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How to Become Animal Manager for Movies in US
Chapters

1Introduction to Animal Management in Film

2Legal and Ethical Considerations

3Animal Training Techniques

4Animal Health and Safety

5Communication and Collaboration

6Understanding Film Production

7Building a Professional Network

Identifying Key ContactsNetworking EventsSocial Media PresenceProfessional OrganizationsMentorship OpportunitiesCollaboration with AgenciesLeveraging ConnectionsBuilding a ReputationLong-Term RelationshipsCross-Industry Networking

8Animal Behavior and Psychology

9Developing Career Opportunities

10Case Studies and Real-World Applications

11Technological Advances in Animal Management

12Cultural and Historical Perspectives

13Marketing and Public Relations

Courses/How to Become Animal Manager for Movies in US/Building a Professional Network

Building a Professional Network

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Learn strategies to build a robust network within the film industry.

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Identifying Key Contacts

Identifying Key Contacts for Animal Managers in Film
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Identifying Key Contacts for Animal Managers in Film

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Identifying Key Contacts — Who You Actually Need to Know as an Animal Manager

"You can be the best animal handler in the world, but if you don't know who calls the shots, you're the best-hidden resource on set."

(Yes, this is the part where your contact list becomes your superhero cape.)


Quick bridge from earlier: Where this fits

You already learned about Director’s Vision, On-Set Protocols, and Post-Production Considerations. Now we move from understanding what the film needs to actually finding the humans who make decisions. Think of it as moving from theory (what the director wants) to logistics (who will let the dog nap under stage lights and when). This is the networking chapter — but not the flaky business-card-swapping kind. This is targeted contact-mapping that saves animals and production days.


What does “Identifying Key Contacts” mean? (Short answer)

Identifying Key Contacts = knowing the people and organizations who will approve, enable, restrict, or pay for animal work on a production. Not all are glamorous. Many will be politely bureaucratic. All are necessary.

Why this matters

  • Safety & legality: Someone signs off on animal safety plans and permits. If you can't reach them at 2 a.m., that’s a problem.
  • Scheduling & budgets: Producers and line producers control money, UPMs control day-to-day scheduling.
  • Creative fit: Directors/ADs decide how animals are used; trainers explain realism limits.

Who to know: The essential contact list (by production phase)

Below is a practical roster organized by when you’ll need them the most.

Pre-Production — the time to plan like a general

  • Producer / Line Producer / Unit Production Manager (UPM) — budget and risk authority.
  • Director and 1st Assistant Director (1st AD) — call times, creative requirements, scene layout.
  • Production Designer / Set Dresser — space, props, and safe animal zones.
  • Location Manager & Local Film Office — permits, local animal ordinances, recommended vets.
  • Animal Wrangler / Trainer (other specialists) — species-specific expertise and backup handlers.
  • Veterinarian (on-call & pre-approval) — required for many productions and AHA guidelines.
  • Insurance Broker / Risk Manager — confirms coverage for animals and liabilities.
  • American Humane Association film unit liaison — if the production seeks the “No Animals Were Harmed” supervision.

Production — where timing and communication breathe fire

  • 2nd AD / Production Coordinator — schedule distribution and last-minute changes.
  • Key Grip / Gaffer — lighting and rigging that affect animal safety.
  • Stunt Coordinator — if animals are part of stunts, coordination is critical.
  • Script Supervisor — continuity notes that involve animals.
  • PAs (on-set points-of-contact) — often the ones to run and fetch things.

Post-Production / Wrap — yes, there are still people

  • Post Producer / VFX Supervisor — if animal work requires digital augmentation or replacement.
  • Animal Transport / Kennel Contacts — for relocation and wrap logistics.
  • Records Manager — keeps health and safety documentation for audits.

The Influence-Responsibility Matrix (How to prioritize contacts)

Think of contacts on a 2x2 grid: Influence (decision power) vs. Responsibility (day-to-day impact).

  • High Influence / High Responsibility: Line Producer, UPM, Director — treat these as top-tier contacts.
  • High Influence / Low Responsibility: Studio execs, financiers — keep them informed, not micromanaged.
  • Low Influence / High Responsibility: On-set vet, wranglers, 1st AD — your daily allies.
  • Low Influence / Low Responsibility: Local vendors, kennel staff — useful but lower priority.

Tip: Build the core as the High/High and High/Low group first.


Real-world analogies

  • Identifying key contacts is like assembling a pit crew. The driver (director) tells you what speed they want; the crew (wranglers, vet, grips) are the ones who actually change the tires while the manager (producer) pays the bill.

  • Imagine a concert: the band wants a pyrotechnic dog entrance (bad idea). You, the animal manager, need the producer (budget/no), vet (safety/no), and pyrotechnician (risk/no). Without those contacts, you can’t stop the terrible idea — or make a safe alternative.


Practical tactics — how to build the list (step-by-step)

  1. Start with the call sheet and production office — extract names and roles immediately.
  2. Map responsibilities to tasks — who signs permits? who vets safety plans? who controls schedule swaps? Write this in a simple table or spreadsheet.
  3. Confirm contact preferences — phone, text, radio channel, or pigeon? (Prefer phone + radio.)
  4. Create a one-page contact sheet for animals, laminated and clipped to your kit.
  5. Introduce yourself early — a 60-second hallway intro beats a cold email later.

Sample one-line intro: “Hi — I’m [Name], animal manager for this shoot. Quick note: who’s our on-set production contact for schedule changes involving animal scenes?”


Outreach templates (use, adapt, repeat)

Code block for a short email/DM you can actually send:

Subject: Animal Work Coordination — [Project Name] — Quick Intro

Hi [Name],

I’m [Your Name], the animal manager for [Project]. I’ll be coordinating animal safety, logistics, and permits. Could we schedule a 10–15 min sync to review the proposed animal scenes, permit needs, and vet coverage? My availability: [times].

Key quick notes: species involved, estimated days, any known stunts/props. Happy to send a checklist before we chat.

Thanks,
[Name] | [Phone] | [Email]

Why do people keep misunderstanding this?

People think networking is “who can get me jobs.” For animal managers, networking is who will let the job be done safely and legally. It’s less about favors and more about creating predictable, safe spaces for animals and crew.


Red flags & ethical guardrails

  • If someone resists vet or animal welfare oversight, escalate to producer or AHA liaison.
  • Don’t accept requests that compromise animal welfare for convenience.
  • Know federal and state rules (USDA, state wildlife agencies) and never bypass them.

Closing — Key takeaways

  • Make a prioritized contact map for pre-production, production, and post.
  • Know who has decision power vs. who does the daily work. Both matter.
  • Create short, professional outreach templates and a laminated contact sheet.
  • Keep animal welfare central — if a contact pushes shortcuts, you’ve got a responsibility to escalate.

"Being an animal manager isn’t about owning every answer — it’s about knowing the right person to call before something goes sideways. Build the list, keep it current, and carry the vet’s number like it’s a holy relic."


Quick checklist to export into your kit

  • Contact sheet (laminated)
  • On-call vet info
  • Production office & 1st AD numbers
  • Line producer / UPM contact
  • Local film office & permits contact
  • AHA liaison (if applicable)

Tags: beginner, practical, film-production

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