When I started my comedy career, there was no Internet for public use.
Even when the Internet became available to the general public in the ’90s, there certainly wasn’t the volume of information that is readily accessible today.
Subsequently, until I had been a comedian for a while, I really had no idea that there was even such a thing as the corporate market for stand-up comedians.
One of the reasons I added an automatic upgrade module called the Corporate Comedy Secrets module to the Killer Stand-up Online Course is simply because…
The Hidden Potential of the Corporate Comedy Market
The corporate comedy market today still remains the ultimate underground market for stand-up comedians for a number of reasons:
- Very few comedians have the skill to develop a stand-up comedy act that is suitable or acceptable for the corporate comedy market, which pays 10–30 times more than what a single comedy club headliner performance pays.
- Once a comedian has committed to a “dick joke” or “edgy” act, they are usually disqualified from working in any well-paying market outside the “traditional” comedy club market (corporate gigs, conventions, cruise ships, wedding entertainment, etc.).
That’s not meant as a negative; it’s just the way it is. Simply verify that information by asking any working comedian who has been around for a while.
- Comedians who do work in the corporate market simply will not tell you how they are getting work as a corporate comedian (which is mostly by referrals or through talent and booking agencies that broker such acts).
I was very fortunate that early in my comedy career, I managed to read some small passage in a stand-up comedy book somewhere that went something like this:
“You can always make clean material blue. But it is difficult or impossible to make blue material clean.”
For some reason, this stuck with me. And being a guy who likes to have many options when possible…
Well, I was able to work both comedy clubs and corporate gigs without issue because of how I chose to develop my act right from the outset.
It also didn’t hurt that I didn’t have the usual problems comedians have developing comedy material because I wasn’t trying to “write” one joke at a time.
Why Corporate Comedy is a Smart Career Move
For the record: I’d never discourage any comedian from working in comedy clubs—they are best suited for comedy, there’s more freedom of speech, and on and on.
And if you can develop a huge following, whether from TV exposure, using the Internet, etc.—as a general rule, you can command more cha-ching when you perform in the comedy clubs (it’s called being a “draw”).
But…
There are only about 300 dedicated comedy clubs that hire acts on a weekly basis.
There are over 17,000 businesses in the U.S. that have 500 employees or more—not including government agencies and other entities that are in a position to hire a corporate comedian for their entertainment needs (which many budget for and NOT just for December holiday parties).
Note: You can use the U.S. Postal Service website to verify that information about the number of businesses.
Someone also told me recently (which I cannot verify) that there are only about 300 corporate comedians working right now.
Well, it doesn’t take a math wizard to figure out where tremendous opportunities are for comedians who can deliver corporate-clean or family-friendly comedy material at headliner levels.
The Reality of Working as a Corporate Comedian
One last thing…
Many comedians are under the false impression that you have to have “corporate” knowledge or corporate “experience” to work as a corporate comedian. The reality is…
Not true. A band or DJ doesn’t have to have any “corporate” knowledge or experience—they simply provide non-offensive, general audience entertainment, just like a corporate comedian would.
So it should come as no surprise given the information above why opportunities abound as a corporate comedian with the right stand-up comedy act.
This is the type of comedian I am. All my jokes are clean I don’t use any profanity. This article gives me a lot of hope that I will be a successful comedian.
Thanks
Great blog with helpful articles filled with lots of useful information. I’ll be coming back to it again and again. Thank You!
Excellent points! I “grew up” in the comedy clubs but always had a clean act. And being a former CPA helped me make a natural transition to doing corporate shows. Keep up the great work!