In my experience, these are "the top of the heap" gigs. They pay twice what a restaurant gig does ($350 up for three hours), the money is always guaranteed, and you get a lot of repeat business.

About 1/2 my jobs are corporate, government (city, state organizations) or non-profits.

Here's what works for me:

* Join the Chamber. Being a member of the Chamber of Commerce was part of my corporate job. After I left the corporate world, I maintained my membership and helped with various committees. I play for special events for them, no charge. I get not only lots of music gigs, but communications work for my company.

* Summer patio work. I work all summer on the patio of probably the top upscale restaurant in the city. All the "movers an shakers" go there to "show off". I start in May and by the end of the month, I've generally booked all the rest of the year. 75% of the jobs are now repeat. They know they're going to see me there. The money is not great ($150.00), but that's what fills thr calendar.

* Kiwanis Club. I'm not a member, due to travel for my company, but used to be. Anytime these old dudes call, I go and play for their weekly meeting-gratis (actually the pay is an $8.00 rubber chicken lunch...YUMM!). It gives me visibility and contacts.

* Charities: Anytime anyone connected with a good cause needs me, I'm there. It always results in additional business at some time in the future.

* Christmas Card. I send a generic card to all people I've played for and all business contacts.

* Be flexible. I do anything from singles to big band gigs. Recently, a long-time client wanted a "Rock-A-Billy night for a Corporate annual meeting. There I was, sparkly tux, gold sparkly Gretsch, patent leather shoes...duckwalk and all!

* Maintain all appropriate business contacts. I teach at the local university part-time and, over the years, have maintained friendships with people who are known members of the business and academic communities. On all my restauramt gigs, part of the deal is dinner for two. I invite these folks out for dinner and drinks, being careful to rotate the list to include all of the "players". That's good for both the restaurant and for me. The owners always call to say that they enjoy the repeat business, and often get company parties, which I generally play. That's good all the way around.

* Billing after the gig. I never wait for my money, and have it set up to bill after the gig.The last thing a busy restaurant owner needs is to stop what he is doing to pay me.
It's all repeat business, and I know and trust my clients. In 50 years, I've never been stiffed.

That's it. No website, no business card (I use my company one), no C/D. No promo package.

The point is, this is what works for me, for both music and communications gigs. I get most of my corporate contacts because of the ability to supply custom sound-tracks from which 10, 30 and 60 second commercial beds are pulled. The marketing that will work for others depends on many factors, and the challenge is to put the right program together. Lexington is the biggest little "one horse" town in the country. You're either "in" or you're "not".
Without my long-time connections, this approach would not work, even here.

Take a look at these corporate and organization gigs. They work for me, BIG TIME!


Russ


[This message has been edited by captain Russ (edited 12-04-2009).]