At 11:54 AM 5/2/2006, Rickey wrote:
Finally, I would like to ask your opinion about
starting a new dance series
in a town that already has a series. In the case I am thinking of there
already is a well established dance in the same town, and it is not at all
clear that the town can support two dance series every month.
Your question is a little vague, but here's my NSH opinion ...
I think your question is not 'can the town support two dance series' but
what makes a successful dance.
I mean, in Atlanta, population of 3 million or so, we have a weekly dance
that varies from 80-200 people, and a 2x a month series that gets 8-12
people. Huh.
In Asheville, population of about 70K, they have a weekly dance that gets
around 300, a weekly dance that gets 100-120, a monthly traditional squares
dance and a monthly advanced dance. Not to mention Greenville, which is
only 90 minutes away, which is once or twice a month.
Can a town support two dance series? Depends upon the town. The energy of
the area, the number of dancers, the number of nearby dances. I'd say the
more dancing in the area, the more dances it can support.
However, your real question (IMNSHO) is "how do I create a successful dance
series?"
I'm not certain of the answer. My suspicion is that people come to a dance
that their friends come to. Once you have sufficient mass of friends, the
dance sustains itself and the dancers keep coming back.
Of course, to get the people to come to begin with you have all the
standard variables that people think about:
* venue - is it enticing and inviting; conducive to dance, have atmosphere;
have safe and available parking; easy to find
* organization - are the dancers welcoming and inviting to new dancers
(this comes from the organizers, who set the tone); does the dance happen
at a consistent location and time
* talent - does the sound make the band and caller hearable, without
screeches; is the caller friendly, and call dances that are successful with
short walk thrus; is the music lively and driving?
* frills - reasonable cost; potluck/food/snacks/water; childcare; etc
Check out Larry Jennings books "Zesty Contras" and "Give and Take" for
wonderful and rich (and dense) articles for dance organizers.
However, I must stress - dance is a social event. People come for their
friends. You can have big-name bands and callers, but those are short term
effects. Dancers come to an event because their friends are going.
=========================================================================
Seth Tepfer: Director of Administrative Computing & Innovative Technology
Oxford College of Emory University - 770-784-8487 - labst(a)emory.edu
For fast and easy computer help,
try... <http://help.emory.edu>http://help.emory.edu
Jex Raven Eidson Tepfer - Born 6/5/05 00:52! Say hi at:
http://www.jexRaven.com/
=========================================================================
"A facility for quotation covers the absence of original thought." -Dorothy
L. Sayers