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Indie Music Resource – 100 Tips To Market Your Music (Part 2)

Yes that’s right…

As promised here is the second part of “100 Ways To Market Your Music” by the guys at the (unfortunately now defunct) independent music resource and community website Artistopia.

Read “100 Tips To Market Your Music (Part 1)”


100 Tips to Market Your Music (Part 2)
By Artistopia

Need ideas on how to spread the news that you are ready to hit the music scene? Don’t know where to start your music marketing and promotional efforts?

This is Part 2 of a two part series about getting your music heard, especially if a career in music is your ultimate goal.

 We had so many ideas for Indie and unsigned musicians, singers and songwriters music marketing tips that we couldn’t fit it in one article.

Here is part two with more ideas to get the word out on your music.

Promo Tip #55: 
Tag your MP3s with your name or band name, not just the song name. They need to know WHO did this material when they happen across it months later.


Promo Tip #56: 
Know who you are! Get into an appropriate category so that you can be found. People have to be able to identify your sound into a category that they can identify with.

You may want to portray a new edgy sound, which is fine, but there are still general categories that people search on in record stores or online and you have to be found in one of them.


Promo Tip #57: 
Throw a listen-in. Contact record stores, coffee shops, book stores, malls, recreational areas, galleries, cool clothing stores or nightclubs that are willing to support local music. The free listen-in could have talk session and discounted CDs with coupons.


Promo Tip #58: 
Keep it simple silly, web sites that take a long time to load, are not easy to navigate, and are not interesting will not keep the viewer’s attention long enough for them to get to know you.

So don’t make your personal website or any site that can be customised, so frilly that it turns a potential opportunity away.


Promo Tip #59: 
Join local communities and organisations and go to meetings periodically and pay attention.

Listen for opportunities in what they are saying and perhaps volunteer. Help them and they will help you. Nonprofit organisations are likely to have access to media outlets that may give your some exposure.


Promo Tip #60: 
Check your public and local radio stations that play your type of music and try to get some air time.

Promo Tip #61: 
You will hear a lot of no’s and negativity. That is to be expected as everyone’s taste is different. Hopefully someone will give you some constructive criticism. Learn from it what you can but keep moving forward.


Promo Tip #62: 
Develop yourself as a complete package. Record labels do not spend the money on A&R as in the day. Educate yourself as a well-rounded music artist and present yourself as such.

Promo Tip #63: 
Elevator Pitch – If you only have one shot to make an impression in 30 seconds or less, can you do it? You will need to, so practice it!


Promo Tip #64: 
Post your gigs on your website(s), class ads, Craigslist, Backpage and other sites for your location.


Promo Tip #65: 
Submit your music to songwriting competitions, musician competitions, singing contests – try out for American Idol, for gosh sakes!


Promo Tip #66: 
Do a free conference call to chat with fans using your website. Record the call and follow up by posting the MP3 on your site. Promote it for all its worth.

Promo Tip #67: 
Never release an inferior product, send out professional, and only your very best demos and new releases.


Promo Tip #68: 
Get testimonials and reviews from people that matter and start locally if you have to. Add them to your press kit.


Promo Tip #69: 
Make sure you make it easy for potentials sales to happen whether on your site or at a show. Make the payment process, safe, secure and EASY.


Promo Tip #70: 
Have a house concert. Invite the neighbourhood to your backyard.


Promo Tip #71: 
Give your fans insider, behind the scenes, back stage with the band info and videos. This is great info to include in newsletters – people that signed up to learn more about you on purpose.


Promo Tip #72: 
Take the good with the bad, and take it all graciously. You must keep your image clean or at least maintain the aforementioned image.


Promo Tip #73: 
Don’t waste time, prioritize and go with the best bets. Put your energy into the correct market for YOUR music.


Promo Tip #74: 
If you can write well about a music subject, write and distribute articles. Always source the article back to your website. Let it be redistributed with the bottom author source info to spread your message and link.

Promo Tip #75: 
Gig swap with other bands from another area to widen your fan base.


Promo Tip #76: 
A music profile or bio, press kit and press releases should all be well written, free of misspellings, kept current, and to the point. Schedule updates of your various online activities.


Promo Tip #77: 
Find a business in your area that you can partner with for mutual benefit. If something about a song, style, or image would boost a local business, develop a cross promotional relationship.


Promo Tip #78: 
Respond to all your correspondence in a timely, businesslike, and correct manner – appropriate to the sender. Be considerate of your audience.


Promo Tip #79: 
Give people what they want. It’s all about the fans. If they come to your website, give them information that makes THEM feel good. If they come to your show, entertain them, thank them and thank the venue for the experience.


Promo Tip #80: 
Don’t disappear. Once you have started building your momentum, it is a continuous onslaught.

Promo Tip #81: 
Attend music conferences, indie showcases, music festivals. Gain exposure and network.


Promo Tip #82: 
Be easy to work with and be flexible. A good reputation carries a lot of weight. Flexibility can also mean possibly adjusting areas of your work or image so as to get your foot in the door if need be.


Promo Tip #83: 
Have a cause. Create an event to promote that cause. Team up with other like-minded bands and make a news worthy event out of that cause.


Promo Tip #84: 
Business Cards – When talking to anyone, hand one out. You must include the link to your website. Consider your link as your online business card.

Promo Tip #85: 
Rolodex your contact list (some sites have contact managers in their member consoles). Make a list and keep it current of all the places online and offline that you need to post to when you need to send out reoccurring press releases of news and events.

Be aware that many sites have limits in number and/or timeframes, be careful to not exceed them.


Promo Tip #86: 
Invoke your personality into your writings to make your invitations, announcements and introductions fun and effective.


Promo Tip #87: 
Clearly define what you are about – quickly, online or offline. People have short attention spans and are short on time – not just the music industry, but most people in general.

This is very important! Don’t waste words. Make anything you have to say about yourself or band enough to give the important necessary information and cut out the nonsense.

Promo Tip #88: 
Create a band calendar with some humorous photos of the various band members at various events.


Promo Tip #89: 
You heard it through the grapevine. Share “some” inside knowledge with other bands and songwriters in your area. Start your own information highway.


Promo Tip #90: 
Create an automated template for emails. Take the time to add the person’s name with a personal tidbit, but save time with a readymade email guide.

Respond to unsolicited emails with your own personalised marketing message and a link to your website.


Promo Tip #91: 
Play for free if you have to, any where, any time. Create an event, an event with a cause and donate the proceeds to a charity. This can open up some interesting contacts and opportunities. Sponsor an event.


Promo Tip #92: 
Reach out and touch your fans. Whether someone else is maintaining your online presence or not, occasionally touch base with fans personally.

Promo Tip #93: 
Include every ounce of contact info needed upon every available surface.


Promo Tip #94: 
Borrow an idea from other sources, even outside the music industry. If it works for that company, perhaps you can adapt the idea to market your music as well.

Find a way to put a new twist or slant on a successful bands tactics.

Promo Tip #95: 
Send birthday cards to your fans… Of course you need to get their birthday info when they sign up for mailing lists.


Promo Tip #96: 
Get involved in the music forums and message boards that target your music segment and ALWAYS include your signature URL.

Promo Tip #97: 
Start a Music or Band Blog, well written and kept current. Submit it to music Blog directories.

Promo Tip #98: 
Create a novelty song that topics a holiday, a hot news item, your city or town, sports team, political event or other idea and gain exposure on promoting this song.

Promo Tip #99: 
Listen to your fans and learn what brought them to your show. This is very effective to giving you feedback on which promotional tool worked.


Promo Tip #100: 
Success doesn’t happen to those that wait. A record label , music deal, stardom, just creating a website “and they will come” doesn’t just land in your lap with you doing nothing.

You have to make success come to you. Be persistent, be confident, roll up your sleeves, it’s going to take some serious work.

We just couldn’t stop at 100! Here are a few more great tips

Promo Tip #101: 
Use the Internet to research and keep current on new ways and new sites to market your music.


Promo Tip #102: 
Strength in numbers. Build joint ventures, collaborations and/or online partners on a project and both of you market that project.


Promo Tip #103: 
Have a professional email address.

Promo Tip #104: 
Don’t burn your bridges. Even with the increasing number of music “wanna-be’s” the music industry is a relatively small and close knit community.

A wrong done to you by someone early in your career, may be that “someone” in a position of music power one day that you just might need to do business with.


Promo Tip #105: 
Join the party, even if you aren’t in the mood. Don’t respond to the inevitable “what do you do” question with your day job, but tell your potentially new fan you are a musician and hand them your business card.


Promo Tip #106: 
Keep a journal of your marketing efforts with what worked and what did not work. This can be used in many ways down the road besides tracking your efforts. A book or e-book maybe?

Promo Tip #107: 
If out partying, have a designated friend or band mate for image control. If you get into something that could potentially land you in trouble, that controller gets you out of the situation before it can hurt your image.

Video can be on the Internet before you even get home, so protect your image at all costs if you happen to get out of control.


Promo Tip #108: 
Business is business. There is a time and place for slang/explicit language, behavior, and the like. Project yourself in a professional manner. Know when you are onstage and when you are not.


Promo Tip #109: 
Get your own competition going about your band or a new release. Give something away, have fans register at local record stores, find a way to get buzz going by asking a great question.


Promo Tip #110: 
Self promote everyday, in every way, one way or the other. 

Some of these pointers may not be for you. That’s fine.

Do what you need to do, just make sure we ALL hear about you. Very true that many artists do not have the funds to do some of these tips, well, with the Internet and some ingenuity it possible to get around this to an extent.

The difference between you and another band that made it may not be that their music was better. It might be that they found a way to get noticed better.

The music industry needs music talent and is constantly on the look out for something that stands out. If you have the guts and perseverance, it can be you.


Well there you go, over 100 tips to market your music online and offline. There are a lot of great suggestions here and some that I hadn’t even thought of as yet.

That’s the really good thing about being independent. You are always learning and growing with your music.

It’s also very important to be consistant with your music marketing. Don’t do things too quickly and give away too much of yourself in a short space of time.

Do something for your music career every day. Plan for it. It will be the best investment you can ever make for yourself.

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