Perhaps you've worded it poorly. Maybe you're looking for your sound guy and just want to offer them "Producer" credit instead of expecting them to pull double duty. If so, everything I've said on the topic is moot.
If you're not paying the people, why not look for separate people to fulfill the appropriate tasks? That way you have people focusing on performing their job to a professional standard instead of splitting their focus, trying their best not to drop balls while juggling roles?
You may also get an additional benefit of widening your potential talent pool. It may be easier to find an audio guy than it will be to find an audio guy who also wants to take on the tasks of a producer.
Yeah, I guess I'm wording it poorly, at least a little bit. Also, I think that earlier we just weren't communicating on the same page, but I think we're past that. Thanks for the advice and the well-wishes!
The reason I would hope to find a sound guy who'll take the credit as producer is twofold. First, I do understand that producer directors like Michael Bay limit their role to that of director during production. You have no idea how much I want to be able to do that. Being a working producer while simultaneously directing a tiny-budget feature is such a pain, and definitely a hindrance to the quality of the final product.
Which is why one of my most important strategies is to take care of as much production detail in advance as possible. I basically plan to over-prepare. While on set, I want to be focused on direction as much as possible, likewise I'd want my sound guy to be focused on sound as much as possible.
The main reason I'd give them that credit is because having a pro sound guy would be such a huge savings to the overall budget, and their "virtual dollars" investment would be so huge that it'd be ridiculous to not credit them as at least an executive producer. And since they'd be such a huge creative voice throughout the entire process, I think they'd also deserve credit as working producer, cuz preproduction would be pretty much just me and them, and post would be pretty much just me, them, and a composer.
I appreciate your warning about a proposed 10-day shoot turning into two years of weekend-warrioring. I realize that the weekend-warrior model works for a lot of people, but it's absolutely not for me. It's a month of continuous shooting or bust. Barring tragedy or catastrophe, I'm confident that we can wrap principal photography in a month.
The thing that will take forever is preproduction. And maybe post. The reason pre will take a long time is because of the aforementioned over-preparation. I'm going to do plenty of test-footage, even for something as relatively simple as lighting. For the more complicated shots (there are a couple action scenes), we're gonna need plenty of rehearsal prior to production. The planning is gonna take time, and that's all on me. As soon as we enter production, we should be rockin' and rollin'!
Post might also take a very long time, but strictly for financial reasons. The production budget is going to be difficult enough for me to raise that I won't be raising any advertising dollars, festival submission fees or postproduction costs in advance. All of that money will be raised in post. I'm hoping to get some investment money by showing a rough cut with a temp score and temp coloring. If that doesn't happen, there's always the crowdfunding possibility, and worst-case scenario, I might just have to self-finance.
Again, there's no deadline for this movie. Production is going to take one month, of that I am confident. Pre and post should take at least a few years, maybe longer? I hope to reach that finish-line as soon as possible, but quality is priority #1. I've set a tentative deadline for production at 18 months from now, but I'll reassess that tentative deadline another six months from now.
Cheers!