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Launching Your Career Begins At Home

By Grover Dale

Are you serious about going "pro"? Are major job centers like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Las Vegas beckoning to you from too many miles away? Are you feeling stuck in the "boonies" where nothing except your home studio is preparing you for a career in the big city? If "yes" is your answer to these three questions, I have encouraging news for you. There are a number of opportunities in your hometown that can help prepare you for the life youıre seeking.

The following strategies, believe it or not, can be explored during your everyday life, inside or outside the classroom. Read on. Invest some time and thought here. You may be surprised by the outcome.

STRATEGY #1: INVESTIGATE THE OPTIONS IN FRONT OF YOU.
If you live in or near a city that's home to a theatre, dance company, or cultural organization, find out if they accept volunteer help or interns. Volunteer a few hours of your time each week. Meet people who are working in the arts and non-profit sector. Establish rapport wherever possible.

Use your local library for free access to theatre, film, TV, and trade publications. Devote some quality research time to the performing arts section. Ask library employees if theyıre aware of any local activities that fall in your range of interests. Run some searches on yellowpages.com for dance instruction, theatres, or arts organizations in your area.

STRATEGY #2: THINK ABOUT THE LIFE CHOICES YOU MAKE DAILY. Everyday choices about relationships, TV viewing, reading habits, eating habits, finances, friendships, and leisure time impacts our professional goals. How? Because they contribute to the kind of person we're becoming. We owe it to ourselves to understand that no matter how well we sing, dance, or act, the kind of person we are plays a role in our employability. So. why not become the kind of person that a choreographer would love to spend 8 to 12 hours a day working with?

STRATEGY #3: FIND THE STRENGTH TO LOOK AT THE TOUGH QUESTIONS. As professionals, we are subject to the rules of free-lance employment. Webster's Dictionary defines a free-lancer as "one who sells his or her services to employers without a long-term commitment." Okay. That means we're working at a profession that , by its very nature, cannot offer steady employment. Can you be comfortable not knowing where the next job is coming from? Is financial uncertainty acceptable to you? Generations of pros have found individual ways of dealing with finances. Some came into the profession prepared to take part-time jobs and some relied on loans or support from their families. The smartest ones acquired "financial management" skills before entering the business. The survival budget we create and live by today can make the journey a lot easier. Another toughie: once you see how much dance employment is out there, you may learn that the form of dance you're most committed to, offers fewer opportunities than you had hoped. Are you willing to explore other, more employable, forms of dance?

STRATEGY #4: ACCUMULATE THE INFO YOU NEED.
Workplace and business information has never been so available. How lucky we are to have access to the super highway of information! Re-enforce that education. Use those websites. Subscribe to trade publications. Inform yourself! Rest assured that "an informed dancer has the best shot at becoming an employed dancer...?"

STRATEGY #5: BUILD YOUR OWN SUPPORT TEAM.
Sharing your hopes and concerns about your goals with friends, family members, and teachers is healthy. Weighing the pros and cons of college programs, scholarships, part time jobs, securing an agent, and survival budgets leads to more solutions when you engage others in the process. The advice and support you need may be closer to home than you think.

STRATEGY #6: NON-STOP PREPARATION!
Regardless of the time we invest in preparation, there's always another lesson to be learned and another technique to be mastered. The nature of the "biz" is that it shifts with public tastes, technical advances, and creative breakthroughs. The tools you need tomorrow may be different than the tools you use today. So, the bottomline ) is that training never stops. If the idea of non-stop education is repellent to you, consider other occupations that will demand less of you. If dance is the only career choice that will make you happy, get comfortable with being on the path to growth. You're going to be on it a long time!

STRATEGY #7: RECOGNIZE YOUR OWN POTENTIAL!
Accept that thereıs already a "complete professional" in you just waiting to surface. All it needs is attention, nourishment, and confidence. Most of us know who's responsible for supplying the attention and nourishment, but what about the confidence? How does a 15-year-old deal with that?

Whatever age you are, start slowly but surely. Begin by hearing the praise you get from others, even if itıs only about the new sweater youıre wearing or how youıve fixed your hair. If youıre too shy to respond to a compliment, then silently agree with it. Agreeing with praise sends your mind a healthy message...you did something right. In time, you begin to think, "hey, Iım good at this." Simple things like acknowledging the progress you make in dance class, math class, computer operation, or family interactions qualify as confidence builders. A string of them can make a difference in the way you feel about your potential. Recognizing what you have to offer as a student, a person, a friend, or a family member leads to believing in yourself ... and thereıs nothing's more potent than that when you're facing the realities of the competitive world in your future. NOTE: Self-confidence doesn't happen overnight. Rushing it can be as defeating as never addressing it. The point is, address it and be patient about the arrival time. You'll get there.

STRATEGY #8: OBSERVE THE POTENTIAL OF OTHERS.
Observe successful people at work. (family members, fellow students, teachers, salespeople, business owners, etc.) Do they seem happy with their jobs? Does their behavior attract others to them? Are they connecting with co-workers, customers and employers? Do their personalities have anything to do with their success? Would you enjoy working with them? Do you see qualities similar to your own? Or qualities youıd like to acquire? If "yes" is the answer to most of these questions, it sounds like a solid career plan is taking shape. Imitating the "potential" of others while identifying your own is a great step towards personal development.

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"I am writing to let you know that I have had success using your site! I just wanted to say thank you, and that I have been a loyal member for six months now. And I have told all of my friends about your site!"
- Maya H. Jackson,
MISS, member


SPECIAL MEMBER BENEFIT: When time-sensitive auditions come In, we immediately email alerts like this one:

'Shipwrecked' now casting a 3rd series For Network TV
RDF Media is now preparing for another series of network reality show, SHIPWRECKED. This time our 16 young castaways will be drawn from all over the world to experience life on a dream island in the South Pacific. The producers will be casting Europeans and Americans based in Los Angeles and Antipodeans in Melbourne, Australia. Would you like the chance to be stranded on a beautiful island with 15 strangers from all 4 corners of the world? Do you have what it takes to live for 10 weeks on a remote, uninhabited island, with limited supplies and no contact with the outside world? The right applicants:

  • will be aged 18-25
  • available all of May, June, July
  • reasonably fit and able to swim
  • fluent in English
  • willing to live off the land and suffer hardships

Information with dates, times, locations, and contact numbers are positioned here.

QUOTES FROM VISITORS:
"I'm on TV dancing with French popstars. Looks like the tips I've gotten from your site are paying off!" Rick A, Paris, France, member

"A4D is an absolute lifesaver!" Sarah G, Australia, member

"God bless you for this website. I had tears of joys in my eyes when I found it!" Rita May B, Duluth MI, member

For more free pages, pull down the non-member menu posted at the top of this page.

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