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ARTICLES
Blog Home
The Silver Rule Of Music Marketing
Selective Perception (a method for mixing music)
Marketing Music: Your Band Brand
What happens on the Internet, stays on the Internet. Forever.
Marketing Online Outline For Promoting Your New Album on iSound
Engaging the Community
Branding Your Band
Tracking The Traffic To Your Website
Understanding Tipping Points
Fame and Fortune
4 Services That Can Help Your Band
New Technology Makes the World an Oyster for Independent Artists
QUOTES FROM THE BEST SONGWRITERS
The Five Rules in Creating Successful Press Releases for Your Band
Bar Video Monitors
Top 10 Music PR Tips
Installment 2 – Your Core Beliefs
Nine Steps to Online Forum Creation for Band Websites
The Long Tail to Sales
Eleven Social Networking Steps to Promote Your Music Online
The Artist Press Kit
Fan Email Marketing Made Easy
Four Online Promotional Steps Every Band Needs To Implement
20 Steps to Creating a Successful Blog for Your Band (Part 2 of 2)
20 Steps to Creating a Successful Blog for Your Band
Eleven Ways Bands Can Utilize their Website to Promote their Music
Tips On Getting More Fair Dates and Corporate Gigs
Recording & Producing Music at Home, Part 2: Fighting Even More Noise
Recording & Producing Music at Home, Part 1: Fighting the Noise
WHy playing live is so important
What is 'Podsafe' Music?
THE ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
Building An Effective E-Mail List and Delivering the Right Message
People Skills plus Networking Lead to Great Relationships
AUDITION AND INTERVIEW COMPLETE BUT NO REPLY... WHAT DO I DO NOW?
are house concerts for you?
How To Get Your Music Going Without Major Label Support
Preparing A Professional Promotional Package... Part 3
Rub a dub dub three men in a pub
Preparing A Professional Promotional Package... Part 2
Get Better Results With A Distinctive Promo Package
Getting Better is All About Promotion! Promotion! Promotion!
Music Pre-Production Values
A NEW YEAR IS THE BEST TIME TO MAKE POSITIVE CAREER CHANGES
Cool Gizmo Alert: Seymour Duncan SFX-01 Pickup Booster
Entrepreneurship Is The Key To New Artist Success Today
'Tis The Season To Turn On Promotional Efforts
SELF PROMOTION VS REPRESENTATION: WHEN SHOULD AN ARTIST SEEK HELP?
Things You Can Do That'll Boost Your Career
The Most Successful Performer Is Always "Takin' Care of Business"
PREPARING A PROFESSIONAL ENGAGEMENT CONTRACT...
IT'S TIME FOR YOUR ANNUAL NEW YEARS REALITY CHECK
Make A Fresh Start... Dream Big and Do Your Homework!
A Good Attitude is the Key to Successful Conflict-Management
Image: It Still Matters More Than The Music
ALWAYS BE THE BEST THAT YOU CAN BE!
How Performers Can Flub The Interview... But Don't Laugh
Review: Genz-Benz G-Flex 2x12 (guitar cabinet)
Lou's 'Fat Tracks' Recording Tip
Cool Gizmo Alert: Koch Loadbox II
Some suggestions for chord playing
I Am a Good Entertainer How Can I Get Better Gigs?
Agent Friendly Websites Not Too Friendly For Agents
An Introspective Look At the Exclusive Agent Question
Promotion and Marketing Tips For Professional Performers
Exploring the Career Direction in a Changing Music Industry
Negotiation... The Discussion Before the Contract Stage
Image is Everything
Create Local Buzz For Your Band
Communicating with your Fan Base
interview with sherwood
Taking Back Sunday Interview
The importance of blogging and keeping your content fresh
Monday, November 12th, 2007
Four Online Promotional Steps Every Band Needs To Implement
Today’s artists have a wide range of possibilities to promote themselves, especially online. But that means you must compete with other groups to gain an online presence. There are four key steps in online marketing to gain a successful start with promoting your music on the internet.



Submit to Directories

1. The first step is to submit. Submit to directories (http://www.rocksource.net/), online radios (http://www.last.fm/), and online magazines (http://www.world-newspapers.com/rock.html) – anywhere that plays or features music. The more places that play your track, the more people will hear and recognize your music. Thousands of people listen to free online radios daily and most of these stations allow artists to submit their music to them. Similarly, directories permit you to add your website with a brief description, which is then added to the directory site. An even better idea is to make a friend submit your site or music for you so you are not always pushing your own music.




You must be careful when submitting to sites, however, because search directories like Google will downgrade you if your incoming links look unnatural. This means that when someone performs a search for your site, it will not show up in the top search results because the search engine is punishing you. Try submitting your site or music to a couple sites weekly with various anchor texts. For example, the words “an awesome rock blog” are the anchor text to the link www.motorcityrocks.com. Also, do not always submit your site with a link pointing to your homepage. Sometimes submit your site with a link to the secondary page of your website to make the links seem more natural.



Give Away Music


Anchor text ¬– visible, descriptive text you click on for a hyperlink


2. Secondly, offer your music at no cost. With the plethora of options available to users to download free MP3s, strictly offering your music for purchase hurts your online status. When a listener gets your MP3 for free, he or she has a greater possibility of returning to your site to hear more music by you if they liked what they heard. Only after listening and liking your music will they purchase your album. You have to be sure not to give away too much music, though, because the listener will have no reason to purchase your album if they can find everything for free.



Adding a podcast or MP3 to your sites also allows users to hear your music without paying anything for it. The hardest part in adding music to the site, however, is the recording, so start by focusing on a quality recording of your music. To add music to the site:



a. Find a computer with audio input capability and an easy to use audio encoding application. This is easy if your music is on CD, just rip it with iTunes or a similar application. If it is in some other analog or digital (mini-disc) format, it gets a little harder, but applications are freely out there.



b. Then with MP3 file in hand, you can upload the file to your web site and link like you would link a web page or other media/image file.



c. From there, there are more complicated ways of doing it so it is more "presentable" with a nice embedded player, etc.



Make Business Friends

3. The third step is to build professional online relationships to boost your online presence. You know a lot about music, so comment on it. Look up blogs related to rock music (http://www.blogcatalog.com/directory/arts/music/rock/) and add meaningful comments to help others reading the blogs. Most of the time the comment box asks for your URL, which is a great way to promote your own website or blog while helping others by posting comments.



Blogger ethics state if one blogger comments or links to another’s site, the other blogger will comment or link back. This is a great way to build an online relationship and promote one another’s music. An additional option, besides just commenting on their blogs, is to help them out somehow. When you find online radio stations to submit your music to, compile a list and send the list to them. They will in return promote your music to thank you for your help.



Besides commenting on blogs, creating a blog can prove very beneficial in online rock music marketing as well.



Utilize Social Networks
4. Connect yourself to tons of different social networking sites. YouTube, Yahoo Video, and Google Video allow you to post different videos onto the site at no cost, like the OKGo video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pv5zWaTEVkI) that was fairly inexpensive and still receives views daily. Post all your music videos and add links to your website to these videos.



MyBlogLog (http://www.mybloglog.com/) allows users to share different sites and build a community based on various interests. You can also add your site to your profile and view who else has your site as their favorite. Although just over a year old, MyBlogLog is quickly gaining popularity, which presents a great way establish yourself early in the community. Similarly, Ning (http://www.ning.com) allows you to create a social network for any topic. Joining and commenting on various rock music networks and creating your own network for group provides the best methods to get the most out of Ning.



Finally, joining the additional social network sites like LinkedIn, Facebook and MySpace are all necessary in promoting you or your band. Finding friends and friends of friends can boost you music and be helpful in additional ways. Network as often as possible both online and offline.



These three simple steps provide a great way to start promoting your music online. Remember to submit, give away, and comment. Online marketing is a continuous process you must constantly work on, but it pays off in the end.



By Lance Trebesch
lance@ticketprinting.com
www.TicketPrinting.com


Posted By @ 12:00 AM
Author's site: http://www.TicketPrinting.com
TicketPrinting.com
[Comment on this blog post]

longhair_illuminati_recordings's comment posted November 12th @ 8:22 PM:
I run a small experimental rock label called Longhair Illuminati Recordings and we started two years ago. I've found that, as long as we've been a label, the industry has not stopped changing and evolving. We have to adapt all the time. We have to stay opened minded and keep learning new things or else we will have to close our doors. I think older labels are having a harder time adjusting to the changing tides of the industry. I found your post to be full of good tips. Things I've thought at one point or another but you worded it perfectly.
Commentors site: http://www.myspace.com/longhairilluminati