Vlastní propagace kouzla úspěchu!
Vlastní propagace kouzla úspěchu!

Tipy pro Úspěšné Nakupování v Sekáčích | Ester Starling (Smět 2024)

Tipy pro Úspěšné Nakupování v Sekáčích | Ester Starling (Smět 2024)
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Ne příliš mnoho let před rokem 2012 byla představa, že člověk může dosáhnout úspěchu a dokonce i slávy v kreativních odvětvích prostřednictvím vlastní propagace, nerealistická. Systém obecně fungoval tak, že spisovatelé, hudebníci a další „talent“, kteří vytvářeli umělecká díla a zábavu, byli na milost agentů a vedoucích pracovníků, kteří se rozhodli, které produkty stojí za podporu a prodej. Úspěch proto často závisel na dodržování stanovených pravidel a cesty ke slávě byly omezené. Cesty samotné, jako jsou marnost a soukromé tisky, zřídka platily značné obchodní dividendy. V průběhu 21. století však internet výrazně narušil mnoho tradičních průmyslových postupů. Díky rozšířenému přístupu k fanouškům i finančníkůmkreativní typy mohou snadněji vyjednávat systém a převzít větší kontrolu nad svou vlastní kariérou.

Provoz v rámci systému.

Pro amatérského zpěváka je velká sada dýmek a oslnivý úsměv dost zřídka, aby upoutala pozornost nahrávacího průmyslu. Proto se tolik účinkujících stěhuje do Los Angeles nebo Nashvillu v naději, že najdou příležitosti k objevení. Pro dva z nejznámějších popových zpěváků na světě však stačilo uvést několik písní online. Britská zpěvačka Adele, jejíž album 21 prodalo na celém světě více než 20 milionů kopií, byla společností XL Recordings podepsána v roce 2006 poté, co štítek zahlédl některá dema zveřejněná jejím jménem na webu sociálních sítí MySpace. Podobně i kanadský teen senzace Justin Bieber dluží svou megafame za montážní linku Disney, ale za dávku domácích videí na YouTube, která upoutala pozornost dobře propojeného hudebního promotéra.V obou případech demokratická povaha internetu umožnila výkonným umělcům přilákat pozornost odvětví bez vynaložení velkého úsilí a Bieber zejména dokázal postavit svou značku online, než prodal jediné album.

Another route to a conventional industry arrangement, it seems, is to exploit new media so effectively that it becomes impossible to be ignored by the old. That was the case for Ukraine-born classical pianist Valentina Lisitsa, who landed a record deal in 2012 only after her amateur performance videos, which she posted to YouTube and sold in DVD form on Amazon.com, attracted millions of views. So, too, for American author Amanda Hocking. In 2010, having received countless rejection letters from publishing houses, she began self-publishing her “paranormal romance” novels as e-books for Amazon’s Kindle device. Shrewdly pricing her titles at discount rates, she became an out-of-nowhere millionaire and was eventually able to ink a contract with St. Martin’s Press. (Wake, the first book in her Watersong series, was printed on paper in 2012.) Meanwhile, a fan-fiction Web site provided a platform for British writer E.L. Jamesto share her erotically charged stories with a community of thousands. Their popularity led to the publication of James’s Fifty Shades of Grey, first by a small Australian press in 2011 and then, as demand skyrocketed, by mainstream publishers as well. The novel was swiftly followed in 2012 by two best-selling sequels.

For some people the problem is not capturing industry interest but rather maintaining it. Many up-and-coming musicians, for instance, sign contracts with major record labels only to have their careers put on hold as the label undergoes a shift in personnel or priorities. When rhythm-and-blues singer-songwriter Frank Ocean found himself in such a predicament in early 2011, he decided to post the entirety of his debut album, Nostalgia, Ultra., on his Tumblr blog. The buzz surrounding the digital release forced Ocean’s label, Def Jam, to pay attention, and in 2012 it issued his follow-up, Channel Orange, to much acclaim.

Digital media also offer opportunities for those who have already enjoyed some success to push themselves beyond the roles into which they have been pigeonholed. British author Stephen Leather had published thriller novels via conventional means for more than 20 years before turning to the e-book market in 2010 as a way of self-distributing works that his publisher had turned down, in part because they fell outside his usual genre. Beyond providing him with a measure of creative freedom, the gambit established a lucrative sideline. For her part, American model Kate Upton had found steady work in various print campaigns, including the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, before a video that captured her spontaneously dancing in the stands of a basketball game went viral on the Internet in 2011. The 19-year-old bombshell quickly leveraged her newfound celebrity into a reputation as a versatile supermodel, with industry insiders speculating that she could soon even break into high fashion.

Doing It Yourself (D.I.Y.).

It is clear that for many talented people, participating in the traditional system makes sense. After some fans accused Hocking of “selling out” by signing with St. Martin’s, she noted that she wanted to reach potential fans who did not own e-readers—and also that wearing multiple hats (writer, editor, and publicist) had become exhausting. Others, however, have discovered that embracing the system as a whole is no longer a necessity.

Although record labels can do a great deal to promote new artists and help them develop their fan base, such efforts are not as crucial for already-popular veterans. That is in part what drove arena-filling British art-rock band Radiohead to abandon its label and self-release In Rainbows (2007) as a “pay what you wish” download on its Web site. Since then a number of other high-profile musicians have embarked on similar schemes, either distributing entire albums for free online (e.g., Nine Inch Nails) or setting up their own record companies (e.g., Dolly Parton). Recently, even comedians have followed suit. In 2011 American comic auteur Louis C.K. allowed fans to purchase his latest stand-up special as a digital video exclusively through his Web site. Offering the content at the remarkably low price of five dollars, he grossed $1 million within two weeks, and in June 2012 he successfully used the same direct model to sell affordable tickets to his live performances.

Obviously, part of what makes such experiments work is that established and recognizable artists can usually risk whatever production costs they accrue and can rely on a vast network of fans to help promote the project. However, even some lesser-known creative professionals are finding that they can survive on an independent (or at least a semi-independent) basis. For instance, Web sites such as Etsy and Saatchi Online (owned by the London-based Saatchi Gallery) provide self-representing visual artists and craft makers (i.e., those without gallery representation) with highly visible platforms to display and sell their work. Etsy’s services have proved sufficiently fruitful that a regular feature on its blog, titled “Quit Your Day Job,” spotlights members who have been able to earn a living through the site. As well, Kickstarter and other “crowdfunding” sites make it easier for creative people to solicit and raise money for their projects.

Perhaps the easiest way to achieve stardom on one’s own is through blogging, as celebrity-gossip king Perez Hilton can attest. While Hilton attracted a following by engaging in rampant snark, Tavi Gevinson, who started her Style Rookie blog in 2008 as an 11-year-old in suburban Chicago, drew in readers with an adolescent enthusiasm for fashion and the smart, eccentric corners of pop culture. Inspired by the hip 1990s magazine Sassy, she soon sought to launch a publication of her own, in collaboration with media doyenne (and Sassy founder) Jane Pratt. After determining that the involvement of Pratt’s media company would restrict her control, however, Gevinson severed ties, and her monthly Web magazine Rookie, which she owned in full, debuted in 2011 to no shortage of praise. With its editor still only in high school, the intelligent independent site might well represent a new paradigm for the creative class.