Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,554 Authors
50,504 Quality Articles
& 4,555 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
David Pekrul (972)
Robert Melaccio, Sr. (6,253)
Nicole Beurkens (184)
Mogama (11,388)
Jane Bullard (3,855)
Terry Mitchell (2,643)
Susan Thom (9,047)
Rodney Biamby (90)
Michael Ramzy (156)
Aaron Taylor (1,129)
Ronyae (1,286)
Joel Hendon (10,717)
Mike Fak (9,928)
Joel Hirschhorn (857)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
The New American Idol Judge - Who Is Kara DioGuardi?

Reality TV I`m a celebrity Get me Out of Here Winner is "Joe Swash" Ha Ha I Told you so

Reality TV - I`m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here "Snake in The Grass" is Revealed

My Frustration with the Cable Company

Reality TV I`m a Celebrity Get Me out Of Here Producers Cheat the Public - 2008 Winner is wjhsoeas

A Better Way to Watch TV

Celebrity Get Me Out of Here - Trouble Brews Up For This Pair & Why Joe Swash Should Win

The blatant Hypocrisy of UK TV show 'Miss Naked Beauty'

I`m a Celebrity Get Me out of Here - Who is The Bookies Hot Favourite to Take the Crown

Reality TV - I`m a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here Jungle Winner 2008 is King Who?

Home » Categories » Entertainment » Television » Breaking Into Hollywood - Do You Know Anyone Who's Hiring? » Printer Friendly

Donna Michelle Anderson

Breaking Into Hollywood - Do You Know Anyone Who's Hiring?

Rated 3.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Donna Michelle Anderson
Submitted Friday, May 11, 2007
Donna Michelle Anderson (776)
Donna Michelle Anderson

http://www.planetdma.com
Log in to become a member of Donna Michelle Anderson's Fan Club!


This is a tough article to publish, but it's just so important! The message of this missive is simple: stop asking people to hire you. STOP IT. It is not only not an effective way to break into the industry, it is a sure way to drive away the very people who are able to help you.

Does this sound counterintuitive? Completely against the whole concept of "taking initiative"? Let me explain.

If you have few or no credits (and little or no income), you know the frustration/panic of not knowing how you're ever going to break through the gates of the entertainment industry and get both recognition for your passion AND a paycheck for your bills. That's a given, and that's entirely valid and understandable.

But take a moment before you ask the next person you've just met to hire you to visualize the same scenario OUTSIDE of the entertainment industry. If you'd just met the senior partner of a law firm, and had neither work experience in a legal firm nor a law degree, would you open and/or close the conversation with a request to be hired? I hope not! Because if you did, the head of that firm would not be impressed by your passion for law. They would be baffled by your lack of understanding of how one gets hired to work in a law firm. They also might be a bit miffed by your lack of respect for what they do since you think that someone with no experience merits some of their hard-earned income. And finally, they might really like you and appreciate your enthusiasm for their field, but they already have a long line of entry-level applicants they've already got a relationship with and will offer the next opening to.

Notice the "entry level" qualification in that sentence. That's because if you are approaching the head of a law firm with no experience or degree and asking to be hired as an attorney, well, you are insane and deserve the outraged expression you are about to see on his or her face. But you know that already. In fact, you would never dream of asking a senior partner at a law firm to hire you as a lawyer if you had no background qualifying you to do so!

Now, if you understand that boundary in the legal arena, but you approach employment differently in the entertainment industry, you are setting yourself up to fail. It is imperative that you enter this field recognizing and respecting it as a real business. Your passion for medicine will not earn you a spot in the operating room if you have no degree, and your passion for Hollywood will not earn you a gig in this industry if you have nothing to bring but your passion. And why should it? Why would you demand to be paid top dollar as a surgeon if you have no idea how to perform surgery...and why would you demand to be paid any dollars as a filmmaker if you have no idea how to make films?

Now I know you might be saying: "I know how to make films!" "I know how to write a script!" "I know how to produce a TV show!" "I know how to act!" Can I ask you, for one moment, to consider the possibility that if you have not already done one of these things, professionally, and regularly paid your bills doing so...that there is something, in fact, much...that you do not in fact yet know?

Still with me? Okay, now what if your approach to the industry became "What do I need to learn to succeed here?" rather than "How much can I get out of this as quickly as possible so my dreams can immediately come true?" What if you slowed down a little and decided to learn before you leap?

As soon as your energy becomes "What do I need to learn?" instead of "What do I want to earn?," your experience in this game is going to change. FAST!

Here is my suggestion to you the next time you meet someone you're dying to work for. Don't tip the balance of the exchange by becoming a "supplicant," someone with their hand out for a job. And don't end the possibilities of the meeting by pretending you know or have done more than you have done. Instead, talk to that person with passion about what they do! People in the industry work the most ridiculous hours you can imagine, as will you. And they do it because they are obsessed with what they do. Let them talk. Learn from what they know. Buy them a cup of coffee or a glass of wine. THANK THEM FOR THEIR TIME. And walk away from that exchange without asking for something additional in return.

I do mean something "additional." Information is money in this industry and every other one. Someone's precious time and pearls of wisdom are worth a lot to you if you listen and learn. Don't add to that generous gift by also asking them for money!

If you find a connection between a talented person and yourself, this is a person to follow up with later and ask if you can give THEM something back in RETURN! This is the person you want to VOLUNTEER for. Now that you know what they do, figure out what skills and contacts and assistance you can offer them. And this is key: don't offer to do something for them that will help make your dreams come true; offer to help them achieve one of their own goals. Because once you do that, you've evened the exchange, and the ball is in their court now to want to help you! And if you go in and do an incredible volunteer job, believe me, they will want to help you.

I cannot count the number of times I've had this conversation with new people in the industry. I CAN count, however, the number of times they've sent me a thank you note and asked me for a job, despite all I'd just told them. Do you think I hired them? Of course not! They couldn't follow the simple, free advice I'd just given them; I knew they might once again think they knew better than I do when I gave them instructions to do something at work at my company! Why would I take that risk when I already have a long list of people I'm already hoping to help move ahead?

On the other hand, the one...and I do mean ONE...person who followed up with me and offered to work for free for a week (on a massive show) in order to cross out of music videos into TV production....well, we hired her at the end of the first day. She was that good.

Are(n't) you?


DMA is a former film story analyst and performer who has spent over a decade creating, producing and running successful non-fiction and new media projects for networks including CBS, Bravo, A&E, TLC, BET and more.  Learn how to sell a screenplay and how to pitch and sell a reality show from her books, “The 1-3-5 Story Structure Made Simple System: The Nine Essential Elements of a Sellable Screenplay" and "The Show Starter Reality TV Made Simple System: Ten Steps to Creating and Pitching a Sellable Reality Show."






Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Donna Michelle Anderson's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 40 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Friday, May 11, 2007
View other articles written by Donna Michelle Anderson (776)
Donna Michelle Anderson


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
History Of Mr. Spock's Vulcan Greeting on Star Trek

When Will Naruto End?

Reality Television - Educational or a Waste of Time?

Reality TV - I`m a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here Jungle Winner 2008 is King Who?

Breaking Into Hollywood - How Do I Sell My Own Reality TV Show?

Reality TV – If the Real World Was Like “Real World”

So called 'Reality T.V.' blessing or bane?

Reality TV: No, It's Not!

Reality TV or Entertainment TV, You Decide

Reality TV Are our lives so empty, we need to watch them?

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company