Promote your Unsigneds Band
with a Newsletter
| Sponsored Ads |
Guerrilla Music Marketing Handbook
Band Promotion doesn't have to be expensive to be effective. 201+ ways to promote your music! |
Viral Music Promotion
Transform listeners into a legion of promoters to Balloon Your CD Sales and give you rapid-fire exposure with little or no effort! |
Indie Contact Bible
The Indie Bible lists thousands of places where you can get your music reveiwed and your songs played on the radio. All genres of music are covered! |
How to Save 1000s Booking Gigs
Learn to Save 1000s of $$$ in booking fees. Musician's & performing artist's guide to successful touring. |
MusicSubmit.com
Save time and Get exposure and traffic from 200+ music specific resources! |
I first started publishing
my unsigned bands newsletter during the Summer of '98. I tried the snail
mail route. It was exhausting. Electronic newsletters (aka ezines) are
the way to go. I must've tried it all too. I promoted gigs, told of our
latest accomplishments, gave away a free mp3 every month. Some of it worked.
Some didn't.
Here are some tips
I've learned about running my band newsletter:
- Give away something
for free. It can be as simple as an MP3 download at MP3.com. Or a sticker.
A free CD once a month. Well worth the cost for their loyalty. And it
can be a great promo tool to draw people into signing up for your newsletter.
- Hype your band.
Tell your fans about all the band news. Who's reviewed your latest CD?
Post rave testimonies by your fans. Post them on your website too. Be
positive and let them know you are the best!
In the two years
I've managed my fan newsletter, I've had scores of fans write, saying,
"Wow! I'm glad you're doing so well." We weren't. And I
didn't lie. But our many small successes sounded like big ones to
our fans. That is what hype is all about.
- Keep it short.
Write as if you were writing for a newspaper. Compose brief paragraphs
about your greatness. Use headlines that make your fans want to read
it. Provide frequent links to your website where you can post articles
or more "further info".
- Publish every
7-10 days. This depends on how much info you get. But as long as the
content is short and informative, people won't mind. If you add a little
drama, like how you're doing on MP3.com, and how they can help, you'll
keep the fans reading. But if you're not gigging much, and don't have
much news. Don't publish. Give your fans what they deserve, the best.
- Don't get upset
if people unsubscribe. It happens. If you lose half your list, consider
adjusting your publishing schedule. But expect that some people can't
deal with a newsletter every 7-10 days. Perhaps every two weekes is
better. I was doing every two weeks until I realized how much more effective
a 10 day schedule was for our fans. But less than two weeks, and you
are no longer on the fore front of your fans' minds.
- Choose a great
inspiring name. Something that has meaning and is fairly informative.
Certainly you can can get by without one, but a good name could attract
people just out of curiousity.
- Make it visually
appealing. Keep lines short--60-65 characters followed by a hard return.
Have a decent amount of space between sections. Add a table of contents
at the beginning of the newsletter. Text newsletters work best, at present,
but if you decide on an HTML ezine. Make sure you test it out extensively
beforehand. Graphics need to be attached to your message. But keep it
visually interesting on all accounts.
- Content is King.
You hear it all over the internet marketing circles. Make sure the info
you provide is useful and relevant. My biggest problem is that my newsletter
has subscribers worldwide and until we got hooked up on MP3.com, it
was useless telling our fans about gigs in Austin. So have info that
is interesting for EVERYONE!
- Reward your fans.
Give discounts for their loyalty. Have your CD on sale to newsletter
subscribers.
|