Too many people record music and want to be a “star” with
out realizing it is about entertaining and not just about the
music. You are a commodity aka a Brand.
There are far too many bad artists on mainstream radio today than good ones. Many more talented artists have recorded tracks that are not selling, as they should be. Getting on the main stream radio is difficult today as it ever has been.
There are far too many bad artists on mainstream radio today than good ones. Many more talented artists have recorded tracks that are not selling, as they should be. Getting on the main stream radio is difficult today as it ever has been.
When performing live, the name of the game is “Can I
fill the seats in the venue?” That is what the venue wants and so do
you! How many seats you fill will tell the venue to rebook you again or
not. This is marketing 101.
How do you become financially successful and accomplish
filling the house?
1-Develop Fan loyalty to your brand
You are a “brand” just like a bar of soap. You
need to sell yourself. Without a doubt you need to network and connect with
your fans. You need fans to want to spend their hard earned
cash for your tickets. If fans do not care, they will not
spend.
Today it is up to the artist to interact with their fans
regularly on social media such Twitter, Facebook, Google + and
others. Do entertaining tweets and posts. Share
about yourself enough to be interesting to the fans. Occasionally you may need
to do a free song give away too. Keep their attention on you. It is
NOT just about a fan loving your comedy act or song. They have
to like you as a person too not just as a performer. That
building of the love will keep fans longer term than if they do not care about
you the person. Appreciate your fans! This is all
part of building your brand and brand loyalty. You are after
all a commodity in the entertainment world.
2- Give a new angle for your next show
Just like in songs you need a hook, you need a hook as a
performer too.
Try a song or album release to get them out. Or,
maybe you are going on tour…so kick off the tour at home for your home base of
fans. If you have a cause or charity you care about. Develop
that caring in your fans through your media interactions with them. Don’t be
afraid to give a portion of what you earn to the cause and encourage them to do
the same by them filling the house. This can help with brand
loyalty. It is good for fans to know that you are a real human being
who cares about what is happening in the community and world.
3- Play Less Often
That may sound strange but if you play constantly and always
do the exact it show in the same area, fans will become bored. Your
seat numbers will decline over time if you do play too often in the same city.
4- Mix it up
Keep your show interesting! Have other artists perform with
you to change up the show. Try out new material! The
best way to try out a new tune of comedy piece is to perform it in front of
your loyal fans. If they do not like it, you know you are heading in
the wrong direction. Do not make the whole show new, just parts of
it. Make the fans feel special knowing they are the first to hear
the material. Ask the fans once in a while what they want to
hear. Be creative! Have t-shirts? Think
about giving out a couple once in a while.
5- Promote!!!
This may see obvious but if fans don’t know about you
performing, they will not be showing up. Ask the venue to list you
on their websites and in their promotional materials. Post a
poster on their premises. As your fame grows, maybe a local radio
station can do a give away of some tickets. Have you connected
with the college radio stations? Online radio stations? Be
creative here, no perfect right or wrong way to promote
yourself. This is where word of mouth from your fans
online comes in handy too. Do event pages on sites like
Facebook. Have friends and fans invite their friends too.
6- Be creative
Remember: You are selling “you the
brand”. Do not be afraid to sell yourself. Volunteer
to perform at fundraisers. Have confidence in your abilities
in self-promotion as much as your confidence in your art. Most
importantly, show the fans how much you enjoy their company at every show you
do.