Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Crew

            The people who work for you are like kids riding in the back of your car. Sometimes they’ll make you question their sanity. But, no matter how good or bad they are it’s still your job to get them where they’re going, because you’re the one in the drivers’ seat.
            It is a well-known fact that hiring the best people is the way to make the best product. But, hiring is still an area where the well-known rules tend to slip by.
            The two biggest issues are hiring your friends and hiring talented people who think that they are too good for the job. The issues with both of these problems are covered extremely well in an article on Wild Sound that can be seen HERE.
            The problem with talented people working a low budget production is that they tend to forget that they are still employees, even if they are working below scale. The best way of dealing with this group is to make sure that you don’t coddle them at the very beginning. If you treat them like they are doing you a favor by showing up they will exploit you at every opportunity.
            I rarely recommend taking the dominant male monkey approach, but when you are dealing with a huge ego holding up your production the only way to get back on schedule is to put them in their place. Either establish the nature of the working relationship up front, or be prepared to fire them. They need to know that they are NOT indispensable.
            As far as your friends go, don’t do it. They may be talented and hardworking, but that will end the second you have them on the payroll. Friends are never afraid of getting fired. And worse, when your friends are on set it makes it incredibly difficult for you to maintain a professional attitude. You can’t play boss to someone who saw you drunk that one time in school when you got dumped. You can’t fire the person who drove you home after your car broke down.
            You can never maintain any serious level of authority over your friends. They just know too much about you.
            With all of that in mind, I am now attempting to put together a crew roster containing people that I have never worked with before, and have no solid references for outside of their portfolios. This, again, is something that you should avoid. But, hey. This blog would get pretty of boring if I didn’t take a few risks.

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