(I) Submitting materials: artist one-sheets and college radio promotion.
April 11, 2013
c∆ve b in DIY, DIY, Music Industry, Music Management, Music Strategy, Presskit, college radio, epk, music biz, music business, music business, music marketing, music promotion, music promotion, one sheet, one-sheets, press kit, radio promotion

This is part 1 of an article written from the perspective of a program director/MD focusing on the creation and submission of materials for college radio – as a radio promotion company, and independently – though many of these points can be extrapolated and applied to areas both inside and outside of the music industry.


1. It’s called a one-sheet for a reason.

Things may be different now, but the one-sheet being one page in length hasn’t changed. The one-sheet, known in other industries as the pitch-sheet or sell-sheet, when executed properly, provides program directors and others with absolutely essential information about you and your record in an easy-to-read, concise format no more than one page in length. You can find these things piled up in the trashcan at most radio stations or squeezed in between the casings of physical promo CDs. More and more often they’re coming via download packages with the record’s .mp3’s/.wav’s or even directly inside of emails linking to content.

If you can’t stand to have only one sheet, just don’t send anything – it will be ignored.

2. Know your objective – catch, keep, inform. 

Typically the objective is to get the record played on air, added to the library, charting, or to coordinate interviews and performances.

Whatever your objective is, make it clear; don’t just send in materials – tell the MD exactly what you want to happen.

In order for your one-sheet to make an impact, you need to catch, keep, and inform. Catch the attention of the music director, keep them reading, and inform them of any unique details, dates, records, contact information, etc.

There are many different approaches to catching, and keeping, the attention of a program director/MD – find out what works best for the project and it’s artistic vision.

A story, humor, visual art, absurdness – the list goes on; make it an experience.

The Heath Bros. authored a phenomenal book, “Made To Stick”, in which they illustrate that the most effective ideas and pitches include more than one of the following attributes: Simple, Unexpected, Concrete, Credible, Emotional, and Story-telling (http://heathbrothers.com/books/made-to-stick/).

3. The layout is crucial – make it easy.

The layout and content must be complimentary. Everything must be easy to find, and easy to read. Great content with a poor layout will be ignored. A great layout with poor content may make it a bit further, but will ultimately be ignored. Think of it as the home page of your website, front page of a magazine, or even the first date – you want someone to care, to keep reading, wanting to experience more, after a very quick glimpse. A great layout (whether clean, unique, etc.) is an excellent way to catch the attention of a music director inundated by mediocre materials.

4. Aesthetic alignment.

Your one-sheet should look like you.

5. Watch the text. 

Say only what needs to be said, and remain tastefully consistent with fonts, colors, and sizes of text on the sheet.

6. Proofread. 

If you don’t care enough to take the time to proofread, I can’t even imagine how little you care about the art you’re sending me!

7. If you’re not playing within a 100-mile radius of my location, please don’t tell me about all of your tour dates.

Create another version of your one-sheet, for example, one without any tour dates or stating that the band is not touring in the stations general territory, but that more information can be found at [bandname].com.

8. I don’t care what WFJN, WKAK, AFNV, LocalCityNews, Friendsblog.com, or any other mediocre, run-of-the-mill “media” outlet has to say about you.

Unless Rolling Stone, SPIN, Pitchfork, NPR or some other hugely influential media outlet has something to say about you, I really don’t care. And even they’re beginning to lose traction.

9. Your music is the reason I should care, not because of someone who worked on the record.

Especially when that someone has no track record.

10. What’s really necessary?

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This is part 1 of “Submitting materials: one-sheets and college radio promotion.”
To read more, visit: c∆ve-b||home


Article originally appeared on Music Think Tank (https://www.musicthinktank.com/).
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