This is What you Need to Think About When Preparing for a Show

Posted on Tuesday in so you think you can dance | by

You will start to feel the need to swagger your abilities? Singing, dancing, and magic tricks are just a few of the talents often seen in talent shows. Many people find enacting in regional talent competitions to be an excellent way to highlight their ability, get exposure for a brand new career, or just have fun showing off their favorite hobby. As everyone knows talent competitions are getting national exposure with programs like American Idol, So You Think You Can Dance, and Rockstar SuperNova. These glorified talent shows are spring boarding some large and up and coming careers for their contestants and winners. You will need to take a look at what you can do to get ready to become a star.

It may be fairlydefinite, but the initiative is to decide what kind of talents you want to show in this particular show. Singing and dancing are always popular choices if you like you can perform using both talents. Magic tricks that are well acted are as a whole crowd pleasers with audiences and judges alike. Sometime your talents lie in a less apparent way. Poetry readings and story telling are both distinctive takes on what is apparent as a talent. When choosing a talent make sure you are intimate enacting it in front of an audience.

The next step in your investment is practice. Now all you need to do is practice. In all seriousness, work up a epilogue so you will not have any problems. This would also be the time to decide an suit or ensemble which should help and compliment the performance. As critics of Janet Jackson would say, an outfit for dance as always never move and should stay in its proper place. Odds are good that a outfit malfunction is something that you don’t want to happen on stage. During this conditioning time, you can have your friends or maybe even your family as judges and ask them to critique your performance. Hopefully they will care enough to be both honest and truthful when critiquing you. As members of your audience they know what they would like to see or hear. Try not to work on your routine to the point that you dislike it and are tired of it.

On the big night try to get at the show timely. Of course, this way scheduling changes can not you by surprise. Finally, you can get acquainted with the stage and backdrop. if there is going to be a dress rehearsal, this will not be as important. However being ready and prepared is very important to your preliminary success. This is also an extraordinary opportunity try to understand the other contestants and grade out the competition. make sure you inspected any equipment you may using and to be sure your outfits are prepared, you can ease off and wait for your moment to shine.

The time is at hand. The moment of truth is at hand. Good luck and break a leg

David Marc Fishman
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5 Responses to “This is What you Need to Think About When Preparing for a Show”

  1. costance o says:

    How do I go about preparing an inventory aging analsis? I need to show fast moving items. slow moving?
    Also i need to indicate obselete and damaged. I need a good format which will be reflect the reality and be informative to users

  2. Dr. Deth says:

    not so much aging as "inventory turnover" is more important. you’d have to do through all purchases in a 6 month or 12 month period for all items – add up total quantity bought and add this number to beginning inventory count and subtract ending inventory count. divide ending inventory count at 6 month or 12 month mark – item 1 – Inventory Jan1 – 50 pcs, June 30 invty – 30 pcs. Total bought in those 6 months – 90. 50 + 90 – 30 = 110 / 30 = 3.67 inventory turnover in 6 months – that’s pretty good – anything slower than 1.0 means it’s taking the full period to get rid of all the old inventory for that item – depending on what standards you set, you can put slow moving items on sales to clear them out and not carry them any more and carry more of the faster moving items –

    the turnover ratio could be different for different types of goods and the same number mean different things – more expensive items probably won’t sell as fast and if they are high profit margin, they don’t have to sell as fast – it will take some time, research and analysis on your part to figure out what’s selling and what’s not worth carrying
    References :

  3. Donald C says:

    Dr Deth has an excellent answer, set up the inventory either in excel or some accounting software. Create the formulas and just plug in the information. Keep track of all new purchases to allow for a rolling aging report.
    References :

  4. april says:

    For simplicity, you can use excel and define columns like date purchased, date delivered (IN), product code, description, date sold (OUT) etc. Add column for product condition where you will indicate G for Good, O for Obsolete, D for Damaged and so on. The beauty of using excel is you can filter columns and insert macros to compute for the inventory aging analysis. You can also prepare a graph based on the inputted data.
    References :

  5. L L says:

    If my memory not play trick on me. I believe most of the simple POS software would come with the inventory control that you set up and flag in any way that you prefer.
    Looking into it and they should have it on both Offline (local) system as well as online. Also they should be very inexpensive, as well they could be industry specific POS to what ever industry that you like to accomplish this task with.

    The function that you need to get this aging report is inside the " Back Office control and function.
    References :