Music Industry News

Marketing Strategies at Digital World as a Artist

March 30, 2020
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1. Revisit Your Branding
Over time, it’s easy to lose sight of your true audience. Take the time to revisit who your target is meant to be and make changes to realign your efforts. Focusing your posts to appeal to your respective audience is key. Try a new strategy like teasing your upcoming release on Instagram Stories.

Need some more inspiration? Look up similar posts on Instagram and Twitter using hashtags you think would fit your brand to get your imagination rolling. (Extra points for getting familiar with SEO and using it to your advantage.)

2. Streaming Services
You already have your music on streaming platforms (hopefully), so how can you use this to extend your marketing efforts? Think of the streaming service as another social media account and treat is as such. Make sure your bios are interesting, up to date, and link to your profiles on other accounts.

If you don’t already, inform your listeners when new music drops by creating alerts on Spotify. Aside from this, always be actively promoting your new releases by reaching out to music blogs, sharing Spotify Codes, and sharing everything you can on as many platforms as possible. All this will help you get more followers.

3. Think About Getting a Publicist
Reaching out to the press with announcements of tours and new music is very time-consuming. You want to focus your efforts on things that aren’t going to burn you out or take your attention away from the things you’re best at. Not sure if you’re ready for a publicist yet? Here are 4 signs you’re ready to hire a music publicist.

4. Social Media Is Key
Keeping your social media profiles up to date is a strong and effective marketing strategy in itself. Use a mix of promotional and everyday posts to pull your audience in and relate to them. Instagram is perfect for both of these!

Facebook can be used for promos, touring schedules, flyers, and important dates. Twitter is best for reaching out to fans and communicating with them directly. Don’t forget to use SEO for hashtags to reach your audience and don’t forget to respond to as many comments as you can to let your audience know you’re always listening.

5. Optimize The Way You Tour with Analytics
Going on tour is more than half of the job, so make sure you’re streamlining this process as best you can. Along with promoting your profiles and optimizing the traffic on platforms like Spotify and Soundcloud, you can gain a lot of success from simply knowing how to properly use the tools available to you.

Spotify and Soundcloud Analytics give you insights into your fan base to help you decide things like where you should prioritize your shows and what songs your fans want to hear.

If you want to make your tour the best it can be, it helps to gather some background info about what your audience loves and wants to see more of.

Once you’ve done all these things, don’t just set it and forget it. The key to maintaining growth over the course of your career is to stay up to date with changes and advancements in the music marketing realm.

Music Industry News

Forming Your Artist Development Team – The Publicist

March 30, 2020
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Throughout this series, we’ve discussed the various members of the artist development team. Each member brings a unique set of assets to the entire team. Each member provides unique guidance and expertise that is essential to launch and maintain an upward trajectory for an artist’s career. This entry is devoted to the form and function of the publicist, a member of the team who is tasked with bridging the gap between the private and public life of an artist.

Brand awareness is at the heart of every artist’s success and failure, and the publicist is who can make that happen. A publicist is on the front lines, closest to the pulse of the public and the opinion the public has about the artist.

Forming Your Artist Development Team – The Publicist
When To Hire a Publicist
Publicists are tasked with communicating an artist’s story, providing details, filling in the blanks and engaging in conversations with media outlets that can connect those stories to the public and help establish an artist’s brand. There are many theories as to when an artist should invest in the services of a publicist, but it distills down to one basic metric; does the artist have a compelling, relatable and unique story to tell? Is there something that the artist is creating, doing or saying that is a differentiator, unique or press-worthy?

A good publicist is expensive. A great publicist is ridiculously expensive. However, the process is complex. Developing a story with just the right slant or “pitch,” submitting it to the appropriate press outlets and following up to ensure that it is published and seen by the public on a timely basis is no easy feat.

If you have enough money to hire a great publicist, any one of them will gladly take your cake. However, don’t think that this will guarantee a cover story in People Magazine or Rolling Stone. The genesis of a press release and story must be newsworthy from the jump. Not even the most powerful publicist can turn an unknown or lackluster artist or story into headlines and feature articles. A publicist will not squander valuable media relationships or contacts on a “fluff piece.” Competition is intense. Thousands of stories are being pitched on a daily basis. A good publicist’s power within the public relations world comes from his or her reputation, experience and ability to bring authentic, hot stories and “breaking” artists to media outlets.

Publicists must be able to engage in one on one dialogues with important editors and content gatekeepers to convince them that their story is “top of the fold” material and deserves press real estate more than any other story out there.

A publicist’s success, in both time and substance, is intrinsically tied to career milestones that are met by an artist. It’s all about the momentum of growth. A record deal, a tour, a major film or television slot, events that a publicist can truly sink their teeth into tells an artist it’s time to hire one. So, if your part-time quest for stardom is beginning to gel, your career “buzz” is real, contracts are being signed, and you are starting to gain momentum, an investment in a publicist is a good one.

Remember: Like a booking agent, a publicist follows the path of the artist’s career, it doesn’t create the path. Make sure there is a real need before you invest in publicity.

The Type of Professional You Need
The relationship between publicist and artist is intimate by nature, meaning that many personal and professional components, skillsets, and networks must align and be compatible to ensure a successful union. The publicist must be well connected. They must be able to reach out to press influencers on multiple press platforms. Basic skills such as the ability to prioritize, schedule, write well and be able to identify and promote the artist’s brand are essential.

A publicist must be capable of delivering press coverage that coincides with the career level of the artist and the events that are taking place along a time continuum. Artists who are starting to catch on regionally and nationally need a publicist with press contacts who can deliver regional and national press. Don’t sign with a publicist until you have thoroughly researched his or her professional profile.

Ask to see their client roster, placements, and press clippings.
Take a look at the press kits they have created for each client.
Experience is essential, especially when dealing with established artists and brands. If you’re a new artist, the most vital skillset to look for is the ability to “break” newbies, aka garnering press coverage for an artist who is virtually unknown. Remember that all members of an artist’s development team are music genre-driven. They specialize in a specific type of music/artist and their contacts and power exist within the context of that genre. So, make sure to find a publicist who has experience in your type of music.

In addition, all publicists must have experience in positioning a client when the press is negative or derogatory. Artists can get into situations that require strict management and strategic positioning with press outlets. Interviews must be controlled, scripted and aimed towards counteracting the negative press. Articles must be written to explain the artist’s perspective or rationale. The public’s support can be reinstated and shaped by a savvy publicist. Damage control is a special skill set that only a few publicists possess, and the cost for that expertise is usually astronomical.

Regardless of where you are in your career, the publicist (as well as all the other members of your artist development team) must have a great reputation in the industry; honest, reliable, well-liked and respected. They must be contingency and solution-based, regardless of the situation.

Working with a Publicist
Because of the Internet, the publicity needs of an artist who’s just starting out can usually be handled by the artist themselves. An artist can create his or her own press releases, service them through various, free press distribution websites and follow up with emails and phone calls on their own. Social media platforms, entertainment websites, E-zines, and Fanzines are plentiful. Editors are usually easy to identify and contact. Generally, they’re happy to receive content and information about gigs, music releases, and other entertainment events. While the reach of these publications can be limited, local and regional at best, you have to start somewhere. And core audiences are built literally one fan at a time.

Be proactive, Do it yourself until your story starts to unfold and then consider handing it off to a professional.

To be a publicist is to be an artist’s perpetually loyal fan and brand guru for as long as they work together. A solid working relationship begins with support and belief that eventually morphs into progressive and consistent cultivation of the artist’s brand. The publicist must be given all the information; the good, bad and ugly, to properly service press outlets who are interested in covering the artist and the music. On a personal level, you must be compatible, certain that you can and will “mesh” personally with this individual because publicity is personal in nature and public in execution. There must be mutual trust and honesty.

If you think you’re ready to hire a publicist, get started by creating a list of publicists who you feel are the right “fit.” Do your homework. Find out who they represent.
Check out the work they are doing for their clients.
Make sure they handle the type of music you’re making.
If they fit your criterium, it’s time to reach out and provide them with information about you.
Create an electronic package that includes a cover message or note offering important information about you, your career and your goals.
If you have a bio include it. Include photographs, links to your music or videos of your performances. Brag about yourself and what you have done.
Let them know where you want to go and what you want to achieve. Remember that promises are empty unless they are kept.
Make sure each candidate has experience, knowledge, skills and the resources to keep any of the promises they make.
Every aspect of your career is an opportunity to learn and grow. Don’t be afraid to ask the hard questions of yourself and to the publicist that you’re considering. Use every member of your artist development team as a teacher. Do not follow blindly. Insist on knowing the answer to “why” something can or cannot be done. Debate and discourse make a team stronger. Learn how it’s done before you turn it over to someone else to do for you.

Decide on the way you want your profile, your brand to be presented to the public. If you have a manager, discussions about your brand should have already taken place. You can turn to them for help in selecting a publicist, but don’t take recommendations without doing your own research. Don’t rush into anything, you’ll know when the time is right.

Music Industry News

The Independent Music Community Needs Your Help

March 30, 2020
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The music industry has experienced much hardship over the past two weeks. From the tornadoes in Nashville to the emergence of COVID-19, our communities are feeling the impact. This impact has also affected artists and record labels by festivals and venues canceling shows in the interest of public health and containment of the virus. This means gigs, tours, productions, merch sales, and other revenue streams have come to a halt.

Here’s how you can help
DONATE // In efforts to help our community, we’ve set up the Support Independent Music page to supplement the income of artists who have been hit the hardest. Every time you refresh the page, a different artist from our community will appear for you to donate to. These donations will go directly to the artist you choose.

Here’s how you can be featured
Head over to the Support Independent Music page and fill out the form with all your details. For the time being, we are requesting Venmo and Cash App as payment forms. If you don’t have an account with them, set one up! It’s really simple. We’ll then add you to the featured artist list.

We will not take a single dime from your donation.

Every little bit helps and thanks for contributing to the independent music industry!
We will be publishing editorial content in our blog, so make sure to check out our tag, #CoronaVirus, for best practices during this time and articles that are great resources for this downtime.

We look forward to continuing to help the artist community in any and every way we can. We WILL get through this. Stay safe.