Career in magic

Can't find a suitable category? Post it here!!

Moderators: nickj, Lady of Mystery, Mandrake, bananafish, support

Career in magic

Postby BlakeMore » May 17th, '12, 01:52



Aside from being a performer, what are the other full time magic careers out there?

Blake

BlakeMore
Junior Member
 
Posts: 11
Joined: Mar 17th, '12, 09:10

Re: Career in magic

Postby magicarp » May 17th, '12, 10:16

Run a shop, online or otherwise. If you could do it somewhere near Banbury, that would be great :D

User avatar
magicarp
Full Member
 
Posts: 90
Joined: Oct 29th, '11, 20:25
Location: Banbury

Re: Career in magic

Postby Lawrence » May 17th, '12, 12:41

Johnathan Creek?

Custom R&S decks made to specification - PM me for details
User avatar
Lawrence
Veteran Member
 
Posts: 5069
Joined: Jul 3rd, '06, 23:40
Location: Wakefield 28:SH

Re: Career in magic

Postby TonyB » May 17th, '12, 17:54

Running a shop or running an entertainment agency are the only full-time options.

As a full-time performer there are plenty of ways of supplementing the income - write books, lecture, act, act as a consultant for films and stage shows, MC events, etc.

User avatar
TonyB
Advanced Member
 
Posts: 1523
Joined: Apr 6th, '09, 15:58
Location: Ireland

Re: Career in magic

Postby bmat » May 17th, '12, 18:06

BlakeMore wrote:Aside from being a performer, what are the other full time magic careers out there?

Blake


What do you want to do in magic? That is the question, then create a career around it. Be the leader of the herd, not one of the sheep.

It is not an easy business. Make sure your business skills are up to date, because with out that particualar set of skills you won't succeed. I'll repeat what I've been saying for ever. Most magic ventures fail not because of the inability to perform, or because the person sucked as a magician. But because they suck as a business person. I'm sorry but I always have to chuckle when a magician fails to make a living out of performing, but loves it so much that they decide to open a magic shop because that is far easier (it must be because they failed as a performing magician). They blame the failure of their performing life on exposure or a bad economy. Then they blame the failure of their magic shop endeavour on the same issues. What they usually forget is the the 'business' part of the magic business. But there is hope if you have no business skills, hire somebody who does.

bmat
Elite Member
 
Posts: 2921
Joined: Jul 27th, '07, 18:44
Location: Pennsylvania, USA

Re: Career in magic

Postby Poppadom » May 17th, '12, 19:08

Very good advice there from bmat about business skills. On a related note, how common is it for professionals to supplement their income by giving private magic tuition? I've seen a couple of guys advertise such a thing on their websites, and it would seem to be a nice little earner - like professional musicians giving private music lessons.

User avatar
Poppadom
Preferred Member
 
Posts: 110
Joined: Mar 31st, '12, 06:58
Location: Scarborough


Return to Miscellaneous

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest