Hi callers,
Website help request:
As I've been ramping up my accepting gigs again post-shutdown, I'm
realizing that I've put off my "get an actual website" too long.
Any suggestions for website designers for caller pages or contra performer
pages?
I can provide photographs myself, for what that's worth.
This is one of those things where, yeah, I could trudge through it myself
with a DIY site-builder attached to a standard web host or Square, but I do
UX Design as my 40-hour-a-week job and I already have many things on my
plate, and I just really haven't found motivation to take on Another
Project. So I really just want to be able to hand someone some money and
know I'll get a good product that isn't needlessly complex.
Self-promotion perspective request:
I'm also looking for ways to appropriately do self-promotion as a caller.
I love doing series dances, and also love doing the dances for groups with
lots of new folks, too. But I also would enjoy expanding doing more special
events, and am getting more comfortable with traveling again, pandemic-wise.
There's this sort of odd condition where the A-List Well-Known Callers
don't need to advertise, but to get there, you need to either/both
advertise and/or have your summers off so you can do All The Tours and All
The Summer Camps. On top of that, New England is kind of a funny area
because we have so many weekly/monthly series dances that we don't have big
dance weekends like pretty much everywhere else in the country.
And ... I dunno, for many of us, there's an unknown of "How much
self-promotion until you become pushy / obnoxious?"
I've been calling for 11 years. Before the pandemic I was doing 30-40 gigs
a year, including some wedding/One-Night-Stand events and smattering of
special events. I've headlined at Flurry in 2018 and got positive feedback.
I known where I'm at in terms of effectively choosing and teaching dances
from simple through advanced. I solicit feedback from organizers I call
dances for. And I know that being an advocate for Larks/Robins as well as
dancer-safety has been a black mark for me in some bookers' minds.
But I still get people being like "Oh, how long have you been calling?" ---
I realize part of this is the name change from Ron to Julian, but, part of
it is definitely hesitation to like, I dunno, email organizers I don't
personally know asking about dance weekends or whatnot. Maybe there's
partly the "imposter syndrome" in there as well.
One thing I do know is that I now have no recent good video of me calling,
which I'm earmarking as part of the website project.
Perspective on self-promotion is appreciated, and perspective for anyone
who also books dances is appreciated.
In dance,
Julian Blechner
he/him
(Western Mass, USA)