Here is a great article by Anne Feeman, one of the most
informative I have read about how to make the most of your musiuc player
to promote your music!
It is a MUST READ!!
Once you’ve established your myspace site, selected a terrific photo or
graphic that
accurately signals your primary artistic sensibility to casual surfers,
and your band name or label name signal the same (hopefully), a few
practical strategies can be employed to help you maximize your marketing
efforts. These basics are worth mentioning because I see so many artists
overlook them that I cannot assume that you know to address them. We’ll
start with your music player, as your music is, of course, key to your
marketing efforts.
By the way, before we move on, I’d like to mention one simple strategy
I’ve seen some solo artists employ on myspace that helps to inform
surfers that they are, in fact, an artist: they add the word “music”
behind their name. Example:
www.myspace.com/kellybrockmusic.
It’s simple. It works. Do it.
OK, back to your music player. I want you to answer these questions
about your music player:
Your Music Player
What does you music sound like?
Crummy sounding demos and recordings sound crummy on the myspace player.
Period.
You gain nothing by advertising to potential fans, venue owners,
bookers, and industry folks that you have crummy sounding demos. I’ve
been on terrific sites only to be disappointed the moment the music
began, and not because the songs were bad, but because the sound was
terrible: muddy vocals, little or awkward mixes, and the like. You must
treat your myspace site as a professional marketing vehicle because your
site is a professional marketing vehicle. Make your demos/recordings
clear and ensure your vocals are upfront.
Did you post your lyrics?
People like to read lyrics that’s one reason why they still buy CDs or
search the Internet for lyric sites. Fans love to know the words to your
songs so they can sing along. If you’re a songwriter pitching your
songs, then lyrics are a must. Don’t make folks look for your lyrics
elswhere or try to write them down or memorize them post them on the
lyric page of your music player. Make it easy for people to understand
your songs and like your music. And don’t forget to include the
following on your lyric sheet:
* Authors/composers of the song
* Your publishing company (if you are an unsigned artist/songwriter,
then you are your
publishing company)
* Your performing arts organization affiliation if you have one, such as
ASCAP, BMI,
SESAC
* A copyright notice! You can simply type “Copyright 2006″. Don’t
neglect to add this important information.
I would also suggest that you include your business mailing address and
contact information, along with your band website, on the lyric sheet so
that if someone copies and saves/prints out your lyric sheet, your
contact information is readily available. Make it easy for people to
find you.
Do you permit rating and comments?
Use your player to gain valuable information about how fans perceive you
and your music. Don’t be afraid to let people rate and post comments
about your songs. If the ratings are poor and the comments are negative,
figure out why and use that information to improve your songwriting,
instrumentation or recording. You can always delete negative comments,
but at least you’ve received input about your music to help you improve
what craft. In addition, comments give you an opportunity to contact the
commenter, thank them for their comments - even if they are negative -
and turn the “friend” into a fan. The same goes for
song rating.
Have you enabled the Add feature to your songs?
When I land on an artist’s site and hear a great song, I may want to
feature that artist on my myspace site for The Aspiring Songwriter. I
regularly feature myspace artists who are friends on my site and play
their song to promote them. I cannot tell you how many band and artist
site I visit that don’t enable the add feature on their music player!
Ask youself this question: “What am I on myspace for?” The whole point
here is to get
people to add your song to their site so that everyone who visits their
site hears your song (and the play is counted on your music player song
counter). If your fan’s visitor likes your song and clicks on the the
“visit” option of your fan’s music player, they will be directed onto
your site where, hopefully, they will ask to join your site because they
like your music so much, and you have a potential new fan because he or
she was sent from your other fan’s
site. And, that new friend/fan may add your song to their site.
Comprende?
The music player add function is viral networking at its simplest! You
will rarely hear me scold, but this is such a no-brainer that I am
confounded when I run across artists and some really good artists
who don’t enable their player’s add function. I’ll assume it was a
momentary lapse in good judgment and I’ll be sure to revisit your site
sometime if I remember you after you’ve had the chance to make the
necessary adjustments. Enabling the add function does NOT enable fans to
download your song; it only permits them to stream your song from their
site much like web radio.
Do it.
Do you enable the downloads?
If you want to enable free song downloads, let me run this idea by you:
Do you want
potentials fans to download your song from your myspace site and your
have no way to obtain precious contact information from that downloader
(e-mail, address, etc)? I wouldn’t.
If you want to offer free downloads, I would argue that you get those
myspace friends to visit your official fan site to download a song, and
require the the downloader give up on e-mail address at the very least
to benefit from your largess. Your purpose is to build your fanbase, and
if you don’t have their direct contact information, such as an e-mail
and/or a mailing address, then you’ve squandered the chance to obtain
that information by enabling downloads on your myspace site. There may
be others who disagree with me on this point, but I’d rather have the
contact information as an exchange for a download.
If you don’t have a home page or download service that enables you to
obtain the
downloader’s contact information, then at the very least post an offer
on your myspace site indicating that you will e-mail your myspace
friends a free MP3 of the song in question IF they send you their e-mail
address. Don’t give away your goods and get absolutely nothing back for
it!
Do you employ the song graphics option?
Again, a no-brainer. Let your fans see your song while they’re hearing
your song. Don’t waste another opportunity to more effectively market
your music. Fans want to see and hear. Get that graphic or photo up on
that player, a different one for each song!! Yes, I’m scolding again,
but there really is no excuse for not marketing your music properly,
especially when the marketing mechanism is free.
Should you use the song rotation option?
Whether you push one song by making it the default song when someone
lands on your myspace site or let the songs rotate depends upon your
overall marketing plan. If you’re pushing a song as a single, then
defaultto that song playing when your site is opened. Build up the
interest and the play numbers for the song. Tie a featured song with a
free download on another site (for which they must give your contact
info), build your fan base and create some press about how many friends
turned into fans by signing up to get their download. Make myspace work
for you. If you’re not pushing a song as a single or as a free download,
or you are a label that is promoting a variety of artists, then letting
the songs rotate makes sense.
MySpace Band Feature: The Amino Acids
Let’s take a look at a site that’s working the myspace player the way it
should be, one of my myspace favs, The Amino Acids, at www.myspace.com/theaminoacids
. The Amino Acids, a surf-punk band from outer space, has a great
myspace site. They’ve done just about everything right, but for this
discussion I want to mention their music player.
Visitors can rate and comment on each of their four songs as well as add
them to their sites, promoting The Amino Acids. They don’t have lyric
pages because the Amino Acids are primarily an instro band, so in this
case lyrics are a moot point. You cannot download their songs from the
myspace player, but they provide their fans several options to migrate
from their myspace site to download songs elsewhere, where the band can
garner more information from the fan. And, each song is presented with a
great graphic.
Just about everything on The Amino Acids’ myspace site drives home their
primary artistic sensibility, and they make good use of the strengths of
myspace. The Amino Acids also give their fans plenty of opportunities to
leave their myspace site to places where they can obtain fan
information. Stop by the Amino Acids’ myspace site: It’s worth a visit.
For a hoot, watch their live video when you visit. These guys slay me!
Congrats to The Amino Acids for a job well done.
Provided by the MusicDish Network. Copyright © MusicDish LLC 2006 -
Republished with Permission
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