Supporting Your Why

WhyStrong leaders know that passion motivates their team and produces high returns on their products/services. This passion is the heart of the company or the reason why the company does what it does. It’s the one filter that everything being worked must be analyzed through.

I recently reviewed a film script that was being produced by an Atheist and a Christian. I found it fascinating that they set their religious differences to the side in order to make a great story. I was also eager to see how the film turned out due to the diverse passions they brought to the table.

However, the screenplay had some major flaws in it. I asked both men how they’d deal with the hole in the plot and they both instinctively knew how the story needed to end, but couldn’t understand how to get there. So I asked if they’d like my input and they agreed.

I asked one question: Why are you making THIS story?

They both answered in almost perfect unison, “To show the audience that people can change with every choice they make including the decision to show a weaker person kindness.”

Here is how I responded…

If a person is going to change, it needs to be the protagonist. (Although other characters can also change.) Therefore ACT 1 must show the unchanged protagonist in his normal flawed life. In ACT 2A, the protagonist must be introduced to the possibility of change or at least the contrast between his current life and his possible life. In ACT 2B, the protagonist must battle through his internal and external obstacles to overcome whom he is to give room for who he can become. In ACT 3, he must look at his flaw from a new perspective and turn it into the thing that catapults him through the change into his new life.

The restructuring of their story based on their agreed “why” drove a dynamic rewrite that made the story award worthy. It also drove their shared passion into the story itself. The rewrite was simple when they filtered every thing through their powerful why.

In the independent filmmaking business, the number one thing that kills great stories is when the writer loses track of the why. Writers are naturally drawn down interesting rabbit holes that take the story in a significantly different direction. The only way to stay true to the story is to understand why you’re writing it to begin with.

When I created Tried & True with Guy Cote and Anthony DeRosa, I started the story with the following why: To help people realize they are trapped in a comfortable, false freedom and need to break free to experience a true adventurous freedom that is available to all who seek it.

Unfortunately we didn’t use the why as a filter during the writing process and ended up having a different story with each draft. Each version would make a great film, but there would only be one version that matched our passion – The one we had neglected to write. It became clear that one more run at a rewrite was necessary to birth the version that we could all passionately get behind.

Filtering everything through your why will keep you focused and headed in the direction you originally intended. Everyone has a why to follow, whether in business, among family, or in creative endeavors. And, everyone can shine brightly in a profound way that the world needs when their life’s output reflects their why.

Copyright © 2015 by CJ Powers

6 Critical Steps of Filmmaking Business Revealed

The fact that filmmaking is both an art and a science rarely eludes those in the industry. Unfortunately, the critical element that escapes the attention of most is the actual business of filmmaking. Actors like Meryl Streep, Robert Downey Jr., and Sandra Bullock were able to rise to the top and find sustainability in their craft because of their business acumen.

Producers, directors, production designers, and even grips, gaffers and best boys all must understand the basics of business to survive. Most have learned that 80% of their work comes from their previous project, while the remaining 20% comes from networking during breaks, hiatus and down time.

In the film and television industry every person is a branded product/service. Some are stronger brands than others, but all are brands even if by a default setting based on ones personality and work ethic. Those who understand that their brand must produce like a corporate product; the business of filmmaking can become profitable.

I’ve found that everyone in film and television can become profitable when they properly execute the 6 critical steps in the filmmaking business.

1. Set a Goal: Picking one specific end-point or achievement for the year is better than setting two or three weaker goals. The goal must be achievable, clear and the object of your ambition with obvious benefits. It can be put into a clear goal statement for the purpose of focus and must suggest some form of measurement that reveals when the destination was met or accomplished. It can also be a multi-year goal, but profitable businesses require at least one goal per year to maintain sound business practices.

SAMPLE 1: Actor Ms. Royale, set a goal to star in a feature film within three years.

SAMPLE 2: Actor Ms. Poplar, set a goal to obtain 1,000 fans.

2. Establish Measurable Objectives: All good goals can be measured in multiple ways. To fulfill the goal, objectives must be set that assesses all the important ways the goal can be measured. Most goals produce 1-3 measureable objectives.

SAMPLE 1: Actor Ms. Royale, set the following objectives:
A). Star in a short film that is submitted to 40 award festivals.
B). Win a Best Actor award for her role in the short film.
C). Send publicity about award to 100 feature casting directors, producers, and directors.

SAMPLE 2: Actor Ms. Poplar, set the following objectives:
A). Develop relationships with 50 arts and entertainment news editors.
B). Hire a publicist to create 12 newsworthy press releases.
C). Create a fan page and fill it with 3 posts per week.

3. Assess S.W.O.T.: Once the direction is set and its clear how to measure the results, the most important thing is conducting a true assessment of your strengths and weaknesses, and doing the same for the competition. Since the competitive information is being assessed from your viewpoint, it’s important to label the competition’s strengths as threats, and their weaknesses as opportunities. It’s also important that all S.W.O.T. inputs be truthful for the sake of developing powerful strategies.

SAMPLE 1: Actor Ms. Royale, drafted the following assessment:
STRENGTH: Years of modeling, commercial and television experience.
WEAKNESS: Not known among the film community and never tracked fans.
OPPORTUNITY: Can easily win head to head talent competition against Ms. Poplar.
THREAT: Politics within existing networks might block her entry.

SAMPLE 2: Actor Ms. Poplar, set the following assessment:
STRENGTH: Standout attractiveness, charismatic personality, well networked and had role in a highly visible film.
WEAKNESS: Is a beginning actor with little instruction.
OPPORTUNITY: Can use politics and a large fan base to help promote ticket sales and block Ms. Royale from acquiring roles.
THREAT: Once she learns how to network, Ms. Royale’s experience might overshadow or dominate in the market.

4. Develop Strategies: Up to this point our competitive information comes from intuition, observation and market conditions. Tying the information to our S.W.O.T. and by using the ability within our network, fan base or entourage forms the development of our strategies. All great strategies are specific and tied directly to one objective.

SAMPLE 1: Actor Ms. Royale, created the following strategies for the objective of starring in a short film submitted to awards:
A). Network with award winning writer/director to create an award winning short film.
B). Network with cast and crew to pull together a high quality low budget short.
C). Raise funds to cover festival submissions.

SAMPLE 2: Actor Ms. Poplar, created the following strategies for the objective of developing relationships with A&E news editors:
A). Hire a publicist to create press releases.
B). Offer “exclusive” interviews laced with name-dropping.
C). Develop campaigns to co-promote the editors and their rags.

5. Create an Implementable Action Plan: Every specific strategy will have a minimum of one action plan. Larger and more comprehensive strategies may require additional action plans to clarify achievements in various markets or channels. The action plan is developed to the level of including all resources, timetables, and activity punch lists necessary to accomplish the task. The more critical or the larger the strategy, the more action plans are required to meet the overarching objective measurements.

SAMPLE 1: Actor Ms. Royale, created the following action plan to fulfill the strategy of networking with an award winning writer/director to create an award winning short film:

The action plan included:
A). Names and contact info of award winning writer/directors.
B). Specific dates and times to contact each writer/director.
C). Questions to ask the writer/director.
D). A drafted working arrangement or deal memo.
E). An outline of emotions needing to be exhibited by the main character.
F). Notes taken to determine best person for project.

SAMPLE 2: Actor Ms. Poplar, created the following action plan for the strategy of hiring a publicist to create press releases:

The action plan included:
A). Names and contact info of recommended publicists.
B). Specific dates and times to contact each publicist.
C). Questions to ask the publicist.
D). A drafted working arrangement or deal memo.
E). An outline of promotional ideas or angles on stories to discuss.
F). Notes taken to determine best person for project.

6. Evaluate Your Performance Regularly: Schedules and objectives can’t be met without some form of evaluating the effectiveness of the plan and any related market changes requiring adaptability. These assessments must be honest and suggest plan B’s and market counter measures when needed. The evaluations are more than just a postmortem, as they must engage ideas for improving and advancing the strategies.

SAMPLE 1: Actor Ms. Royale, evaluated the following activities from her action plan:

A). The successful selection of an award winning writer/director.
B). The brainstormed story concept and its match to the emotions needing to be exhibited by the main character.
C). The establishment of a writing schedule for the first draft.
D). The review of the next action plan, its timetable and required resources.

SAMPLE 2: Actor Ms. Poplar, evaluated the following activities from her action plan:

A). The hiring of the publicists.
B). The brainstormed outline of press releases for the first quarter.
C). The development of a new action plan to generate photos for the press releases.
D). The discussed style of the writing.

The key to the business of filmmaking is to make sure each step does what its supposed to do.

Goal – Set the direction and vision for the general accomplishment.
Objective – Turn the goal into something measurable so the work process is functional and operational.
S.W.O.T. – Understand the true facts about the brand, competitor and market to facilitate working strategies.
Strategies – Programs or initiatives that direct and influence specific tactical actions.
Action Plans – The blue print of daily tactical activities including dates/times, resources, and other detail necessary to execute strategy.
Evaluation – The documenting of the outcome for postmortem discussions and expedient adjustments.

Those who are able to put these elements in writing, perform the work, and analyze the effectiveness of each step are the ones who will dominate the industry within a short time frame. People and businesses come and go in the film and television industry, but those who stay are successful because they understand the business.

Copyright © 2015 by CJ Powers

Why Kendrick Brothers and Miller Confuse Hollywood

Warren Miller EntertainmentWarren Miller Entertainment is the most respected name in shooting action sports films since 1949. I met director Warren Miller when I was at the university. He brought his team to La Crosse Mountain and shot stunt and trick skiers for one of his feature films. He also shot some comedic scenes that included my university drum line skiing down the slopes while we played our marching drums.

In fact the entire Marching Chiefs, our high stepping competitive marching band, also participated in the shoot – Well, at least the ones that knew how to ski. I’m not sure how it happened, but I also ended up playing my marching snare in television commercials demonstrating how wide the newest grocery store’s aisles where. But I’ve digressed.

Miller was known internationally for his great sports films and every university showed his movies regularly. The films drew large crowds based on the exciting tricks and the comedic fails and spills. And yes, our bass drummer took a nasty spill into the snow knocking over several other band members. As for me, I learned how to do 360s and helicopter spins from the trick skiers – After I had taken off my snare drum.

Miller’s films pulled in millions of dollars every year and confused Hollywood. They couldn’t get a handle on why he was successful. When they tried to copy his tactics to capture some of the revenue, the studios failed miserably. Some how Miller was the king of his niche market and made the exact type of films his audience required, complete with his own personal narration on most pictures.

War Room the MovieHollywood has never understood niche markets, especially in the latest genre of faith-based films. The Kendrick Brothers are now the latest source of Hollywood’s frustrations as their “War Room” movie continues to exceed expectations.

Several critics complain about their movies being stories that preach to the figurative choir, which causes Alex Kendrick to laugh, shake his head, and say, “they just don’t get it.” While the critics want the Kendricks to make their films more palatable for those outside of their niche, the brothers continue to make their trademark films for their niche audience.

Stephen and Alex are preachers who know exactly how to create movies that “preach” an important message to their niche audience. Their goal is to help the “church” understand important principles that can be implemented in their lives for the good of their families. They don’t care about the money or expanding the audience, but the witness their films make and the changed lives that result.

SUPER FANThe Kendricks and Miller have the ideal job as a filmmaker, which only comes about when a director finds his audience. They are able to make the shows they want and in the way they want. The great blessing for both comes in the form of super fans that make sure audiences continue to watch every film they make.

In the industry, production companies try to build a fan base of 500,000 people because that’s the number needed to continue doing what the directors of the show love to do. When the numbers are below that point of demarcation, studios and networks start dictating how the shows are made, which confines the director’s talent.

Thanks to social media and the faster flow of information, production companies now only need 1,000 super fans to give the director the same creative control that used to take a half a million fans to achieve. Both the Kendricks and Miller have their 1,000 super fans that support the director’s untainted vision.

Since Hollywood doesn’t understand the power of niche markets, and therefore understands little about super fans, they are forced to work with the Kendricks and Miller regardless of how they might judge the quality or universality of the films being released. In other words, they don’t get it.

Fans are people who like the artist’s work enough to tell a couple people about it. Super fans are people that not only like the artist’s work, but also do what’s in their power to help the artist get noticed. They are the fans that tell hundreds or thousands of people about their art.

I first learned about super fans when I met Miller. He introduced me to one of his super fans that pulled together enough showings for his films that he’d breakeven far before the budgets required. Miller was happy to help his super fan whenever he had the chance.

I’ve heard that the Kendricks also have super fans that are great influencers and leaders of churches. Every time they release a film, their super fans stir entire mega congregations to get out to the theaters and watch the important films.

This confuses Hollywood all the more. The studios and networks all believe that a film lives and dies based on its story and production values, not its message. However, a team of great super fans makes sure the pictures are successful regardless of the filmmakers ability to tell a great story or place high production values on screen.

Thankfully, both the Kendricks and Miller continually improved on their production values as a way of thanking the audience that supported their films. The more they worked on their story, the wider the audience grew beyond their niche.

This expansion is the only thing Hollywood might comprehend, but it may be a while before they understand how niche markets work. After all, Hollywood is too big to comprehend how niche films bless community.

Copyright © 2015 by CJ Powers