Scranton Isolation 'Informance' No. 17

Join Performance Music for Scranton Isolation 'Informance' No. 17 on March 24.
Scranton Isolation 'Informance' No. 17

Scranton Isolation 'Informance' No. 17: Donate Like Capitalism Depended On It!
Wednesday, Mar. 24, 2021, 7:00 p.m.
To Watch: facebook.com/PerformanceMusicAtTheUniversityOfScranton

We live in a time where the Top 0.1percent own more than the bottom 80 percent, but we hear more and more about donor burnout. U.S. nonprofit performing arts organizations, and by extension artists, rely on the largess of these large donors - so why are they not stepping up to strengthen safety nets to similar levels seen in countries like Germany? The answers require going all the way back to the Revenue Act of 1913 and how that influenced the development of the nonprofit tax-exempt status.

Join Cheryl Boga, director of Performance Music, and her co-hosts S.P. Chattopadhyay, Ph.D., professor of management, marketing, and entrepreneurship and Hal Baillie, Ph.D., professor of philosophy and ethics as they welcome their guest Drew McManus, arts consultant and principal of Venture Industries Online to engage in this discussion. They will also field questions from viewers.


Drew McManus may be Venture's principal but don't let that title fool you into thinking he's just a tech geek. He brings 20 years of global broad-based arts consulting experience to the table and helps clients break the cycle of choosing one-size-fits-none solutions and instead, deliver an option that allows them to get ahead of the tech curve instead of trying to catch up by going slower.
With the vision of legacy support strategy and the delights of creative insights, his mission is to deliver a sophisticated next generation technology designed especially for our business. The first step in that journey began in 2010 when he released The Venture Platform, a purpose-designed managed website development solution designed especially for arts organizations and artists.

His expertise spans multiple sectors and regularly quoted as an industry expert in media outlets including New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, Dallas Daily News, The Guardian Unlimited, and the Melbourne Age along with more than 100 additional newspapers, trade journals, and magazine outlets. Broadcast appearances include NPR's All Things Considered, NPR's Weekend Edition, NPR's Morning Edition, WQXR's Conducting Business, WNYC's Soundcheck, CBC One's Definitely Not The Opera, and SoundNotion.TV along with two dozen additional regional market appearances.

As a sought-after speaker and panelist, he has worked with Nonprofit Technology Enterprise Network, Opera America, Americans for the Arts, National Arts Marketing Project Conference, Southeastern Theatre Conference, National Performing Arts Conference, Chamber Music America, NewMusicBox, The Conductors Guild, the Organization of Canadian Symphony Musicians, and the International Conference of Symphony Orchestra Musicians. He's been a featured lecturer at University of Wisconsin-Madison's Bolz Center for Arts Administration, Northwestern University School of Music, Eastman School of Music, and Arizona State University. In 2011, he was featured presenter for Chicago's TEDx Michigan Ave conference.
For fun, he writes a daily blog about the orchestra business, provides a platform for arts insiders to speak their mind, leads a team of intrepid arts pros to hack the arts, founded a free arts admin jobs board, and loves a good coffee drink.
He currently resides in the Chicago's Streeterville neighborhood with his wife, violinist Holly Mulcahy.

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