Oh, the mess we’re in!
The visual effects
industry is still having problems and they’re getting worse. R&H looks like they're filling for Chapter 11. Why do companies
have to underbid and close? Why are artists losing jobs without notice? If
visual effects is helping to create most of the successful films of all time,
why do we have so little leverage? Why do companies and artists have so little
control over what’s happening?
Let’s take a look at the
basics of business, which may provide some insights.
Law of Supply and Demand
If you have 12 people who
want to buy a house in a particular neighborhood but there are only 3 houses
for sale, that’s a sellers market. There is more demand than there is supply.
The few homes will likely sell for their asking price or even higher. The
buyers know that others are interested as well and if they wish to buy the
house they have to be prepared to pay at least the asking price. Frequently
there are multiple offers such that the house is sold to the highest offer.
This is great for the seller who will make money.
Now if you had the
opposite situation, 12 houses for sale and only 3 potential buyers, that’s a
buyers market. Each homeowner who wants to sell their house knows that they may
be stuck with their house for months longer if they don’t sell. Buyers will negotiate
- there’s a house down the street almost as nice for a lot less. They will
offer less than the asking price because they know the seller has few options.
Many sellers will trim their price even before posting so they can try to make
sure to sell their house. This reduces their potential profits and the price
may be less than the homeowner paid for the house years earlier. They are
losing money due to the amount of competition and because they know it will
cost them even more if they have to hold onto it for another year.
The same principle of
supply and demand is involved with many business and personal decisions. If something
is rare then it’s likely to get top dollar when sold. If something is very
common it will likely get a base price or less. Workers with specific skills or
experiences that are rare will more likely be paid more than someone who fills
a role that can be easily filled.
Balance and market size
If 10 car washes are
built in a town of 1000 people then it’s likely all of the car washes will have
difficulty making money. The car washes will try to lower their rates so they
can at least get more customers but many of the car washes will lower their
rates as well. And the rates will continue to go down in a desperate attempt to
get more customers. They’re like fish out of water gasping for ‘air’. All the
car washes will suffer. One by one the car washes will close. The one that
remains open may do so because of location, quality, and deeper pockets of its
owner or any combination of reasons.
If it’s a town of
100,000 people then there will be a corresponding number of car washes it would
support. The size of market and the number of customers will drive the number
of businesses that fulfill that specific type of business. Anyone interested in starting a
business has to first determine the size of the market and how much competition
there already is. This has to be in the business plan and is used to get
investors or to get a business loan from a bank. It would be difficult to find
investors or a bank willing to put money into a business that is unlikely to be
able to support itself. In the case of the car washes the investors and bank
would likely refuse more car washes after the first or second have been built.
They know the odds of getting their money back are nil if there isn’t a large
enough market.
Free market evolution
With any new industry
there is usually a rush by a large number of companies trying to take the lead.
As the industry matures many companies will fall to the side. Some will merge
and some will purchase other companies. At some point they will likely reach a
balance. Over time some companies may come and go dependent on the health of
the industry, how well the companies keep pace with their market place and
where they sit. In most industries there are only so many companies and in many
cases this number is relatively small. Now there may be some regional or local
companies and there may be some niche market companies but by and large the
industries tend to be dominated by a few companies. There are not 10,000 film
studios. There are not 10,000 car manufactures. There are not 10,000 frozen
foods companies or airlines or car rental companies or hotel chains. There may
be 3 or there may be 12 but there certainly won’t big huge numbers. And while
these companies are competitive they don’t need to underbid or run in the red
for months at a time. They have a certain amount of leverage and have found
their balance. Evolution is a combination of many things and if the market
doesn’t support as many companies as they are in that particular business, then
many will fold until the correct number of companies exists. It’s a painful
process. If an industry has a large market place with too few companies, where
these companies can not keep pace with the demand, then someone will step in to
fill that gap using money from investors or other sources.
Visual Effects
Just how large of market
is visual effects? Sure there are visual effects in most films now. There’s
also television, commercials, video games etc. but let’s focus on films. The
studios are now either making very expensive movies or very small movies with a
gap in-between. They can only release so many films a year since they know that
there are only so many theaters and so many viewers. Audiences only have so
much free time and are overwhelmed with options to see and do already
(television, video games, internet, sports, etc). A film has only a few short
windows to make their profits (theater, DVD, Pay per View, etc). Sure they are
in a library for the studio and continue to make some money but the studio want
to do everything they can to make profits as soon as possible.
In the US there are
250-350 or so films released theatrically a year as I recall. How many would be
considered visual effects films? No matter what the number is, not all visual
effects companies are working at full capacity. Many are likely to have a hard
time finding much work and others are only working at ½ capacity.
Given this there’s
likely too much visual effects capacity in the world. There are at least 8 very
large visual effects companies and dozens or more medium size visual effects
companies. All of these companies vying for a relatively small amount of work.
And even a portion of this work may already be assigned to specific companies.
Weta will be doing all the Hobbit movies. ILM will most likely be doing Star
Wars related movies. Just like the UK was pre-destined to do the Harry Potter
films due to the incentives. This
results in companies all trying to underbid the other or at least cut their
margins to the bone. In this scenario it’s a buyers market so the studios have
all the control and the companies have very little control.
Imagine for a moment
what the industry were to look like if there were only 3 or 4 visual effects
companies. It would be a sellers market. More than likely they’d be working
close to capacity all the time or at least getting a reasonable stream of
projects. They’d be charging what it cost plus profits. They wouldn’t be underbidding.
They’d have some leverage with the studios. This is similar to how things were
pre-digital. There was much less work but a relatively small number of visual
effects companies. Each was getting some work and none was trying to go into
debt bidding on a show. Studios would have to ask when the work could be done
by.
Un-natural Selection
And this points out the
other problem visual effects has suffered from – unnatural selection. Evolution
not based simply on free trade, where quality, cost and efficiency would be
critical factors, but on politically manipulated trade. The incentives subsidies reward companies in some areas and penalize them in areas without the subsidies.
This creates a constantly changing shift of selection. A company even with good
quality and excellent efficiency could still fail because they cannot beat 50%+ subsidies. Matching them alone still isn’t enough for the studios. This
manipulated market results in some companies in places that shouldn’t have
visual effects companies or that would have resulted in smaller companies left
to their own natural evolution. I know some people like to avoid talking about subsidies but it has had a major impact on the film business and visual effects. It’s
hard to deny that they haven’t.
There’s also been some
manipulation by individuals. George Lucas moved ILM to the San Francisco area
and made a heavy investment. Peter Jackson setup Weta with a large investment
in New Zealand. It’s not like a lot of studios and producers were saying ‘Gosh,
we wish there was a large vfx company in New Zealand.’ A large visual effects
company would have been unlikely to naturally develop there.
And with the subsidies comes the need for workers and artists. Artists are traveling the
world to try to continue to work. And places with subsidies are pumping out
more and more students and local workers whose entire career is based on government
support and continues to need government support. This leaves others in areas
without the magic wand of subsidies high and dry.
Visual effects as a business
All real businesses are designed
and started to make a profit. (With
the exception of non-profits.) Investors
would have to have confidence that a company would be able to not only break
even but also return profits. Otherwise they have their choice of investing
their money into other more profitable businesses or other financial
investments. Most start-ups require a business plan with a clear idea how much
money they could make based on the size of the market. If a business is doing
poorly then investors are likely to want to sell their share of the business or
to close the business.
Yet most visual effects
companies haven’t been started as real businesses. Visual effects artists
started many because they were interested in having their own company. They
wanted freedom, control and hoped to earn a living. Most were not started as
large profit centers. Some
companies were started by wealthy individuals (George Lucas, Peter Jackson) to
provide visual effects for themselves and their friends. The hope was the
companies would pay for themselves. And if they turned a real profit all the
better but they weren’t started as an investment strategy. Some visual effects
companies are owned by post-production companies, film labs and other companies
that tolerate a loss because it allows them to offer package deals where they
can make up the loss in other areas. Some are funded by wealthy individuals who
like to dabble or by companies who hope to sell or advertise a product
(computer based). In many cases these are almost like kick starters where there
is money donated with no requirement to return a real investment. As DD found
out trying to get real investors was a problem and most who bought into the
company were sold on the aura of visual effects and the stories of other much
more potential markets (medical, military, etc)
If you went on Shark
Tank (TV show with wealthy investors) and pitched a visual effects company as
an investment they would laugh you out of the room.
If these were all real
investors then a number of visual effects companies probably wouldn’t have even
been started. And certainly investors would be skittish of investments that
were totally dependent on subsides which may or may not continue. And of course they'd see no reason to invest in a company that could go out of business due to subsidies elsewhere, no matter how good the company is. Some would
have been closed sooner. Those of us who do this tend to do it for love so we
do all we can to keep the companies afloat. A businessperson would not invest in
such a situation and would likely try to get out of it and it’s losses. They’d consider
real business means of making it work such as merging with another visual
effects company.
Pricing tiers
Some businesses set
different tiers for themselves to get specific types of customers. There’s the Dollar
Store, Target, Macy’s, Nordstrom’s, Neiman Marcus – Even though they might sell
some over lapping products each has a different price point, quality level and
different clientele. You can eat cheaply at a fast food place or go to a very
expensive restaurant. But visual effects has a hard time doing that. Nobody
really wants to work on cheaper looking shots. Lower budget films know they
have some restrictions but they still want to get footage that looks as good as
the large tent pole films.
Amateur hour
In the world of
photography there are professionals. They shoot stock photos, weddings,
portraits, news and other photos where they get paid. Still cameras have become
easier to operate and less expensive so many amateurs have jumped in. Because
this is a hobby and not their main profession, the amateur photographers aren’t
concerned about making a real profit. They’ll shoot their friends wedding for
$100 and costs of the prints. They send their photos into the stock libraries
or provide them free to news services. The sales give them a little extra pocket
change that’s fun. But they end up reducing the work for professionals, those
whose livelihood depends on getting enough income to pay for the equipment and
the studios. They don’t have another job that pays them and they don’t have an
employer paying their health insurance. Any professional cat photographers are
all probably out of work given the glut of cat photos on the web.
There are now people
doing motion graphics and visual effects on the side. Some workers are now
independent contractors working at home working for the same amount they made
but they fail to include overhead or heath care costs so they end up losing and
lowering the rates for everyone. Some productions are having students do the
work. Students and newcomers are far too frequently eager to work for free. In
the end this just reduces income for professionals and produces a downward pull
on wages while the studios are pushing downward on the visual effects
companies.
Small companies
Some people think the
solution is to have a lot of small visual effects companies and do away with
the large companies with their large overhead. It’s an attractive and romantic
notion for many in visual effects to have their own companies.
Trying to get leverage
with a few large companies working on large portions of movies didn’t work so
how are dozens of small companies going to have any leverage? The studios would
now have a hundred other places to go if you ask for too much or want to bill
for changes. Leverage equates to payment, credits and other benefits. If getting
the large vfx companies to unite has been impossible, how easy will it be to
get 100 smaller ones to unite? If most of the problem boils down to too much
capacity then how is simply having many more companies with the same capacity or
more going to solve anything?
And while it’s true
there is overhead at a large company consider the overhead of dozens of small
companies. Each company is likely to have a supervisor and producer or a
person(s) fulfilling that roll. Each will need some type of support unless they
are doing it all themselves, in which case they aren’t doing visual effects
portion full time. What about vfx editing and all the other misc items? Are you
reviewing everything simply on your monitor even if it’s for IMAX release? Look
at the credits of most movies currently. Many films already have 10-15
companies working on them, even with large companies in the mix. Look at the
redundant titles of supervisors and other management positions. And some of
those aren’t listed but actually worked on the production. Overhead savings by
dozens of companies may not be that much different when it boils down to it.
Especially since the studio may have to hire a company or two just to do
R&D. The biggest overhead savings is on the down time when a large company
has a large permanent staff and a large building(s).
At a certain point if
you break the work in to a lot of small companies are you gaining anything for
the studio that the studio can’t get setting it up themselves? If it’s just a
few guys/gals in a large room with some computers, stripped of large pipelines
and multiple disciplines, couldn’t you set that up in a warehouse and not have
to pay profit to each company? As I noted in another post there’s nothing
preventing a company from setting up a building all prepped and available for
rental with basic pipeline and hardware already in place, just awaiting
artists. The studios don’t want to do this since they don’t want the risk.
They’d rather have the companies hold all the risk for them and to absorb a
certain percentage of the changes and overages. Now there is a company or two
that handles indirect management of multiple small to mid-size companies but
the problem is they take a slice from the already thin margins and have now added
in yet another layer of unnecessary communication.
Truth be told the fewer
number of companies involved in a film the more efficient it is. When it’s at
one company you have one place responsible and less communication necessary
with the client. There’s only one set of management on the team and all people
within the company are communicating efficiently using the same pipelines,
processes and software. No conversions or modifications necessary. Same models, same rigs, no need to
adapt, no need to share proprietary code, etc. A lot of small companies would
mean they’d have to willing to pass interchange all of their models and
scripts. It would also mean a lot more communication time as each company has
to be communicate and interface with several other companies and the clients.
So why do the studios break up the work so much?
They don’t want to be
held ransom by any company so they split up the work because they fear the
company taking advantage of them.
They split it up because
the schedule is too short to achieve at one place.
They split it up to try
to save a small amount on the matte paintings or wire removals or whatever. The
added handling of these shots and communications, etc. tend eat up any savings
that these less expensive places offered.
Sometimes other
companies do offer specialized visual effects that another company may not be
able to or not at the same quality level.
Do the studios really want to parcel the work out
to a 100 smaller shops? No. It
would be like a bad grocery shopping expedition. Drive here. Buy 3 apples. You
want 5 so you need to drive to
another place to get 2 more. Then you have to stop at the orange store. Next
you have to drive to the frozen dinner store. And on and on. Right now one of
the concerns studios have when they include small to mid size companies in
their group of companies is what happens if the work expands? Because as we
know that’s not unusual so the studios have to know if a place can actually
ramp up and do more work with little notice. Some smaller shops have a physical
limit of space. Some don’t have the work stations or capacity to handle more
people.
Too many artists?
Some people have voiced
that there are too many artists. That too many people are being educated in
visual effects schools and trying to enter the workforce. And that’s why the
industry is the way it is. The number of visual effects students is far
eclipsed by the number of film students yet the film industry isn’t being
destroyed by students. A large part of this is because there is a union for all
other film workers (writers, directors, grips, cinematographers, etc) The
studio has agreements in place not to simply start hiring anyone off the
street. Believe me it would be easy to drive around LA and pick up people who
would be more than glad to work for free or to pay to work. But the studios
know that if they’re going to invest tens of millions of dollars or more, they
don’t have time to teach on the set. They have to be as efficient as possible
when shooting and can’t take the chance of problems. They’d rather hire an
experienced professional who knows what has to be done and pay them more. They
gather a small army of people and each one has a job and has the experience to join
in and do what they need to. Now
that means that it is tough for film students to find real work in the field,
especially on larger productions. And a large percentage of film students will
never find work in the business. Others will pursue the dream for years. It’s a
problem for some in visual effects because the companies are under so much
pressure to get the prices down. Some managers don’t understand what the
studios already know – experienced professionals are the best use of money and
trying to save it on inexperienced people is being penny wise and pound
foolish. Not that beginners shouldn’t be hired but they will have to start at
the beginning and be in small numbers. And that’s why I caution students who
are interested in film and visual effects. You have to know the odds and
understand you’re going to work very hard to succeed in the specific business.
Summary
Maybe we should start
treating visual effects as a real business. Maybe we don’t need more visual
effects companies. Maybe we need less. Maybe our business skills and approach
should start to match our love of the work. Visual effects companies need to
stand up for themselves and take a hard look at their business. Would they be
better off merging? Are they simply dragging down the rest of the industry?
Maybe all visual effects artists will start to understand the impact and
dangers of subsidies.
----David Cohen has a great article in Variety that covers visual effects business issues.
Ailing f/x sector spotlights creaky tentpole foundation
Why is the VFX business failing? Questions for Scott Ross
The Miracle of Visual Effects, will it continue?
----David Cohen has a great article in Variety that covers visual effects business issues.
Ailing f/x sector spotlights creaky tentpole foundation
Why is the VFX business failing? Questions for Scott Ross
The Miracle of Visual Effects, will it continue?