This month I was asked to speak at the Leap - NZ's newest Entreprenuers conference. My topic was 'Sharing the Dream' and I was asked to speak for 20 minutes to close the festival.
Intro
Thanks to
Robett for having me. Yes I’m from Rhythm and Vines and we are about to sell
out our 14th festival next month.
I’m here to
speak to you about sharing your dream. Now I know some of you have already your
own dreams - both in startup phase and others in full development running at
various levels. I also want to speak to those who have that idea bottle up inside
them. I’m going to tell you some stories about my journey to encourage you to
share your dream, get it out there for the world to see, include others to help
build it and keep it sustainable. I will start by telling you a bit about my
journey from finding a dream, getting it off the ground and continuing to share
to this very day.
Our Dream
Now granted
our idea was a big one and continues to be. We wanted to get the networks of
friends from around NZ together to celebrate the new year. In 2003 there wasn’t much happening in the way
of NYE concerts so we decided to do it ourselves. To get a number of people for a party in a
vineyard of course you have so share it and that is what promoting is all
about. But I wouldn’t be here today if I
hadn’t shared my dream, bought others on board and stood back at times to build
a business and brand that is still relevant today.
Tom
sharing the dream
The first
time sharing the idea was via my friend Tom telling me his idea for a New Years
Eve party. Let’s get a few mates together
for an end of year piss up by the beach. He may have been drunk but he got it
out there none the less. Next I picked up that idea and ran with it. I had done
a little bit of promoting for my band around Dunedin and was excited by the prospect,
and of building my skillset towards a job in the music industry. So we went
down to Gardies and discussed the ideas. Where would we have it? How could we
promote it? Let’s get $100 in a hat and see where it goes.
Next we
shared it with my flat mate Andrew. I
had seen a photo on the wall of his parent’s amphitheatre in Gisborne. Next
thing we were walking around the pub with the photo sharing our vision with our
mates. Would you come to Gisborne for NYE? This sharing provided valuable
feedback and motivation to continue building our dream.
Dean
Witters
Soon we
were sharing our idea with Andrew’s Dad. We wrote a letter to him about having
the event. He flew us up to Gisborne and it was a bit like the dragon’s den
standing in front of him pitching our plan. It would be called Rhythm and Vines
and the Black Seeds would headline. We decided to go 50/50 in the concept and he
would provide some start up capital to get off the ground. He helped us write a
mission statement about what we were trying to achieve one that is still
relevant today.
University
We went
back to university and shared our dream around campus. Black Seeds, DJ Soane
(Rip) at a vineyard location in Gisborne. We shared our vision – road trip,
sunshine, music, camping – one that continues today. We put up poster and handed out flyer while
people were studying at the library. Given it was pre facebook we had a unique
marketing technique where we invited all our friends to the pub. Rugby players,
pretty girls, Southland boys, Auckanders and we stood up and shared and sold
them the dream over a few crates of Speights.
Gisborne
Tom and I
realised we weren’t going to be able to do it all so we got 7 of our mates up
to Gisborne and had a house on the beach. It was so important to share the
load. Tom and I had limited experience with any event this big. But we soon had
my sister handing out flyers, our mates, friends doing the design. Others
helped paint the stage, stock the bars and mow the venue lawns. Others cook BBQ
back stage and hosted the artists. That year we hosted 1800 under the bright
blue Gisborne sky.
Losing
money
We lost $20k
that first year due to a number of mistakes – using cash on the bar, no one on
the gate taking tickets, and exhorbitant venue hire arrangement. We sat down
with Mr Witters and he put together a plan for the following year. Tom and I
had to work again on the festival from next to know income.
To see someone
in control of our dream was tough. We got told this was what was going to
happen. Tom got disallusioned and did a runner to London. But I was young and naïve,
and passionate about the opportunity to build something and I stuck around. I
want to see where my idea could go and having shared it now with a few partners
and a few thousand kiwis. Soon enough we had others sharing our idea. It felt
like the next year everyone came back with a friend or two and soon we went
from 5000 people to 10000 and the Rhythm and Vines festival was born.
BW
Campgrounds.
Andrew my
friend had the foresight to start up the BW campgrounds with local lad Toby
Burrows. After a few years we were beginning to compete for the same patrons –
offering accommodation and entertainment on Gisborne over new years - so we
merged. We began to sell tickets together, marketing spend together, share
finances, teams experience. They provided capital a few years when the times
were tough. They came on our board and together we began a bigger better, more
sustainable Rhythm and Vines and week of festivities in Gisborne.
It was hard
to pass on my dream. Tom had left. But the vision was bigger than just me and I’ve
always thought I was just one part in the cog of it all. By now I had a 30%
stake so others were invested in the concept, both in risk and reward. I didn’t
try and do everything my business partners were better at different areas of
the business. I focused on the brand marketing and program aspects while they
focused on the event management, ticketing, camping and all the many numbers of
the event. Having new people on the team meant we were able to share the work
load, the experience and the dream.
As a result
we got the festival we wanted. But we were in serious debt. Budgets blew out in
a number of areas – artists, production, security. Charter flights and visas
for international acts. Buy this time me and my partners were able to take over
and continue to build a local team. We had around 8 staff over the next few
years. Marketing, Accounts, Event Management, Programming. They were all
helping work towards our dream. A world class festival experience right here in
NZ. They had accountability in a number of areas from what bands we booked
through to what beers we stocked. A big business you need to trust and invest
in people.
Pride
Soon we had
up to 8 staff all passionate and engaged in our dream. The other thing is
people take pride. They become their own sales team for you they push the dream
forward. They source opportunities for you and bring it to the team. They are
walking talking billboards for your dream. By delegating you get to learn too.
Bringing on industry experts and surround yourself with experts.
What if
you don’t share?
I look at
some of my competitors stressing our each yeah and overloading with
responsibilities. They have kept their dream. People become greedy. Their ideas
get stale. They hold on to the same team year in year out. They book the same
acts. They more inclusive than what we have been. They stress. They live and
die by the results of this inclusion but they haven’t shared at all and as a
result we have been able to surge ahead.
Doesn’t always
work
Sharing
your dream doesn’t always work. We have had a different marketing manager every
year and I spend a lot of time with them on the vision. I have invested time in
many man people sharing for and caring for it to be thrown out and start again.
The investment doesn’t always pay off. Many
of our young staff get a head of themselves. We have an active and engaged social
media following and people feel the power of being involved in a popular
lifestyle brand. People think they are
the brand. Sometimes we come across entitlement.. We call it wearing the ring
as ego and entitlement kicks in. Had to have a few hard words with staff over
the years to give the ring back!
Well
poisoners.
Beware of
well poisoners and those that don’t share your dream. I remember some of my
best friends when we were getting our dream off the ground. They didn’t support
the event. Some still don’t. Other’s try and steal the dream. I have had staff try and change the concept,
brand and ethos of this dream for their own gains. Others misrepresent
themselves. With any big dream there are lots of moving parts and it your role
as founders to keep the dream intact, share it and to steer it. We have had a
staff that undermine the dream and have needed to be pulled back into line by
the rest of the team and realise that no one is bigger the brand business and
dream.
To much
sharing!
As a result
of this big team we had driving towards and achieving our dreams we got to big.
We got offered lots of opportunities. We
set up another festival. Given we had a full time events team we started taking
on other projects to feed the beast. We
even ran a manpower tour! Things started to go astray so we have come back to
our original dream and trying to keep things simple again.
Back to
earth
We have
bought things back to earth. Kept it simple. I had my good mate Kyle back on
board as my right hand man. And Kieran one of our hires who has experience for
Live Nation one of the bigger promoters around the world. He has no ego and is
a great believer in the dream. I trust them and they fight for the dream every
day.
Selling
out.
So I hope
you got some insights into my journey for sharing my dream. I continue to lead
my team and others towards our dream. I
encourage you to be open for opportunities. Inspire others towards YOUR dream. Surround
yourself with experts. Get their buy in. Be aware of those trying to undermine
or steal your dream. But over all get it out there for the world to enjoy.
And as
Winston Churchill said:
Never Ever
Ever give up.
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