Getting Away to Get Things Done
It’s tough to get everyone on the same page of a big initiative. A retreat can galvanize your team around a goal and prep your group to tell the same story.
It’s tough to get everyone on the same page of a big initiative. A retreat can galvanize your team around a goal and prep your group to tell the same story.
Like social culture, organizational culture is pervasive. It’s also one of the most important factors in our ability to sustain innovation.
Many artists have administrative skills in addition to creative power. Why aren’t more arts organizations tapping those skills for their own teams?
Announcing the four grantees for the EmcArts Innovation Lab for the Performing Arts, Round 8.
The Group transformed its website into a blog of daily video shorts in their signature style to enable them to create artistic work in a new medium and engage audiences during their lengthy absences from New York.
A large multidisciplinary arts organization uses its knowledge and skills to develop a new program meant to train the business community by using the arts as a vehicle to stimulate leadership, creativity and innovation.
A new strategy for audience and community engagement – the Connectivity Department.
An 100-year old settlement house boldly integrates its social service delivery with artistic practices in order to produce deeper relationships with neighbors.
One of the country’s leading playwright centers explodes the power their residency program by inviting the playwrights to co-create their own experience.
A provocative and socially committed theatre company focuses on alternative programming in order to achieve financial stability without compromising its strong mission.
A New York-based “theater of social investigation” combines artistic approach with social media to engage new audiences and develop artistic content.
One of the largest Shakespeare theaters in the country develops a shared online script management system to improve accuracy, efficiency and communication throughout the complex production process.
No longer believing that it could engage children solely by creating plays for them, Children’s Theatre Company found a new pathway for deepening its relationships with its young audience members and involving them in the creative process.