Musician’s Arsenal: Killer Apps, Tools & Sites – Crowdbooster Analytics Made Easy for Musicians

Welcome back to Musician’s Arsenal. This week we’ll be going over analytics. Too few artists actually pay attention to their social media analytics. Some just don’t know analytics for social media exist, some don’t know where to find them and some don’t think it’s important. It’s time to remedy all of this here and now.

Crowdbooster recently launched the public version of their site (it had been in private beta for a while), and they join a legion of other social media analytics solutions available to musicians. I choose Crowdbooster to write about due to it’s ease of use and affordability (how’s free?). Crowdbooster provides straight ahead, no nonsense analytics in an easily digestible format.

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Music Marketers FAQ – Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube?

I’m continuing the Music Marketing Experts FAQs where my favorite gods and goddesses of online marketing and Social Media promotion share with me the questions they get asked the most by musicians.

What’s most important as a promotional tool; Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube?

Ariel Hyatt

I believe all three sites are vital and important to have and keep active with an ongoing strategy.  I know what you are thinking…  That will take a LOT Of work.  And if your networks are not very big and robust to begin with creating and posting content on three platforms can feel totally overwhelming.  But think about what each of these Social’s represents.  Twitter is like a great news feed  on steroids and it’s a completely open and a place where everyone can come and follow your updates.  Facebook is more of a closed ecosystem where you will tend to be connected to people you actually know and recognize, and YouTube is a platform where people see your videos based on the fact that you either sent them there (using Twitter, FB or your blog) or they discovered them using a search and the keywords matched their interest.  The truth is these three work in concert with one another and it is vital to use all of them.  After much consideration, I can’t choose one as the most important.  If you are not yet on all three and you would rather stab a pen in your eye then dedicate the time it will take to manage them all my advice is: Get really good at using the one that you like the most and make the most sense to you.  Mastering one Social is better than doing all three half-way.

 

Rick Goetz

Oh man – this one’s a setup.  There’s no right answer to this one.  Different things work for different people.  If video is easy and cheap to regularly create and edit for you then YouTube can be great.  If you are surgically attached to a smartphone with a camera then Twitter or Facebook are good too.  IMHO these three and a website are (in my opinion) the must haves for any artist.  I do believe that Twitter is only half as powerful without blogging.  At 140 characters Twitter is made to send people to links – these may as well be links to your content situated some place where you get the most benefit.

 

Bobby Owsinski

I’ve personally found that Twitter is the most immediate and successful promotional tool as long as you use hashtags (the “#” before a keyword), which is the key, and your content is interesting or informative. The problem with Twitter is that a tweet has a shelf-life of about an hour, so if it doesn’t grab someone right way, it’s gone and of no further use. On the other hand, YouTube has the longest shelf-life and the best possibility for a viral success under the right circumstances. Plus, it’s easy to point people to a video from any medium, and if you’re SEO savvy, can develop a new audience just from searches. Facebook can be effective too, but it takes a while to build up your friend- and like-base, but these are your hard-core fans/tribe so it’s the best medium for sales opportunities.

Corey Denis

Marketing plans cannot successfully replicate and all three tools are different. The first step in deciding which tool is most important is figuring out what you want to achieve.  If you are unable to tend to all three platforms named above, the best way to figure out which platform is more important to you is to spend some time using it – without promoting yourself. Make real friends and get acclomated. Figure out how the community works, and then you may figure out if it’s a good fit for your intentions. If you have to ask which platform is best for you, and are on a tight schedule for an album release or upcoming tour, I advise that you delay the album release and set aside a budget for some marketing strategy, advice, and, if you can afford it, marketing execution. The space is new, and the tools are new. There isn’t terrible harm from misusing the tools, but the Internet is written in indelible ink; over the long term it could be similar to leaving money on the table. If you already have a fan base, go to where your fans are, and stalk them. Know them. If they are on all three platforms, combine your efforts.

Carla Lynne Hall

If you had asked me which social media tool was more important two years ago, I would have said Twitter, hands down. But now, I’d say that YouTube is the most important promotional tool that anyone could have to promote themselves. Online video was created to be viral, so if someone likes your music or message, they can easily share it with their friends. Online video has a powerful reach, and I believe that we’re going to see a lot of musicians using more online video to promote themselves.

Cassie Petery

All three sites are extremely important.  As far as which one is the most important, I truly believe this varies depending on the genre and the type of audience you have. If you have a strong video strategy, then YouTube would obviously be one of the most important pieces of your online marketing campaign.  However, if you don’t have the right video content to do this, then YouTube shouldn’t be your number one focus just because it’s a huge site.  You must have well thought out video production strategy to be successful. Facebook and Twitter are always the two main communication outlets for my artist’s online marketing campaigns, and which one takes priority changes from artist to artist.  A lot of my developing acts view Twitter as a priority because a lot of early adopt/hardcore music fans live there.  However, Facebook moves the dial more than Twitter for most of my established acts.


Music Marketers FAQ – Contributors:

Corey Denis
Corey Denis is Vice President Digital Marketing & Social Media at TAG Strategic. Throughout her career, she’s created & executed digital strategies, built & marketed platforms for numerous distributors, startups labels and artists including What Are Records, IODA, IRIS Distribution, Michael Tilson Thomas, SoundExchange, Todd Fancey, Ning, Loudcaster & Comedian Stephen Lynch. Corey founded San Francisco’s first Musician & Promoter Workshop and has produced numerous music centric fundraisers such as Save Net Radio SF, Barack N’ Roll, Reload: SF. She writes a weekly column about digital music for SF Appeal, San Francisco’s online newspaper, has 2 cats and 8 iPods.

Rick Goetz
Rick Goetz is a music consultant by way of a ten year career at major record labels, TV & Online Projects. He’s also an avid surfer and blogger.

Carla Lynne Hall
Carla Lynne Hall is a musician and online music marketing consultant based in New York City. Her mission is to make music and share her knowledge with other musicians. She has released three CDs on her Moxie Entertainment label, and has toured the world as a singer/songwriter, and professional vocalist. In addition, she also has spent a number of years behind the scenes in the music industry, in publishing, management, publicity, and social media.

Bobby Owsinski
Using his music and recording experience combined with an easy to understand writing style, Bobby Owsinski has become one of the best selling authors in the music recording industry with thirteen books that are now staples in audio recording, music, and music business programs in colleges around the world. Based in Los Angeles, Bobby is also a producer of several music-oriented television shows and can frequently be seen as a moderator, panelist or giving presentations at a variety of industry conferences.

Cassie Petery
Cassie Petrey is the co-founder of Crowd Surf, which helps fans feel closer to the artists and music that they love. Cassie is one of the most devoted music fans you will ever meet, and this is why she understands the ins and outs of digital marketing and fan relationship management. Crowd Surf has successfully launched and developed digital marketing campaigns for major label, indie, and unsigned artists in a variety of genres.

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I Wish That It Was Not Called Social “Media”

Have you ever been to a music conference or to a networking event and observed that artist or producer who treats everyone they meet like a “mark?”

That’s the same person who is blasting self-promotion on Facebook, I guarantee you.

They gun up to you and are immediately shoving a CD in your face or talking about themselves before you even know their name.

Have you ever been to a networking event and met the guy who is shoving a card in your face before you even find out whet he does?

Have you ever been to a party and met the guy who starts endlessly talking about something you are not interested in at all?

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Sound Advice TV – Musician’s Roadmap – Newsletters

Click here to order your copy of the new book: http://arielpublicity.com/musiciansroadmap/

In this episode of Sound Advice, Ariel and Carla discuss the importance of having a quality newsletter. They dive into the golden rules of newsletters and some of their favorite newsletter providers.

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Sound Advice TV – Musician’s Roadmap: Twitter – Find Local Fans

Click here to order your copy of the new book: http://arielpublicity.com/musiciansroadmap/

In this episode of Sound Advice Ariel and Carla talk about how to find new fans on Twitter. They take this one step further and talk about the most effective ways to engage these fans once you’ve found them.

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Musician Marketing Basics: Your Newsletter, Your Product Line & Asking Your Fans What They Want

I’m just back from the mighty ASCAP Expo in Los Angeles where I spoke on a panel, did a book signing and sponsored.

I learned so much from the hundreds of artists I spoke to over the 3 days there and I boarded the plane with a whole new perspective on just how confronting marketing and social media is to 90% of artists.

You guys REALLY hate this stuff

You hate it so much that I literally felt like I had been beaten up over the concerns, complaints and sheer confusion directed my way.

So I  will kick off with this: Making it in music is HARD

No matter what side of the fence you are on.  My friends who are managers and agents and club owners work just as hard as my artist friends.  And, music industry professionals are getting laid off left and right. This game (if you choose to play it) is not for the meek!

And now you, the artist are required to do a WHOLE LOT MORE than you might have 7, 8, 9 or 10 years ago (if you were lucky enough to have a label).

But here’s the thing:

The basic rules for success are still the same.

They have always been the same and those artists who understand this succeed: To Increase Your Bottom Line (no matter how you define your bottom line) you MUST focus on your fans!

The first step towards this is building rapport with everyone you come into contact with in person, social media and on your email list.

Everyone always references the astonishing Amanda Palmer as the poster child for success in this paradigm – the woman focuses on her fans!

You know how Amanda does this?

She STAYS at the venue after each and every show signing every CD and piece of merch and scrap of paper put in front of her

She STAYS until she has personally touched the last fan.

Then she STAYS in touch with them long after she has left their town with her newsletter, her blog, her Facebook posts and her Twitter stream.

She understands the rules of engagement.

It’s not magic – its just hard work.

You can have what she has too and here is how:

Today we are going back to three very important basics

(I’m not going to focus on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and all the social media that drives you bonkers this time – you can read many articles I wrote about social media on this blog)

  1. Your Newsletter
  2. Your Product Line
  3. Asking Your Fans What They Want

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