thanks in advance
Con

Moderator: busybusybusy
Perhaps be a little careful with what you are saying triple threat , you seem to be new to dealing with agenciestriple threat wrote:It may be good, but I thought it was illegal to charge upfront money on the client with agencies. Also, they take quite a large chunk of the money you earn! Seems like easy money to me
No worries,triple threat wrote:Ooops!
I didn't realise you could charge fees. I suppose that it depends what type of fee it is...
Sorry, I take my previous comment back then. Although you can find agencies that don't charge you upfront money
Thanks napm
pg wrote:I'm not sure that's necessarily true, Triple threat - unless I have misunderstood what you are saying. I agree that unscrupulous agents can make money by charging for lots of "extras" but I don't think that an agent will necessarily be more successful as an agent with hundreds of clients rather than scores of clients. The best agents are very particular about who they taken on and then nurture that talent. The best agents have clients who get well-paid jobs and/or regular work and therefore get regular or good commission. An agent that takes on hundreds won't be very attractive to the best talent (because the talent knows it won't get the attention it needs). An agent that charges for extras will be avoided by any actor with any kind of industry knowledge. Therefore the agent with hundreds of clients will probably be fairly swiftly deserted (or avoided in the first place) by a successful actor.
Actors do have to pay for their own marketing materials, but they shouldn't have to pay the agent for these - they should be free to choose who they buy from.
Top agents don't charge their clients for extras, don't have hundreds on their books but are still top agents - representing prestigious clients. Top agents do often have big client lists but they also have several agents so the agent to client ratio is often similar to the smaller agencies.