A $150 Cup of Coffee
I spent a few hours this afternoon chatting with Andrew Smith, a new STBD fan who had discovered the show somewhat accidentally a few weeks ago (by way of the "Leo's Guide to Pittsburgh" video, of all things) and became hooked on our entire series. Shortly before New Year's, Andrew donated $150 to the cause, which garnered him a few cool bells and whistles. While he was at it, he asked to meet for a cup of coffee, and today I was able to oblige.
The interesting thing in talking about the show with a fan, as opposed to a journalist, is that the fans ask the questions that I as a creator love to answer, whereas what's interesting to a journalist are all the things I've said about the show in every interview I've ever given. It was a very cool experience to have someone asking all about our process, and how certain scenes were really filmed, and what the cast was really like, etc. It's not that I dislike giving traditional interviews, but it's rare that someone a) knows as much about the show as Andrew does, and b) asks questions I can answer from an artistic point of view, rather than the "what is STBD, how did you get started and how are you making money?" POV.
Then Andrew asked me one question I couldn't answer: "What can I do to help?"
Oddly enough, I was stumped. I spend so much time doing STBD myself that I really don't know how to utilize an offer of someone else's time and creative resources properly. So it got me thinking: What's my...
1. Increased Viewership. STBD has been around for 4 years now, but our numbers are nowhere near where we'd like them to be. Part of that is because we don't advertise. Part of that is because our barriers to entry ("3+ year's worth of episodes? How the hell am I supposed to catch up on all this? I'll go watch The Office instead...") are so high. And part of it is because I spend most of my time on production and not nearly enough on promotions or business development. Ann and Erik (aka Caroline and Rich on STBD) have helped out a lot with those issues in the past year, but both of them are busy with more pressing engagements these days, so our numbers have dipped back to their pre-push standard, which is frustrating.
2. Reliable Schedules. Since we film every week, I should have specific days set aside in which certain cast members and locations are always free to film. Oddly enough, in the 4 years we've been doing this, I haven't found a way to make that happen. Yet.
3. Improved Website. Shawn Smith of Geek Riot built us a great site back in 2005, but it's become increasingly clear over the past year that a lot of elements need to be tweaked / updated / replaced. He doesn't have much time and I don't have much money to pay him, so those elements remain unchanged, including the things I know I could do myself but never seem to get around to. From an ease-of-use perspective to a better-use-of-space perspective, there are a number of cosmetic changes that could really push the site to the next level and help us create a...
4. Social Network. As Andrew pointed out to me recently, our forums are broken (again). Shawn has been working to fix or replace them, but even after that happens, we've still only ever had a mild buzz going on our forums, even in their heyday. Considering the seismic power most social-based sites can generate, it seems ludicrous that STBD has existed as long as it has without having a self-generating buzz built around it. That kind of thing only happens when the users / viewers of a site can take an active role in the experience's development, and we aren't providing that to our fans. Yet.
5. Operating Cash. I've saved this for last because it's almost a given: everyone wants more money. We here at STBD would love to be able to throw money at problems, but even with "breathing room" cash, the issues above would still take ingenuity, manpower (or person-power, if you prefer) and time to fix. What operating cash of a recurring nature would provide us with is the opportunity to improve our production quality, pay our actors (so they can reduce their reliability on their day jobs), hire marketing and salespeople to build the back-end business side of the STBD brand, and otherwise expand what's currently a clever low-budget sitcom into an experience with a defensible plan for growth.
I'm sure there are more (a mini-DV deck and a lighting kit would come in handy, for example), but those are our 5 key needs, as I see them.
So here are three open questions to our fans / readers:
What elements do YOU see STBD needing to focus on to improve?
How do you think we can tackle the ones listed above?
And, what are the five Wish List items you have for your own site / show?
(If you do post a Wish List, please track back to this post so we can continue the concept of the conversation.)
Labels: businessplan, donations, wishlist
6 Comments:
Hi,
I hope you don't mind me posting out of the blue. I've been watching STBD since the Fall, and since the aformentioned forums are busted I was glad to see you had opened up the post to discussion.
1) I think the biggest thing I would like to see is the characters starting to go somewhere. You did this Caroline and Dean, and it worked really well. And it looks like you might be doing this with Lex and Derridre. But so far we've only seen Lloyd and Caroline in scenes together talking to each other, not much changes from one of these scenes to the next. I'm not saying they have to hop into bed right away or that they even need to be romantically entangled, but this has been going on for months without much progression. Also, it seems like Leo has been completly isolated from the rest of the group for quite some time.
2) I think moving WANT to a podcast is a great idea, you might want to check out woxy.com the first ever terristial radio statio to go completly internet.
3) Also, and I say this loving the cast you've put together, but its just too big. This is probably a neccesity because of the scheduling problems you talk about, but not enough attention is paid to to many of the characters.
4) Have you ever thought of assembling, in the crudest possible sense of the word, a set? Having absolutly zero experience with this sort of things it just seems that having a place that you could arbitraily dress and light could provide a lot of flexability. Again, I have no knowledge of these things at all.
As for the thing you listed above.
1) If you could turn part of your website into a fan resource page that might help. If, for example, you had something as simple as a badge that people could put on their webpages/blogs/myspace/etc that would not require much upkeep and grab a few eyes.
2) Sorry, can't help you here.
3) I have a BS in Computer Science. I don't have a whole lot of free time, but I'd love to help out with some small stuff.
4) Maybe start a facebook group?
5) Perhaps get a sponser. Not like ads or product placement, but a PBS sort of thing. Just a five second blurb at the beginning or end of the episode.
Anyways, I love STBD, keep up the good work.
Hi,
I made the previous post. Anyways, I didn't see the part about trackbacks, implying that you didn't want your comments all cluttered up.
Go ahead and delete the posts if you want. Sorry for any inconvenience I may have caused.
Adamv;
Thanks for the comments! (And the trackbacks suggestion was meant for the people who might post similar "wish lists" for their own shows, so don't worry.)
I agree, the biggest storytelling problem we have is momentum. Along with an oversized cast, that's the other by-product of scheduling difficulties: more characters = slower-moving storylines. The more planning ahead I can do, and know I can definitely get from beginning to end of a plotline, the better we can fix that problem.
Building a set? I'm sure it could be done (we know a person or two with warehouse space), but the time and $ that would entail is prohibitive at this stage; it would have to be an off-season thing. Fortunately, the Affogato cafe serves as a "set" in its own way.
Website badge? Actually, one exists and will be rolled out shortly.
Sponsors? We (and every other web video creator) are always open to the idea. The search continues...
Facebook group? Interesting idea. I forgot Facebook was open to the public now...
Thanks for all the suggestions! And, if anyone would like to volunteer some time and / or talent to help out STBD, email jkownacki at somethingtobedesired dot com or AIM me at stbdpittsburgh and we can discuss.
Justin:
One thought I had was the possibility of advertising - maybe a 10 - 30 second clip at the beginning of each episode. It would dovetail with adamv's sponsor idea.
Another thought I had was more public showings like you did with PUMP's Flicks on Bricks. That's how I came to the show.
Public appearances by the cast at events - announce them in advance. Fans could meet the cast, and the people around them would ask what was going on...
As far as improvements, I agree that things are moving slowly. The season started off well with the closing of WANT but the tension from that seems to have disappeared and been consumed by the Caroline / Lloyd / Liz love triangle, and more recently the Deirdre / Lex thing.
And you'd better wrap up the Todd / Celeste thread!
Just some thoughts,
Scott
Scott;
Thanks for the suggestions. And, actually, how ironic: we have another public viewing coming up this week at Affogato on Thursday. I really should do more self-promotion of these things...
Momentum is always our biggest hurdle. I see now that I'll need to map out story blocks more aggressively in the future. Fortunately, I think we've gotten the whole "character development" thing under control, which means we should do better with the whole "concise plot" thing...
Oh, and the Todd / Celeste thread? Keep your eyes open. :)
Sorry, one last idea. Have you thought of making the WANT podcast an actual podcast? That might be a good way to reintegrate the local/indie music scene, spin the show off (as you said above), and may lax some of the scheduling some. Also, since it would probably be about 1/3 to 1/2 music it would require less writing.
Post a Comment
<< Home