Posts Tagged ‘Music Industry’

No two people are the same. To a music enthusiast, that truism means paying close attention to what motivates people to buy your music. Your audience will approach buying with their own agenda. For example, they could be shopping for specific tracks, hoping to build a long-term relationship with the artist, or finding relative music. Either way, the more they are sold on your music, the more they are sold on the artist. So to a music enthusiast, the first and most important thing is to “Sell Yourself First, Not Your Product.”

That means your management should tailor your sales technique based on the primary reason your audience wants to buy. We have our preferred selling style and it’s one we have built up with layers in a period of time from experimenting. I don’t always see entrepreneurs or management trying to understand the need from the buyer’s perspective. And the main reason that I see is, they focus solely on their own artist instead of their artist’s audience.  (more…)

So many people are asking for support but no one is willing to support in return.
Usually I don’t see people asking anymore, it’s more like demanding for support.
You know what’s funny about that is — those same people gain more “haters”
than “supporters” then have the nerve to get upset about the result.
Based on what I see in general, people are lazy. Usually it only takes 3-4 minutes
out of a 24 hour day for someone but people are so caught up in themselves
to make the time for another. (more…)

Whenever I talk to a artist who’s about to sign with a major label, I always end up thinking of them in a particular way. I imagine a trench, about four feet wide and five feet deep, maybe sixty yards long, filled with runny, decaying shit. I imagine these people, some of them good friends, some of them barely acquaintances, at one end of this trench. Then I imagine the faceless industry at the other end holding a fountain pen and a contract just waiting. Nobody can see what’s printed on the contract, because it’s too far away. The industry shouts to everybody that the first one to swim the trench gets to sign the contract. Everybody dives in the trench and they struggle and fight to get (more…)