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« Business idea: Put buskers online | Main | In Defense Of 1,000 True Fans - Part III - Amber Rubarth »
Monday
Dec072009

But it makes sense to me

There are a lot of musicians and groups that artistically want to stretch people’s minds and make people think, figure out and really dive deep in to the meanings of their songs, their name, their image, different elements of their marketing and other underlining elements that many artists think will add that hip or cool edge to them. The problem that can occur though is flat out confusion or actually deterring more people away from your music and you than helping bringing them to listen to you and want to find out more about you.

Don’t get me wrong, adding elements of stretching the mind and being creative is a great thing, but think about it as a later step or being placed a little deeper in your marketing rather than right there where people get their first impressions. Make it something that fans will have to dig in to as opposed to overly confusing the new listener or first time visitor to one of your social networking sites or website.

Wild stories, confusing bios, songs that make no sense or tie in to the more experimental side of you can be red lights for many people to not want to dig deeper. For example, if you are a grunge/industrial type band with fast loops, dirty guitars and in your face samples with brash harmonies and powerful hooks, having song sample number one on your site be one of the tunes that is least like your sound or one of your more experimental and say softer and more trancesque tune that you use right in between two powerhouse tracks, you may loose the interest right off the bat of the listener that happens to pop on to your website for a minute.

Get over yourself.

The reality is that when new people are visiting your website, your networking site or one of your song sample sites, most are only going to be there for a few seconds unless they are drawn in. There are 40 million Myspace music pages and that number continues to grow even as Myspace continues to go down in the rankings in the social networking world. People are being tossed links from spam emails, from friends, from strangers and from third parties everyday.

While every musician wants to think that people are spending a number of minutes listening to every sample, looking at every picture and reading every piece of text, the truth is the majority are only spending seconds and moving on very quickly. We are a nation of ADD, ADHD and every other acronym that points to the bulk of us having less and less of an attention span everyday.

These people have so many choices and so many options so it is up to you to grab them, wow them, explain and showcase to them and pull them in to want more. It is crucial just like having a fast pitch for industry professionals to also have that same fast pitch and grab for the fans and the masses.

Good Ideas vs Bad Ideas

A couple strong examples are the bands that have very fast loading webpages that immediately showcase the logo, the tagline, the image and information easily. Now on the other coin, there is a website for a band that actually has a small animal that walks around the page for some 10 seconds before the page opens and you cant skip it. This may be creative and cute for the band and for fans that know something about the reason behind the path and the creature but for a browsing new person, it just comes off as stupid. Another site has a band bio that is so small and so long with so many applications that have been added to their page that you are not sure who’s information is what, not to mention the slow load from having so much on the page.

Some of these websites or social networking sites where you are forced to scroll down or wait to find or fish out information is not helping you capture the new fans that are coming across your site. On the same side with the music samples. Instead of putting up total songs why not put up samples and a lot more of them?

Think about it, just as you should put together a small demo sample for any industry person so they can listen to the bulk of your songs with out the bulk of time it takes to listen to every song, you can do the same for your fans. Supply 20 to 30 seconds fade in and fade out samples that are clearly marked as samples with the time in the title. This way when a new fan sees the player or what ever you are using to present your music, they know right off the bat, they are getting samples and may just listen to them all.

This also gives you a chance to choose what they listen to and what you want to highlight in the song, instead of them flipping through and potentially just listening to the beginnings of all your tunes if they listen that far. Think of it like giving them a sample of everything and at that point making them want to dig deeper.

Conclusion

It is fine to go deep and make people think, make people have to search and challenge your fans but first get those fans through the door, interested in you and wanting to be challenged. Make sure you have created a crystal clear image that will demonstrate you, sell you and entice them to want more. It is a hard thing to sometimes separate what how you see something against how the bulk of the public will. Remember just cause you get it or it makes sense to you, it doesn’t mean it will to most people. You are the artist, you are right smack in the middle of it all and a big part of pulling in and creating the fan base is working on creating the right appearance and marketing to pull them in the audiences that are sifting through thousands of sites and turning them in to interested fans.

Also remember, with all the other bands on all the other sites and the over saturation of music and artists that are out there, it is crucial to pull them in to want to see more first. Make the first presentation easy, fast and simple so that people can get a clear idea of the overview of you, your music and what you are about, then you can start playing with the intricacies and extra details.

Reader Comments (7)

You make some valid points. It's a good idea to try browsing your own site the same way and at the same speed as you browse other people's. You may be surprised what you don't notice (or care about).

However I have a problem with the way you use these words:

* you may lose the interest right off the bat
* for the fans and the masses
* most people

The plain truth is you are NEVER going to appeal to most people and you look stupid trying.

Your fans are not "the masses".

If you're not prepared to lose the interest of 99.999999% of people right off the bat then you'll probably never catch the attention of the tiny minority of people who ARE genuinely interested in what you do.

December 7 | Unregistered Commenterfelix

Cool post, I have not even thought about the "sample tape", as I've been so preoccupied with offering complete streams. Good idea.

Felix, you are so right. To target everyone is a surefire miss.

Jeff
www.cerebellumblues.com

December 7 | Unregistered CommenterJeff Shattuck

At the bottom of it though, if you 'TRY" and get too deep or 'TRY' to avoid getting too deep then you are trying TOO hard. Honesty sells no matter how simple or far out you take it !

- LA

I 100% agree with this post. I don't think Loren was saying you should try to appeal to everyone and this post still stands even if you're targeting a specific group of people.

It's like designing an easter egg hunt–a great hiding spot is irrelevant if they don't find the egg.

...and whatever you do, take out the popcorn flavored jelly beans... Gross.

December 7 | Unregistered CommenterKeith

You know what? Just do whatever it is you do and let the chips fall where they may. If you are trying to create music for the sake of music, then use your creativity to create whatever you want and if people like it OK, if not - so be it. If you think it is the right thing to do for you, it probably is. If you are creating music just to make money - God bless you and good luck.

I agree with the poster above, you have to be willing to not appeal to everyone or you will just become another faceless band or artist that sounds/looks/acts like all the others. And why would I be interested in being a second-rate copy of something else?

Dirk
Rubber Clown Car

December 8 | Unregistered CommenterDirk Prysby

It's not about appealing to EVERYBODY. It's about making your mark on the few people that may be interested enough to care. If a would-be fan is turned off by an annoying flash, a ridiculous MySpace layout, whatever then its a lose-lose.

As everyone knows, there are thousands of bands out there with thousands of MySpace pages. Only a tiny fraction of music fans will stumble upon you. It's about maximizing your ability to convert THAT fraction into positive relationships.

People that don't care about this may be considered "making music for the sake of music" by some, but to me, I simply don't care. If a musician is playing his guitar on a tree that falls in a forest, does it make a sound? It's not that I believe marketing skill runs in complete parallel with musical skill, as that is absolutely untrue. However, showing absolute disinterest in getting your music out there, to me, seems only lazy.

I get hundreds of e-mails every week from artists looking to develop relationships. These all come from forms on my website that implicitly say to include links, full contact info, etc. Yet still, people submit with just their name and a message saying "Will yuoo mangae me?????" No. If you are that lazy when looking for help I can't imagine how useless you will be in trying to work with you.

Artists today need to be savvy, creative and do a whole lot of work outside of JUST the music. That's how it is.

December 9 | Unregistered CommenterAndy

I love this post. Really, not that this is something new, but I waited for someone to put that point clearly.

I'm especially concerned about the look of the musicians' sites - it would be so great if more artists understood simple web usability principles themselves, or at least found people who know about a proper webdesign. In this case, it's not only about the music, though I definitely like your samples idea.

December 11 | Unregistered CommenterAndrew Apanov

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