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Monday, September 14, 2015

Investments and Easy Riders


Around this time last year, my old improv team, the Stage Monkeys San Diego (SMSD), celebrated our 5 year anniversary. It was an amazing milestone for a team that started doing longform in San Diego when no one else was doing it, and when most people didn't even have faith that it could be done. Now this team isn't celebrating a six year anniversary this year, because about eight months ago it died out. This doesn't come as a true surprise – most improv teams don't last more than a few months, so a team that runs for 5 years is really like 50 in improv years.

Why do improv teams die out? Well there are obvious reasons: people get too busy, lose interest, better teams take all the slots, or the work becoming sloppy or careless are the commonly espoused reasons. But these aren't causes of teams falling apart, they're the symptoms. The center of the circle that connects all of those things is commitment. Commitment is the currency that all teams spend, and when the bank account runs low, that's when teams dissipate.

Where does the commitment come from? It's a product of each team member – the member's make periodic deposits into the group's commitment bank account and these deposits must be made routinely. An account cannot survive on debits alone. Okay so great, teams need commitment from team members, which is great, but surely we've all been part of teams where everyone says how committed they are to a group or a project or a team, and those teams are usually the first ones to expire. True deposits are made from sacrifice, and all teams periodically require it.

This isn't virgin or animal sacrifice, it's a sacrifice of time. We don't often think of time as something that we spend in this way but it is, and time is the one thing we can never get back. You can only spend it once, and on only one thing at a time. What we choose to spend our time is a critical consideration and one that shouldn't be taken lightly, ever. (This coincidentally, is a good life lesson as well as a good improv lesson). No doubt you've had some people on your teams that seem un-committed; they show up for practices (usually) and shows (usually), but they seem generally absent from the team (symptoms may include: being on phone constantly, leaving early, showing up late, etc.). In game theory, these people are referred to as “free riders” or, to use the movie title, “easy riders”. All teams can suffer a certain percentage of these people will with no serious ill will and no fatal effects. But every easy rider needs someone else to make sacrifices on their behalf, because they are not making deposits and are enjoying the withdrawals.

Every successful team will be made of people making equivalent sacrifices for each other. You'll often hear these people refer to their teammates as “brothers”, “sisters”, or “families”. Everyone on the team is making periodic deposits into the team's account – making those sacrifices of time for the sake of the group. In an ideal world, everyone is making equivalent deposits, just since it is the duty of every person to make it happen; “many hands make light work”. Jane Jacobs' “The Life and Death of Great American Cities” essentially summarizes that neighborhoods (read: improv teams) fail because the people who populate them fail to actually “live” in them. Neighborhoods populated only by people “just passing through” are ones that are destined to perish. Successful teams (really successful ones) have everyone fully dedicating their time to each other continuously (making many deposits gives you more money to spend).

Some teams and their members refer to things like “team bonding time”, which for all intents and purposes is equivalent to the phrase “quality time”. This is a clichéd idiom with a basic underlying premise – that it is possible to “plan instances of extraordinary candor, plot episodes of exquisite tenderness, engineer intimacy in an appointed hour” [1]. Despite a lot of training, workshops, books, and blogs (like this one!) all dedicated to the principles of improvisation – namely that it requires patience, finesse, and being present – we are continually intoxicated by the promise “capturing lightning in a bottle”. More specifically, we assume that capturing said lighting means that we can force a storm to come rather than understanding that sometimes we will catch lighting, but mostly we only catch sparks that we will have to grow into lightning. In general though, there is no substitute for physical presence. All the promises, practices, and “group hangs” make no difference when members are unwilling or unable to dedicated (read: sacrifice) time to each other. Time is, and always will be the most valuable asset we can ever have and give to each other.

[1]http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/06/opinion/sunday/frank-bruni-the-myth-of-quality-time.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&region=CColumn&module=MostEmailed&version=Full&src=me&WT.nav=MostEmailed&_r=0