Guest post by Dee Mason.
Artists have a tendency to wear many hats at once. The process of becoming an artist whether you are striving to become a dancer, actor, filmmaker, or painter, is quite expensive. Money must be spent on classes, supplies, special equipment like pointe shoes, brushes, lenses, etc., and for many artists, the way to keep overhead at a minimum is to create their art alone. Choreographers also function as their own costume designers, grant writers, and tour directors. Filmmakers write, cast, hire, light, shoot, and distribute their own work. Rarely do artists consider outsourcing the minutiae of arts administration that takes them away from the act of creation. However, it is a practice that all artists should consider, and is a hugely helpful in freeing up creative energy that is otherwise used up on logistics.
Arts administration requires wearing many hats, and can include everything from grant writing, to visa paperwork, to scheduling hotel and plane travel, to booking gigs and lectures, to hiring cast and crew, to cutting promotional trailers or videos, to advertising shows, and the list goes on. Many artistic directors try to do all of this on their own, while simultaneously creating new works. The practice of “doing it all”, is often a train wreck, and something gets shortchanged. However, taking the time to find someone outside of your own head to handle projects that are not directly related to creation can vastly improve the kind of creative work you put out. If you are an artist considering hiring a virtual assistant to help you with your artistic endeavors, there are a few things to look for that will help make your assistant search, and subsequent working relationship, more successful.
Decide What You Need Done
While it may not give you the chance to finally sit down in your favorite comfy chair for a half a minute, it will most definitely help you retain your sanity.
Don’t go looking for an assistant helter-skelter. Take the time to sit and choose what portion of your arts responsibilities you can comfortably assign to someone else, and what you must keep on your own docket. The success of your virtual assistant will be partially based upon how well you can delegate, so be sure to adhere to the work-related boundaries you create, or you run the risk of micro-managing.
Who to Hire
A lot of the work that you will be outsourcing will be time-sensitive. Grants must be turned in by particular hours and dates. Producers and presenters need documents in time to go to press. Able crew must be hired before someone else contracts them. Consequently, unlike large corporations or businesses that outsource work that is less pressing, the virtual assistant you hire would ideally be in the same time zone. They also must have a firm grasp of the native tongue of the region in which you are working. Remember, your virtual assistant will become the first point of contact for your film, dance, or theater company, so their ability to communicate eloquently is vital to the success of your arts entity.
Their History
Finding someone who lives in your general area and has linguistic skills that will be an asset to you is the first step. Next, their work history must be examined closely. In arts administration, years of experience in the workplace are far less important than what the years of experience were focused upon. For example, someone who has a 15 year experience in phone sales, may not be as useful to you as someone who interned for three major theater companies while in college, but then spent the next two years working as a waitress. Arts organizations, sponsors, presenters, and producers of arts events, have their own language, practices, and codes of behavior. It is a very different field from the worlds of finance, advertising, or sales, though it does combine elements of all of these. Master’s Degree programs in Arts Administration exist for a reason, and that is because it is a difficult, multi-faceted job. When seeking someone to take over a portion of those duties for you, actively seek out those candidates who have at least some prior experience in an arts related office position. If their time was very short, make sure to ask them why they left.
Samples
If you know that your virtual assistant is going to need to write grant proposals, press releases, advertising copy, or web content, ask for writing samples. If they are going to be spending time speaking with potential funders or the press, spend some time on the phone with them to get a sense of their phone manner. If they are going to need to book multiple travel dates and accommodations, ask them to create a mock itinerary for you within a particular budget. Get to know how they work. This also allows them to get to know how you work. If it is not a comfortable working situation for one or the other of you, than it will most likely not work out in the long run.
Hiring a virtual assistant is not an exact science, but if you are an artist looking for some help, these guidelines will hopefully give you a jumping off point. Having some support when creating a new work of art is also incredibly helpful.

My name is Deborah A. Bailey and I’m a writer, entrepreneur and author of “
My name is Marjorie R. Asturias, and I’m president and founder of
I hired a US-based VA to write titles and descriptions for about 100 posts on a blog that I run after it was moved to WordPress. I hired through
How has your life changed when using your virtual assistant?
I have owned a small web design company (200 clients) for a little over 10 years. Most of my clients are in the professional services industry (coaches, authors, speakers, attorneys, financial advisors). In 2004 I had my first opportunity to work with a VA through one of my clients. She happened to be in Canada but after working with her a few months through our mutual client, I quickly realized how valuable a VA can be. In the years since, I have worked with at least a dozen VAs, in the US, Canada and a few other countries. I have found that US (or Canadian) VAs are best for the majority of my clients. The time zone issue is probably the biggest problem with working with VAs from other countries, not to mention the language barrier.