3 Simple Steps to Effective Music Marketing
Bob Baker
© 2009 by Bob Baker
All Rights Reserved
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3 Simple Steps to Effective Music Marketing
Ready to dive into this important topic? Great.
Here’s a simple question for you:
What is music marketing?
Sure, you know it’s something you have to do. You have at least some grasp of what is it. You recognize it when you see it (most of the time). But at its most basic level, can you explain what it is?
And more importantly, can you spell out the basic elements of effective music marketing? Because, after all, if you’re going to invest your time and energy in promotion, it better be effective. Right?
Don’t worry if you can’t come up with a quick answer to my question. On the other hand, please don’t curse me if you think you know the answer and feel my probing here is pointless. Because it isn’t.
If you plan to read this report and use these ideas to create a music promotion plan for your music, you better damn well know why you’re doing it. You need to understand the underlying principles at work here. These elements are simple, but they’re often glossed over by eager musicians who just want to “get their name out there.”
Getting your name out there is fine. It’s better than doing nothing at all. But mindless music marketing – without focus and purpose – usually leads to frustration and continued obscurity.
The solution: Look under the hood and get a grasp of what’s at the core of every effective music promotion plan.
The three stages of music marketing
When it comes right down to it, music marketing consists of these three elements:
Creating
awareness – taking action to communicate your identity to
a specific audience
Making
connections – starting and maintaining relationships with
a growing number of fans and media/business contacts
Asking for the sale – generating cash flow and creating incentives for fans to spend money
There they are. The three stages of marketing. In a nutshell.
Seems simple enough, right? Then why do so many music promoters get it wrong? They spend time on one or two of these stages but ignore the second or third. Or they get busy doing a bunch of marketing “stuff” but don’t stop and think long enough to ponder how their efforts fit into the three-stage process.
Don’t make these mistakes!
Want some examples? Have you ever seen a band or record label run an ad that shouts out something along the lines of “Wakeup Call, the New CD From the ABC Band. In Stores Now!” Just the name of the band, the name of the CD, and the fact that it is now on sale. Perhaps you’ve even created an ad or flier like this yourself.
What’s wrong with this picture?
Well, with this ad, the band is creating awareness, and it is asking for the sale. But it leaves out an entire, all-important stage: developing relationships with fans.
This error would be especially unforgivable if this was the only marketing method the band was using. Why? Because consumers typically need repeated exposures to something before they’ll get out their wallets. In addition, they need to feel a connection to the music and the artist. This ad does nothing to facilitate the relationship. And that means wasted money spent on advertising.
Another example: Have you ever known (or been in) a wonderful band that does a good job of creating awareness and a great job of connecting with fans – perhaps through their live shows? But then they drop the ball when it comes to asking for the sale and generating cash flow. They don’t make people aware that they even have music for sale and don’t make enticing offers for fans to buy now.
Again, they’re only putting together pieces of the puzzle. And it’s the missing pieces that are stopping them from reaching the music career level they really want to be at.
To help you use the three stages of music marketing better, let’s examine each stage and go over a summary of how you can make the most effective use of each one.