Synchronicity by Peter Westermann | Threyda.com

Engaging Art: How Threyda Deliver…

A picture is worth 1,000 words, common wisdom has it. So social media should make it easy for artists to share their work, right? Image galleries, slideshows, done… …except there’s much more to it than that.   Copywriters are valued for a reason and engagement, though a notorious buzz word, is widely heralded on every [...]

Social Media Icons

The Paradox of Choice: Prioritize Your…

Last  week I posted more in depth explanations of  the first two points on my original 12 point check list for developing your web presence. Today, we’ll look more at the third point on the list: establishing the priority of your online platforms and the key elements that you’ll need to focus on as you develop them. [...]

Twitter & Television

Conquering the Smaller Screen:…

This is a re-post of a guest article from Minni Kemp, originally published on a previous incarnation of this site. Having attended a Social Media Week panel on Social TV last week, I thought it about time to resurrect her observations on the rise of social media and its integration with our television experience.  Minni [...]

Attracting and Engaging True Music Fans In the Digital Era

TechCrunch David Hazan (Mobile Backstage) Video Interview

Click to head over to the video interview

The remit to attract new fans of music is a ball that is now almost completely in the court of the artists themselves.

After a decade of digital disruption, even those artists on whom major record labels decide to take a chance, need to have built a significant base of excited, engaged fans following their every move.

The key question in the emerging digital music industry is this:

Where and how do you as an artist attract and engage these fans?

Watch the interview linked from the image above (or start here and watch for just a few minutes, if you want to avoid the awkward interviewer’s preamble).

It features David Hazan of musician-to-fan community service Mobile Backstage and covers some potential solutions to the question above. Although the platform itself is rather new and still to prove itself sustainable as a business, there is a trend towards these types of ‘true fan’ platforms. The reason being that musicians need to connect regularly and deeply with their most passionate core of fans, in order to drive longer term sales of merchandise, concert tickets, and perhaps even (shock) recorded music.

Wide Open Spaces

The intention of this post is not to glorify one specific service in this realm. Rather, I want to focus your attention on the potential online spaces in which you can best attract and engage fans.

Consider questions such as:

  • Which platforms (social networks, websites, blogs etc) attract the most new fans to your music?
  • Where do you find your fans becoming most passionate?
  • How could you combine platforms to deliver a more coherent, interactive space for your fans to gather and interact?
  • How could you utilize mobile content to connect with your fans more closely?
  • What other media have you not yet tapped to connect with fans? (e.g. video, podcasts, text messaging, crowd funding)
Echna Loch Horizon Sunset
Photo Credit: Ian Balcombe

 

Fan Clubs for the Digital Era

Whatever your answers to the questions above, the overall objective is to find either one highly productive space, or a fusion of many, that in effect becomes the digital fan club for your music and the content, products, and events that surround it.

As outmoded as the notion of a fan club may sound, is it not where the core of your most ardent supporters will gather? Through a combination of interaction with the main event (you!), community with other equally engaged fans, and that intangible ‘inner circle’ feeling that comes of investing oneself in an artist’s work. Furthermore, the excitement that is generated when impassioned fans gather together around a shared interest only furthers the attachment that they feel towards that common denominator. Fans breed further fanaticism.

From this base of hardcore support you can launch all of your future projects, from new music to international tours and other artistic pursuits. And it’s a purer connection in the digital era, as it has been built by you the artist directly, rather than through a convoluted chain of marketing departments and physical retail chains.

 

Your Two Cents?

Where do you stand on this?

Is it a crucial consideration that needs to now be fully taken up by musicians themselves, or simply another distraction from the true pursuit of making music?

Where do you make the truest connections with your fans?