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The Artful Manager

Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture

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Towards an artistic theory of everything

May 21, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

Author, educator, and consultant Eric Booth has grown weary of the disconnects and bickering within the many fields of art — by discipline, by professional level, by community, by distribution channel, by artistic intent. So, in this compelling essay, he suggests a renewed emphasis on the common core of artistic endeavor — the ‘grand unifying […]

The minimal web site

May 20, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

I wondered out loud last week (on Twitter, anyway) about our increasing efforts in arts organizations to add more and more internal functions to our web sites. Calendars, blogs, news banners, rotating content, special interactive features all have their lure for our visitors and potential visitors, but they also create an increasing drag on our […]

Is dynamic pricing in your future?

May 18, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

If you book a lot of flights, you know the oddities of airline pricing — where a round trip can be one price on one day, and then either half or double that price the next. Such is the world of dynamic pricing, where high-volume sellers work to charge what the market will bear while […]

The TED Commandments

May 15, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

I’ve often expressed my admiration for the TED conference keynotes — 20-minute nuggets of insight, humor, provocation, and revelation by really smart and engaging people. A perfect fit for my bus ride home. So, I’m thrilled that the ground rules behind those great presentations are available on-line. Tim Longhurst (via Garr Reynolds) offers a transcription […]

Operas captured in 140 characters (or less)

May 13, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

After diving into Twitter last month, one of my happiest discoveries was #operaplot, a competition (launched by this brilliant individual) to summarize opera plots within the confines of Twitter’s 140-character limit — massive, epic narratives constrained to absurdly small dimensions. The contest had basic rules, fabulous prizes donated by web-eager opera companies around the world, […]

On Facebook and mortality

May 12, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

NPR had a fascinating segment on the challenge of on-line identities when the originator dies. Who owns your Facebook page, your LinkedIn profile, your Google mail account, your Twitter feed, your Flickr photos, your YouTube videos, and all the other remnants of your virtual life when your actual life has ended? I’m honestly not sure […]

Assessing Lincoln Center

May 11, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

Anthony Tommasini offers a 50-year assessment of Lincoln Center in the New York Times that’s worth a read, especially if your town is planning a major multi-venue cultural facility. Although, Tommasini may have missed the recent and continuing developments across the country built upon its model: Yet if a sprawling performing-arts complex like Lincoln Center […]

Business planning meets mixed-media

May 8, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

Business planning books are generally linear things, stepping you through the motions of starting or extending a business from insight to implementation. But we all know that reality is not like that, particularly in artistic enterprise. When artists and creative individuals consider starting their own business or profit-generating activity, vision, business, purpose, life, passion, and […]

The urge to merge

May 7, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

In a tight economy, there has been increasing chatter about the potential for mergers in the nonprofit world. The social service sector has seen a slew of them. But the arts have seemed more talk than action. While not specifically promoting merger, the Lodestar Foundation recently encouraged collaboration more broadly through their Collaboration Prize (winners […]

Does this make me a twitterer or just a twit?

May 6, 2009 by Andrew Taylor

I decided to finally dive into Twitter this past month, since it seemed to be getting serious traction as a tool. You can follow me if you like. I was wary of the step, as I couldn’t identify a tangible benefit to knowing short bursts of facts about strangers — buying coffee, eating pickles, tweeting […]

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About Andrew Taylor

Andrew Taylor is a faculty member in American University's Arts Management Program in Washington, DC. [Read More …]

ArtsManaged Field Notes

#ArtsManaged logoAndrew Taylor also publishes a weekly email newsletter, ArtsManaged Field Notes, on Arts Management practice. The most recent notes are listed below.

RSS ArtsManaged Field Notes

  • The relentless rise of pseudo-productivity May 13, 2025
    Visible activity and physical exhaustion are not useful measures of valuable work.
  • The strategy screen May 6, 2025
    A strong strategy demands a clear job description
  • What is Arts Management? April 29, 2025
    The practice of aggregating and animating people, stuff, and money toward expressive ends.
  • Outsourcing expertise April 22, 2025
    Sometimes, it's smart to hire outsiders. Sometimes, it's not.
  • Minimum viable process April 15, 2025
    As a nonprofit arts organization, your business systems need to be as simple as possible…but not simpler.

Artful Manager: The Book!

The Artful Manager BookFifty provocations, inquiries, and insights on the business of arts and culture, available in
paperback, Kindle, or Apple Books formats.

Recent Comments

  • Barry Hessenius on Business in service of beauty: “An enormous loss. Diane changed the discourse on culture – its aspirations, its modus operandi, its assumptions. A brilliant thought…” Jan 19, 18:58
  • Sunil Iyengar on Business in service of beauty: “Thank you, Andrew. The loss is immense. Back when Diane was teaching a course called “Approaching Beauty,” to business majors…” Jan 16, 18:36
  • Michael J Rushton on Business in service of beauty: “A wonderful person and a creative thinker, this is a terrible loss. – thank you for posting this.” Jan 16, 13:18
  • Andrew Taylor on Two goals to rule them all: “Absolutely, borrow and build to your heart’s content! The idea that cultural practice BOTH reduces and samples surprise is really…” Jun 2, 18:01
  • Heather Good on Two goals to rule them all: “To “actively sample novel experiences (in safe ways) to build more resilient perception and prediction” is about as useful a…” Jun 2, 15:05

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