Growing Your Fan Base

Gorw Your Audience
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This is from Areil Hyatt, and sometimes its good to go back to the basics.

As many of you know Cyber PR® is a hybrid of Internet Marketing, Social Media and PR. I am an avid Internet Marketing student and I gather the nuggets I learn from my studies for musicians.

For many years, I’ve attended internet marketing retreats and seminars; a favorite of mine was a two-day intensive course run by the incredible marketer, Ali Brown.

The course was a whirlwind, and the core principles I learned were both basic and critically important.

There are three ways to increase your income:

1. Increase your number of clients (fans).

2. Increase the frequency of purchase, how often your fans buy from you. (and you’d better have more than just music to sell).

3. Increase the amount of money that you charge.

Okay, none of these three things is brain surgery, but from a musician’s perspective, it brings up some interesting points.   In my last article about Internet marketing, I point out that music sold online cannot be treated like a diet product. So, marketing music from a straight-up traditional Internet marketing approach is, in my opinion, not entirely possible. The reason why I think this is: Products that sell very well online tend to solve people’s problems.  (Like Losing weight or making more money). I am captivated by how musicians can use some of these basic principles, to increase their own bottom line in the digital space. I’m going to break each one of the three principles down from a musician’s perspective, and my next three posts here will focus on each one.

This blog post will focus on #1.

So How Do You Increase your number of clients (fans)?

I am always shocked when musicians I work for at Cyber PR®, are desperate to reach more and more potential fans without really focusing on the fans that they already have. These fans don’t need to be found, because they are already your fans.

Studies have proven that it is much harder to make a new client and get them to purchase something than it is to get a client that already knows you and trusts you to purchase from you over and over.

I always suggest that, in measuring fans, the best place to look is at your social networks and at your mailing list.

Your newsletter list is the only place where you can directly engage with your fans on your own terms.

Not Facebook’s terms, and not Twitter’s terms.

10 Fail-Safe Ways to Increase/ Engage With Your Fan base

Here are 10 fail-safe ways to increase / engage with your fanbase by pulling from fans that you already know and have who trust and like you!

1. Get serious about your newsletter.

Use Fanbridge.com or ReverbNation.com and send your newsletter one time per month.  Track your effectiveness by monitoring your open rates.

2. Mine your inbox and outbox for names and addresses to add.

Ask all of your friends if it’s OK to add them to your list, otherwise you might be considered a spammer.

3. Bring a clipboard to each and every live appearance.

Invite people onto your mailing list with a raffle or giveaway from stage, and collect e-mail addresses.  During your performance, hold the CD up on stage and than give it away, you’ve just inserted a full commercial into your set without feeling “salesy” and you’ve excited one of your fans by giving them a gift.

4. Include a special offer on your home page with a free exclusive MP3 or video.

Use the Reverbnation Fan Collector or Free Download widgets to deliver it.

TIP: Make sure this download is not available anywhere.  Not streaming on your Facebook page.  Only on your website.

And of course it can also be available for purchase on your CD, but make sure that no one can get it anywhere else online. This will motivate people to sign up to your mailing list!

5. Follow 25 new people a week on Twitter.

6. Send out e-mails to your most engaged fans on Facebook and ask if you can have their e-mail addresses for your newsletter.  This is a bit arduous but the results will pay off.

7. Do the same with Twitter.

8. Start a blog and start sharing photos and stories and thoughts.

Note: you can also use Instagram to take pictures from your iPhone or Android phone, which can then be shared through Facebook and Twitter.

9. Start a podcast or a vodcast and interview other artists with big followings.  Ask them to share your podcast with their fans and followers.  It doesn’t have to be a big production.  It can be a small, informal video at YouTube.  Click here to see mine.   http://www.youtube.com/arielpublicity

10. Ask your fans to review your music at CD Baby, iTunes, and Amazon.

Boost Your Spotify Profits Using Fanbridge Page

The FanBridge Fan Page Creator just got more social, thanks to our new Spotify Play Button integration. If you have music available on Spotify, you can add an album to your FanBridge Facebook tab and allow fans to stream music with Spotify. Using the Spotify module on a FanBridge Facebook tab allows artists to get the best of both services by embedding audio directly onto their Facebook page and collecting streaming royalties through Spotify. Make your music more shareable and get paid for it, too!

How does it work? Simple. Just add the Spotify Play Button module to your FanBridge Facebook Fan Page, search for your artist name, and select the album you’d like to include on the player. When fans go to play your tracks, Spotify will automatically launch. If your fans don’t have Spotify, they’ll be notified that they’ll need it to access the tracks and will be prompted to either open or download the app.

Leave A Reply (6 comments so far)


  1. Ali Cunningham
    378 days ago

    This is great Dave, thanks for posting it.

    It can all get a bit much sometimes. I think alot of other musicians may be feeling like me right now, and that is feeling “lost in the woods” that is Facebook. Feeling like its the place where everyone is but not knowing what the hell you are supposed to be doing there to promote your music.

    By centralising all content from your own website/ newsletter you have complete creative control and it makes it a special space for your fans only, and when they feel special and part of an exclusive club, they want to let their friends know about their special and exclusive club and maybe thats really what Facebook should be, a place for fans to share things with other potential fans. Otherwise you are just shouting in the dark in a massive free for all, hoping someone thats passing by at the time will hear you.


  2. Marcus Macadi
    378 days ago

    Hi Dave

    Thanks again for another solid podcast full of information! I have been aware of Ariel’s Cyber PR for a while now; and I highly recommend their biography writing service! (For those interested; check out my bio at http://www.marcusmacadi.com/biography).

    There are seriously so many different online channels for artists to use to promote their music and like Ali said; it becomes rather much at times. I am thankful for you helping us out and giving us recommendations as to what to use etc. I am yet to start a newsletter (not good, I know) but it really does seem to be the best direct contact with existing fans. I’ll check out the Fanbridge newsletter platform and hopefully I’ll have a regular monthly email starting by the end of this week!

    I hope you have a great week!
    Marcus


  3. nathan
    377 days ago

    Great ideas. I am a bit hesitant on maintaining my newsletter. With all the social tools, and the preference of using those tools to connect, are newsletters really effective anymore? I would love to hear opinions. And I guess I opened the newsletter to get to this blog so you got me :)


  4. Dave Jackson
    377 days ago

    Nathan,
    I”m with you on “isn’t email so 2005?” but studies have shown the reason people say “The money is in the list” is because, “The money is STILL in the list.”


  5. Dave Jackson
    377 days ago

    Marcus,
    Ariel always has great stuff. I was checking out your website. Good stuff. ANy chance I can get a copy of Want it all to play on a future podcast? (or whatever your single is)? I had a bit of a problem when I was listening to your songs while browsing your website (as the minute I went to a new page, the song stopped). I’d like to recreate that scenario on the podcast.

    Dave


  6. Rachel
    377 days ago

    Hi Dave!
    Thanks for this great advice!
    I really appreciate the information you send…:-)
    Nice when someone sheds a little light in the maze.
    Have a great day…music, once released just goes on…..
    Rachel

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