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Marketing Lessons from the Green Room
by Linda Puig
When my son played the role of Jack in Into the Woods, his
high school's musical, I volunteered to be the back-up parent
in the Green Room one night. (The Green Room is the off-stage
room in a theater in which actors can change costume or rest
while they're waiting for their cues.) As the back-up parent,
I had to be ready with duct tape for a ripped costume, bobby
pins for a fallen hairdo-whatever. But all went smoothly that
night, so I just sat back and observed.
It was amazing watching those teens!
Alive there in the Green Room-as well as on the stage-were
principles that breed success not just in our personal lives
but in our businesses and private practices, as well. I
couldn't sleep that night until I wrote them down. Now I'm
happy to share them with you.
Never give up. One girl cried after the opening night
performance, feeling she'd really flubbed her very challenging
role as the witch and especially her singing. The next show,
she came back utterly determined to succeed and kept up a
laser-like intensity all the way through the evening. As
fellow students congratulated her on one number or another,
she'd say, "Thanks, but I'm not done yet," and sharpen her
focus. She nailed it that night! Imagine taking that
intensity, that gritty determination to succeed, into your
efforts to get new clients or grow your business!
Gather a good support team about you. A show doesn't go on
without a good support team. The student stage crew for Into
the Woods was so good that when one of the actors missed her
cue as the booming off-stage voice of the giantess, the stage
manager bellowed the lines herself. Likewise, as a
self-employed therapist or coach, or a small business owner,
it is essential to have a team that supports you and can pinch
hit when you're out.
Prepare. More than that, don't stop preparing. I was moved to
see even well-rehearsed students care so much about their
performances in the musical that they read over their lines
and hummed their songs before every scene. This speaks to a
desire for excellence, for continuous improvement. What steps
can you take-and keep taking-to prepare your business, your
practice, for the kind of growth you want?
Visualize success. Before his outlandish scene as the wolf
trying to entice Little Red Riding Hood off her path, one
student would sit in the Green Room, close his eyes and
visualize himself as the canine bad guy. He never failed to
wow the audiences with his larger-than-life performance. I
think visualization is an underappreciated and underutilized
business skill.
Pay attention and improvise. When the set change dragged on
before one scene, it became clear that there was trouble
behind the curtain. The quick-thinking student playing the
narrator ad-libbed for more than three minutes while the
problem was fixed. This crucial theater skill is a great motto
for business and for life.
Recognize your role in the bigger picture. In a play or
musical, one character can't zig unless the other zags. In
other words, others depend on you to do your part. So if you
stop yourself from stepping boldly into your own success, it
doesn't affect just you, but also everyone else.
Dress the part and you will become it. This is why costuming
is such an important part of theater. In business, "dressing
the part" is more about the attitudes you wear than the
clothing you have on. Let's say, for example, that you're
negotiating your first contract with a corporation for mental
health services or executive coaching. Rather than fret about
your inexperience, you'll be more likely to get the gig if you
adopt an attitude like "So what if it's my first negotiation.
I know what I want, what my services are worth and where I'm
willing to bend."
When you lose your way, pause for a second. We all lose our
way from time to time. As an actor, someone is likely to feed
you your line from off stage. If the path you need to take in
your business isn't clear, it may mean you need to take a
break from it all to replenish yourself.
Play one role at a time. Even in those slapstick-y plays in
which two actors play 24 roles, the roles still have to be
played one at a time. As a self-employed or small-business
person in charge of a dozen different "hats," it's helpful to
remember to wear one hat at a time. Be the CFO, then be the
marketing officer, then the technician. When they're all
"speaking" at once, the result is chaos, not clarity.
Celebrate your successes. I loved watching all the students
celebrate each other and themselves each night after a great
show. It's easy to forget about celebrating when there are so
many other tasks awaiting your attention. But when you start
celebrating your completions, your accomplishments, you'll
notice a difference in how you feel about your business and
yourself.
About the Author:
Linda Puig is a newsletter marketing expert, a writer with
nearly 30 years' professional experience and president of
Claire Communications, which provides high-quality, low-cost
articles to busy professionals who don't have the time or
inclination to write articles.
http://www.articlesforsale.net
-article added to
Teed Hosting on May 1st, 2008
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