Focus

If you've ever worked for a non-profit, you know there is always more work to do than time and resources allow. So what you focus on is important. At the Kranzberg Arts Foundation, I have a small department that's responsible for thirteen different brands across seven buildings with eight stages, four galleries, and three restaurants that, last year, hosted over 1,000 nights of arts programming. There's no shortage of things we could be doing. The challenge is deciding what we should be doing. Prioritization can lead to tough decisions and conversations. When one department needs something, it's at the expense of another. A new program or initiative takes time away from an older one. How to balance growth and maintenance internally and across departments is a big question without an easy answer.

I've learned that what's critical is to always focus on the bigger picture. While something might be a good idea in isolation, it needs to be judged by how impactful it is to your overarching goals. I've spent a lot of time thinking about the idea of avoiding "snacking" while at work. First introduced to me through an Intercom blog post, the idea comes from Hunter Walk. The basic idea is to avoid the low-effort, low-impact work in favor of focusing on the high-effort, high-impact work. It's easy to knock the simple tasks off your to-do lists even if they ultimately won't move your work forward in a meaningful way.

Without our venues being live seven days a week, we've had some time to slow down and refocus our work in marketing and communications on some high-effort, high-impact projects. And I wanted to highlight our team's efforts over the past six months.

  • We've created a new brand book. The work we put into creating new guidelines and standards has already paid off, improving the speed of our design process and the quality and cohesion of the work. We've even been able to do some exciting rebranding for one of our venues we'll share soon.

  • We've slimmed down our website portfolio from five to three. The sites we've kept were already receiving 80% of our traffic. Now we're providing our guests with a better user experience while reducing the burden on our staff. We've been able to put some of the time we've saved into new features like our exhibition pages for our visual arts program while also planning our move to a more modern theme.

  • We've started our blog. A natural outgrowth of Soul of the City, more frequent posts allows us to continue to tell the stories of our city's artists and better advocate for them.

  • We've started the process of moving to a new CRM. Our current CRM does everything we needed it to when it was first implemented three years ago, but it's not growing with us. Over the course of the year, I worked to become a Salesforce certified admin and now am building out our installation department by department.

These projects are long-term, high effort work. But each one will over time amplify our efforts and help us deliver on our mission of building infrastructure for the arts to thrive in St. Louis.

Rejoice - Counting of the Omer

In the Jewish tradition, we count the 49 days from Passover to Shavuot. This year, the Center for Jewish Learning asked me along with other writers, poets, and Jewish learners to offer reflections based on Psalm 67.

Here’s what I wrote:

Tue Apr 28/Wed Apr 29
yismechu - יִֽשְׂמְח֥וּ

REJOICE

Rejoice. The word feels distant. Like an old friend I caught a glimpse of from across a crowded room. When I try to think of what to rejoice, one of two moods takes over.

In my darker moods, I only come up with “At least it’s spring.” The very real and difficult fact is that people are dying, and they are dying because our leaders failed to do everything they could to keep us safe.

In my brighter moods, I’ve settled on the fact that we still have plenty to celebrate. Our connections, our care, our memories. Our resilience, our strength, our will. Our adaptability, our zest, our humanness. I can rejoice in the kindness on display today.

Our rejoicing doesn’t stop us from being critical. As we always have, we must work towards building a better world. One that is just, and kind, and holy to all of its inhabitants. But, our insistence that things be better doesn’t stop our ability to celebrate what is good. Rejoice in the holiness of care and rejoice in the sanctity of healing

Bolstered by our joy, we must use that energy to support each other. It is our duty to repair the world.

Cover the Mirrors

For the last three years, I've been working on an EP called "Cover the Mirrors" that I'm finally ready to put out. I'll be upfront and let you know that it's mainly about grief. For a long time, I felt extremely powerless against the world. This collection of songs represents countless days spent mourning and with a lot of time and attention a little bit of healing.

At the end of 2019, and up until a few weeks ago, I was starting to feel hopeful again. I was excited about what the world was going to bring. Now, while things are pretty confusing, I am attempting to remain optimistic that profound change for the better will come out of this moment. That we are still able to come together and support each other. This is my way of saying that I am here.

I had to reach out for help to bring this together, and I'm eternally grateful to David & Jeff Lazaroff for supporting me in developing, recording, producing, and mixing these songs. I would have never finished this project without them. And I'm thankful for the contributions of Grover Stewart, Sam Golden, and Mark Hochberg on the tracks, and for Jacob Detering for mixing and mastering. The artwork has a particular meaning to me. It's by Peter Jensen, a close friend of my father. To all of these people and more: Thank you.

I hope you enjoy, and that you're all staying healthy. Stay in touch with the people you care about. The only way through the hard times is together.

Listen: https://peacebath.bandcamp.com/album/cover-the-mirrors