers that the artist serves. In other words, know your artist’s customer because music fans are not all the same. Certainly, the artist’s fans who buy tickets, recordings, merchandise, and digital products are first on the list. However, others that artists and their managers serve include concert promoters, talent bookers, sponsors, members of the artist’s team, commercial radio, print and digital media, and anyone else who relies on the artist to provide something. Striving to promote good relationships with people who rely on the artist creates the kind of reputation that draws and keeps the kinds of professionals who are willing to invest their energies in the success of the artist’s career.

Making Decisions

Decision making about an artist’s career certainly has to do with business, but there are also decisions to be made that deal with art and artistry. As tough as some of those decisions are for the artist manager, management icon Lee Iacocca puts it best: “If I had to sum up in a word what makes a good manager, I’d say decisiveness” (Iacocca and Novak 1985, 37). Often being decisive is easier to say than to do. For example, choosing the commercial viability of a single recording from a ten-cut album of music requires a certain intuition based on experience. In the music business, it often is referred to as making a decision based on your gut feeling. Former BMG Music Group CEO, Clive Davis, was said to have golden ears, because into his eighties he continued to hear the sound of commercial musical success when choosing which artists to sign. Although Davis used a different part of his anatomy, it is the same concept as using your gut to guide your decisions. Artist management today requires professionals to step away from the standard strategies that have been used in the past to manage the careers of artists in the music business. Some things remain as they always have been, but there will be times when a manager must rely on that special inner feeling to direct the artist to an opportunity because it feels right, or, to guide them away from it because it does not feel right. There are no criteria for this kind of guidance. You just follow your gut.

Managing Pressure

The stress that comes with managing an artist is set in motion when the manager begins promoting the artist’s career. When launching a career for someone else, there is constant pressure to plan and to try alternatives that will work. On the other hand, when an artist has become popular, there are demands on his or her time that the manager must try to meet, because an artist’s career in the music business has a limited shelf life, and there is an urgency to draw as much from it as possible while demand is there. Likewise, there is necessary pressure on the artist to present the strongest work ethic they’ve ever had. They must work as intensely as the manager does if the door is to remain open to opportunities.

Artist management causes pressure for those whose style prefers order and predictability. Although an artist’s manager is an advocate and is viewed as someone who makes things happen, managers cannot predict when people will respond. That means that the manager must always be prepared to react, regardless of the time of day or the day of the week. So an artist manager does not have set office hours with weekends and holidays off nor a guaranteed two-week vacation each year.

Artist managers are ultimately responsible for the success of every performance an artist makes, and many of those performances are rehearsed during the week and performed over weekends. When you add in the other dimensions of an artist’s career and multiply it by the number of artists in a manager’s portfolio, it is easy to see that 24/7 easily could become 25/8 if it were possible.

With the stress of the work, it becomes very important and necessary to balance personal life with work as an artist manager. This book advises and guides artist managers in the creation of plans on behalf of artist clients; however, actively planning for personal time can keep artist managers refreshed and have them prepared to handle the business of managing careers. Planning for that balance between work and personal life can minimize the burnout that can result without it. Occasional long weekends are equivalent to a power nap—they’re a quick refresher and then it’s back to work. Plan for longer breaks—block out the time and take at least a week away from management responsibilities. Without an extended break from the office, it is impossible to genuinely break the frenetic cadence of the office environment, with its cache of wireless and electronic devices that keep you lashed to your work. Put your watch in a drawer and give your digital assistant to your human assistant for a week. Two things that are never available in unlimited amounts are money and time. Be sure you spend an adequate amount of both on yourself.

Perhaps the best strategy an artist manager can use to handle the pressures of managing within the music business is to learn to put stressors in perspective. The most effective artist managers are those who are not prone to take the actions or inactions of others personally. In nearly all circumstances, the response or lack of response by others has little to do with your work as the artist’s manager; rather, it has to do with their personal and professional agendas. Former Sony Nashville CEO, Joe Galante, noted in an interview shortly after he left the company in 2010, “I went back to a T.J. Martell function in New York and was having a conversation with somebody, and I could see him look past me. Like, ‘You can’t do anything for me anymore’.” Galante had done a lot of business with this person in the past but, as he found out, he now didn’t serve his former associate’s professional agenda (Helton 2010).

Knowing to expect some of the stressors that accompany a career of artist management can help a manager approach issues professionally and with the aplomb that keeps them from becoming personal. As you consider the realities outlined in this chapter, remember that they are usually business—not personal—and these are specific realities that can cause the manager stress and consternation only if they are permitted to. Following are some of the realities in the music business that have the potential to create stress.

Reality One

A lot of people will say “no,” and a lot of gatekeepers will seem immovable. The music business on its grandest scale offers the promise of great financial rewards for the relative few who are able to connect with a large audience. This means that there are countless thousands of talented people seeking ways to access gatekeepers who can give career opportunities to artists in the music business. When they say “no,” it is not a personal response to the manager. It simply means that the manager must find a way to get past the gatekeeper, or must pursue another one who is more likely to be a favorable audience. Finding out what the gatekeeper needs and using it as a way to gain access is one strategy offered by veteran artist manager Ken Kragen (Kragen and Graham 1994). For example, personal or executive assistants are essential gatekeepers in any company and are often underappreciated for their contributions. They have a need to be recognized for their value to the company, so the manager who takes time for a brief visit with them implies to the assistant their importance and builds an ally who can perhaps open other gates within the company.

Another way to get past gatekeepers is to find someone in your network who can open that door for you. Build the network and use it.

Reality Two

You are a “player” in the music business only if you are relevant. Relevance has to do with your current activity in the industry—specifically, in the case of an artist manager, this is defined by the artist management firm for which you work, or by the artists you manage. If your telephone calls are not returned or your emails are not acknowledged, it is not personal. It just means that you haven’t developed the perception that you offer something that will improve the other person’s business.

I emphasize throughout this book that every business encounter a manager has on behalf of artists they manage isn’t about the artists. It’s always about the agenda and needs of the other person. You must be able to demonstrate to others that you and your artists are relevant to the continued success of the other person’s business. Otherwise they aren’t inclined to “spend their time” on a discussion that they know won’t bear fruit for their business.

Reality Three

Keeping the spirits of your artists up during a continuing career roller coaster will be draining for you. And it can become doubly draining because the roller coaster they are on is the same one you are on because your career is dependent on their success. Understand that the pursuit of opportunities for your artists will include many rejections, due primarily to competition within the industry. Even if he or she knows that rejections are a regular part of the music business, they can still be a defeat for the manager. And then the manager is the one who must pass the difficult news along to the artist. Finding a way to cope with disappointment at the personal level and then being able to find a way to keep up the spirits of the artist is always a challenge for the artist manager.

An important thing to remember about rejections of any kind is that no one person can define who you are, what your talent potential is, what your values are, or what you personally bring to the music business. If you take a rejection personally, you’re bowing to one individual who is essentially saying what you offer isn’t likely to make them money. Never let rejections define who you or your artists are—it’s business, not personal. Forgive the necessary paraphrasing from the original Godfather but it truly makes my point (Pacino 1972).

Reality Four

People will string you along. Early in the author’s career in the music business, a prominent music industry publisher advised, “Don’t pet stray dogs.” His point was that you can waste a lot of time by giving advice and befriending individuals who are not in the industry yet and have a long way to go before they will have any chance at success. Some in the industry will tell others whatever is necessary to get them off the telephone or off their doorstep if they think the individual has nothing to contribute to their business. A frequent tactic is to be told “They’re tied up in a meeting. May I put you into their voice mail?” You leave your message and there is no chance that your call will be retrieved and returned. It is not personal. They just don’t know how you can contribute to the success of their business and don’t have the time to figure it out. The second time you hear from a personal contact saying, “I’ll get back to you in a couple of days on that” is the time to move on. It’s a not-so-subtle way of saying, “Don’t call me again.”

Don’t allow people to string you along—they’re wasting your time. (Author’s note: Petting stray dogs with candid and genuine guidance becomes a way you can give back when the music business gives you your measure of success, however you define success.)

Reality Five

People will disappoint you. Someone you feel you can depend on will disappoint you by not following through with promises or commitments made to you and your artists. Even the smallest oversight by others can have an impact on the things you are trying to achieve for your artist. Anticipate that people will disappoint you, but be pleased when they deliver on their promises. As I noted earlier, don’t take it personally.

Advice to artist managers: always follow through with your promises because it helps define your character to others.

Reality Six

Hard work doesn’t guarantee success in the music business but it’s doubtful you will succeed without it. Filmmaker and television producer Todd Cassetty has worked with singer Taylor Swift on several projects, and he says that one of the keys to her success is her work ethic. She has initiative, immense drive, and a sense of responsibility to herself and those who support her career, and she takes and follows career advice. Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones says in his book, Life, that the hard work the band puts in preparing for shows and recordings is an important ingredient in their 50-plus years of being one of the most enduring musical groups ever.

Reality Seven

Holding grudges against gatekeepers who turn you away won’t help your business and it won’t help the artists you manage. It can be difficult to separate business from the emotions you put into your work when you truly believe you have the perfect artist for the perfect opportunity. When someone rejects your artist and your plan to manage them—for whatever reason—harboring continuing resentment towards that person won’t help you in any way. The music business can be a small community, and it’s one that continuously shuffles people between companies and responsibilities. Today’s gatekeeper may appear at another’s gate, or, perhaps you may find yourself as the one holding access.

Reality Eight

The agendas of many people in the music business determine whether you matter to them. If you are the current manager of a significant artist about to go into the studio to record an album, music publishers will stumble over each other to get the chance for a conversation. If you are the former manager of a major artist, you might elicit a faint hello from those same publishers.

This is just the beginning of a larger list, but it covers key points that can easily be taken personally, when in fact, they usually should not be. Recognizing these points as realities of the music business environment can help the manager step away from an issue, realize that it is not personal, and minimize an emotional response to a business situation.

Managers are Inconspicuous

Many artist managers are very low key and rarely mentioned or quoted in the press, so it is important that they actively pursue their own public relations within the music industry. An artist manager’s best clients will be the result of the active network of contacts they maintain. This means attending industry parties, events, conventions, and other networking opportunities. Because there is no official Association of Artist Managers in the United States, managers must find events and occasions when they can be seen by being involved socially in the music business on a regular basis. In Britain, however, the Music Manager’s Forum (www.themmf.net) offers regular meetings and seminars locally and around Europe for those employed as artist managers, and it is an excellent way for managers to become part of a network with others in the same profession to help improve their effectiveness on behalf of their clients. Appendix E of this book offers a look at the code of conduct adopted by the Australian Music Managers Forum that is a practical ethics guide for those who manage artists in the music business.

AN UNDERSTANDING OF POWER IN THE MUSIC BUSINESS

In order for the new artist manager to be prepared to navigate the music business, he or she needs to understand where power comes from, who has it, and how it is acquired. Connie Bradley, former ASCAP Senior Advisor, says, “Power lies in your friendships. I’ve never known one person to be powerful without anybody else” (Underwood 2006). This is a good starting point for a look at where the true power resides in the music business.

Friendships in the music business are much like those in the world of politics: you find out who your true friends are when you no longer hold a position of immediate relevance. True friends quickly step up to offer to help; others who were business “friends” will no longer text, no longer call, no longer email, no longer invite, and no longer return calls. When an artist manager is without major active clients or is downsized from a management company, it can be shocking to learn how weak those relationships with former associates truly are. It can also be reassuring when the manager learns how important the few true friends can be in reigniting a career.

Power in the music business can get things done for you, and having people within your network who have power can advocate for you when you need their influence. Let’s look at those sources of power.

The Power of Money

As in most industries and in politics, power in the music business comes from having money, the ability to earn money, and money to influence decisions. Major labels, with millions in their annual budgets to promote their projects and those of their partners, are able to claim considerable space on the weekly SoundScan sales charts and on the major airplay charts. It is very difficult for small independent labels to compete at that level.

For example, money shows its power in the music business in the ability of major labels to influence who is nominated, who wins, and who performs on some music awards shows. For some association-sponsored shows, labels actively lobby members of the group and their talent selection committees, and they buy their employees voting memberships in those associations to help influence the outcome of decisions. Money makes it happen. For award shows like the American Music Awards, criteria for an artist’s nomination are linked to sales and airplay of recorded music, which virtually assures that only music by the largest labels will be eligible (Serjeant 2010). Labels whose artists are chosen to perform on awards shows invariably see a short-term boost in sales of their recordings and performance ticket sales, which points to the value of awards shows.

There is an occasional anomaly like the artists Ylvis and Psy, who can use the Internet with a creative video distributed through YouTube to successfully launch a recorded music project and a tour. However, the power of money at larger labels will continue to help define who the major recording artists are. To underscore this point, just look at the Top 200 chart in Billboard each week to see how very few independent labels can—by themselves—sell at the volume of the majors to get to the top, even in this age of universal access through digital media.

The Power of Access

In the music business, the power of access is an important resource for people who have it. Those who can reach key decision makers—or more importantly, influence those individuals—who have power that many do not. This power comes from business relationships and sometimes from associations with others. For example, when Garth Brooks was at the peak of his career, manager Bob Doyle became someone who needed his own personal gatekeepers to filter access to his time. Too many people wanted access to Brooks, and they needed to go through Doyle to reach the artist.

Booking agents have the power of access. Their relationships with prominent concert promoters and other talent buyers can give an artist access to some of the better performance opportunities at the better venues with the more successful promoters.

Radio programmers have the power to give an artist access to their audiences. It is their final decision whether an artist’s single is played on their radio station, and that gives them immense control and the accompanying power. With the huge competition among labels for airtime at traditional radio stations, having access to a programmer to promote music on behalf of a record label determines the effectiveness of a label’s radio promotion staff. Radio has the power, and the labels invest heavily in the talents of their promotion staffs to access it. For example, country music represented 14% of commercial music sold in the U.S. in 2013 and Nashville labels spend an estimated $40 million annually to convince radio programmers to choose their music to play for listeners. Smaller independent labels have no chance to compete at a regional or national level because of the influence that money creates for large labels. Similarly, cable music channel programmers control access to their viewers and have the power to include or reject a music video, though promotion of a music video is done in much the same manner as music is to radio.

Publicists use their power of access to help their businesses. Those with high-profile clients leverage their association to build on their own client base and to help record labels schedule their artists for appearances on television and cable programs.

The Power of Your Latest Success

The old saying that success breeds success also applies to the idea of drawing power from your latest success. Most definitions of success in the music business are based on money. Successful tours, music downloads, CDs, and songs that find acclaim in their ability to earn give power to those responsible. Producers request the writer’s songs for albums they plan to record, concert promoters seek out the artist’s agent, and the artist might be able to renegotiate his or her recording contract for better terms. If your latest success is not followed by another success, there is a strong likelihood that you will become yesterday’s news.

The Power of Your Body of Work

People with the privilege of an extended career in the music business have built a considerable amount of success. The sheer staying power of individuals who have built long-standing careers within this industry, which disposes of commercially unproductive talent, means they possess power simply because they continue to succeed. These are the people who have the “secrets” to success in the industry and are often sought for their help in opening doors, making introductions, providing advice, being partners, and being mentors. A strong body of work builds a reputation, and that translates into power.

Power Carries a Responsibility to Give Back

People who have had any measure of success in the music business should use their talents to improve the quality of life of those who need help. The power of music can aid in efforts to raise money for world hunger, for victims of floods or earthquakes, or to pay medical bills for a needy family in a big city or a rural town or village. As artist’s careers are managed to success, it becomes the responsibility of the manager to seek opportunities for both the artist and the manager to return some of the fruits of their success to the public responsible for helping them achieve it.

References

Anderson, Chris. The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More. New York: Hyperion, 2008.

Cassetty, Todd. Personal interview. 15 June 2012.

Elberse, Anita. Blockbusters: Hit-making, Risk-taking, and the Big Business of Entertainment. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 2013.

Helton, Lon. “Joe Galante & Gerry House: Definitely Not Exiting.” Country Aircheck. Dec. 2010: 33–34.

Iacocca, Lee, and William Novak. Iacocca – An Autobiography. New York: Bantam, 1985.

Kragen, Ken, and Jefferson Graham. Life Is a Contact Sport: Ten Great Career Strategies That Work. New York: William Morrow and Company, 1994.

Leeds, Jeff. “Global Income from Music Business.” E-mail message to the author. 2006.

Pacino, Al (actor). Godfather. 1972. Paramount, 2008.

Richards, Keith, and James Fox. Life. New York: Little, Brown & Company, 2010.

Sergeant, Jill. “Eminem, Bieber outscore Lady Gaga in AMA nods.” Reuters.com, 12 Oct. 2010. 8 Jan. 2014. Available online at www.reuters.com/article/2010/10/12/us-american-musicawards (accessed 8 January 2014).

Smirke, Richard. “IFPI 2013 Recording Industry in Numbers: Global Revenue, Emerging Markets Rise; U.S., U.K., Germany Drop.” Billboard.com, 8 Aug. 2013. Available online at www.billboard.com/biz/articles/news/digital-and-mobile (accessed 8 January 2014).

Underwood, Ryan. “Executive Q&A: Connie Bradley.” The Tennessean, 10 December 2006.

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