The Mercury

Offer the skills to enter many workspaces

- Michelle Constant is the chief executive of Business and Arts South Africa (Basa).

Duckworth talks of “failing fast” (the current holy grail of the business world, it seems), saying that failure is not a permanent position. I believe that the arts teach grit – they are about failure and iteration.

Every good artist or creative, at some point in his or her life, has failed – a theatre production that bombed, an artwork that never sold, a less than perfectly pitched song. After failing, it is the artist who gets back into the ring and tests a new answer to a different question.

In his article, Qabaka talks correctly of the catalytic drivers of peer learning, that Business and Arts South Africa (Basa) should offer. We do.

It should be noted that Basa is not a programme, but rather a non-profit company that has operated for close to 20 years as a public-private partnershi­p, with valuable support from both the Department of Arts and Culture and the private sector. This includes business members as varied as the JSE, the major banks, insurance companies and also small to medium enterprise­s.

Our national education programme (supported by the National Arts Council, Rand Merchant Bank, the British Council and the National Lotteries Commission) takes place in all nine provinces, driving the concepts of access and agency within the sector.

We work closely with young arts organisati­ons, focusing not only on business skills, but also driving the tools of Asset Based Community Developmen­t, while examining society’s inconsiste­nt response to scarcity, as cogently argued by economics professor Sendhil Mullainath­an and Eldar Shafir in their book, Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much.

Qabaka is also accurate in distinguis­hing between the self-employed and the entreprene­urs in the cultural sector. There is a difference.

The former talks more specifical­ly to sustainabi­lity, while the latter talks to scaling. Our research over many years has shown that some creatives have the entreprene­urial bug while others simply need the business skills to become self-sustaining over long periods so that they can talk to having jobs, instead of job hours.

Basa’s research shows that the role of the private sector has shifted and changed over the years. Funding of the arts moved from corporate social investment budgets to marketing budgets around 2008.

Most recently, owing to the economic downturn, we have seen businesses requiring a much more equitable partnershi­p, one that verges on shared value and one that is based on trust and real deliverabl­es.

The support for the arts is often driven directly through core strategy and may impact on human resources (performanc­e before profits), broad-based black economic empowermen­t and then marketing.

With this mind, Basa has a variety of programmes that offer research and artsbased intelligen­ce to businesses – including our Young Profession­als Programme (specifical­ly for business people) and the Business Exchange Programme.

We offer marketing toolkits for both businesses and arts organisati­ons, as developed by members of the Gordon Institute of Business Science, and consult on our extensive research on millennial­s and the arts market.

It should be noted, though, that currently the Treasury does not offer tax benefits to businesses that support the arts, unless it is considered to be an education programme, in which case it is included in Section 18A. This is severely debilitati­ng for arts sector funding opportunit­ies. While the arts and culture sector only provide for 2.9 percent of the gross domestic product, according to Department of Arts and Culture statistics, the opportunit­ies are extensive.

According to Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, the planning of culture needs to run parallel to the planning around transport and housing in the city. Isn’t it time we took it a lot more seriously?

 ??  ?? The Market Theatre in Newtown, Johannesbu­rg. Opportunit­ies in the arts are extensive, says the writer.
The Market Theatre in Newtown, Johannesbu­rg. Opportunit­ies in the arts are extensive, says the writer.

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