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HOW-TO, Techniques, & Best Practices Channel
Finding Film Industry Employment After Graduation
By Staff
posted Jan 26, 2010, 08:10 |
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Check out this article in the print edition of StudentFilmmakers
Magazine, April 2007. More photos featured
in the print edition. Click
here to get a copy and to subscribe >>
Finding
Film Industry Employment After Graduation
To Succeed, You Must Network
by Michael Corbett
Networking: n., the developing of contacts or exchanging
of information with others in an informal network, as to further a career.
Not only do you want to be a filmmaker, but you want to work in the big leagues.
You want to be on set and work on Fortune 500 television commercials for national
clients and on studio and independent feature films. More than 90% of the people
you see on a film set are freelance. They are hired, sign a deal memo, and work
in their craft as long as they are needed. At the end of the job, they are unemployed.
To succeed in a working environment like this you must network. You must constantly
stay in touch with other freelancers and stay abreast of what is happening in
the industry. You must always be looking for a job.
(Pictured) Guest director of photography and Emmy award winner, Flip MInott,
shoots a scene including pyrotechniques and mechanical special effects on the
PCC class project �Uriel� shot on location at Carolina Pinnacle Studios in Yanceyville,
North Carolina.
Working for an industry vendor is a great way to build your network. Working
filmmakers routinely visit and patronize industry vendors, renting equipment,
buying expendables and arranging for needed services. By working for a lighting,
grip or camera rental house, many a filmmaker has launched a career or gotten
a foothold in a new market. Most rental houses are accustomed to a regular turnover
of employees, as experienced employees join the freelance workforce, and newcomers
take their place. Our industry is growing at an unprecedented pace. There is
no shortage of opportunities for skilled craftsmen.
The plan: Make a plan. Take the time to plan how you will seek
employment. Over time, your plan will change as your interests change and you
discover strategies that work better for you. The important thing to note here
is as a freelancer: you will always be working your plan.
Research and identify possible sources of work and leads for
work. State and locally funded film liaison and production offices are paid
for with your taxes. Almost every production will require a permit to shoot
or some other service provided by the local film office. Call the film office
and find out who is working and who is coming to town.
Equipment rental houses, production companies, film laboratories, and postproduction
facilities are sources of leads for freelance employment. Organize your time
and plan to go and visit these places. Take resumes and business cards with
you. Make up a video �reel� of productions that you have worked on. Be ready
to show it if the person you are interviewing with has the time to watch it
and is so inclined.
Go see people. Look sharp, feel sharp, and be sharp. It doesn�t
matter if you have long hair, no hair, earrings, tattoos or anything else. What
does matter is that you look professional, neat, clean, and dressed appropriately
for the job you are applying for. Always have your business cards and resume
with you. Smile and use a firm handshake. Ask for work. Ask if they know about
any work coming up.
Visit production companies, rental houses, production offices,
the set of working productions, the film office, and your production friends
(take some beverages and some chips and become better friends). Join and attend
industry organizations. Volunteer to be on committees or just to help with projects.
Go to networking nights and other social events. See and be seen. Enroll in
seminars and classes to enhance your skills and continue your education. Go
to industry conventions and conferences.
Make friends. Ask people to lunch, or dinner. Most of the work
you do in this industry will come to you because an individual recommended you
for a job. The more friends you have in the film industry, the easier it will
be for you to get work. Have parties for production friends. Go to parties.
Join professional organizations and attend meetings, mixers and network nights.
If you are capable of doing a competent professional job, and if you go and
visit sources for work and make production friends, you will succeed as a freelance
production person.
Telephone. Your telephone is your most powerful networking
tool. Call people you went to school with, production assistants, technicians,
crew members from the last job you worked on, the film office, professional
friends in the industry, production managers, production offices, rental houses,
and post production houses. Call anyone who might be able to help you find work.
I know freelancers who, when unemployed, spend their entire day on the telephone
calling network contacts. They don�t stay unemployed very long.
Mail/fax. Send a personalized cover letter and resume to the
production company you just worked for, production offices you learn about through
industry publications, and to production managers and production offices you
discover through your phone network. Generally speaking, you won�t often get
work by simply mailing someone a resume and cover letter. This process is much
like advertising done by Fortune 500 companies to establish and maintain their
�brand� identification with their customers. By using the mail and fax to persistently
remind producers and production managers that you are still in the business
and seeking work, there will be a long term benefit to your career.
Read periodicals related to the industry not only to look for
work possibilities but also to increase your overall knowledge thereby making
yourself more employable. Publications such as Variety and the Hollywood Reporter
that you can find at most big city libraries or on the Internet, routinely publish
lists of feature films �in development.� It�s a long shot, but send them a nice
cover letter and resume. Getting on one eleven-week shoot at standard industry
pay rates is worth a few hours a month of mailing out letters.
Persist, persist, and persist. If you make a plan and follow
it, you will succeed. Keep calling people. Keep going to visit employment contacts.
Keep sending out resumes and cover letters. Keep attending professional organization
meetings, networking nights and other special events. Keep taking classes to
improve your craft, your business skills and your human relations skills.
You are only as good as your last job. The single most important
thing that you can do to get more work in the industry is to do a good job on
the show you are on right now. Keep your mouth closed, your ears open and pay
attention. Work hard, don�t complain and thank the person who hired you. Several
key advances in my career came as a direct result of sending thank-you letters
to production managers and producers that I had recently worked for.
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