How to get better results with your musicians press kit, and save time and money too!

MyMusicSuccess receives hundreds of unsolicited CDs, emails and press kits every day, most of which have cost the sender considerable amounts of money and time for the CD pressing, printing and postage costs. With emails it’s taken time and effort to send out the email whether it’s through an automated system or bulk blind CC.

As a music industry professional, I feel compelled to give feedback to the independent music community on how to achieve better results when sending out press kits to the media. All of the advice I’m about to give you might seem obvious; however, 99.9% of all the press kits we receive at MyMusicSuccess miss these out. So listen up, and learn how to get the attention of the music media. You’ve invested in a great recording, committed yourself to promoting it, don’t fall down at the last hurdle!

Press kits

First up lets look at the contents of a press kit, and what it should contain. Number one, it should contain the music. I said this was going to be obvious, but seriously, we receive emails and letters at MyMusicSuccess with just a flyer, no information except an invitation to a website. A full 100% of record executives and music industry professionals do not have time to surf the web; spare time is a commodity they just don’t have when running a business, so asking a music industry professional to just visit your website alone will guarantee that you get overlooked.

Include Music!

Make sure that if you are mailing your press kit that you include a CD, and take off any shrink wrap too before you send it, if there is one thing that will stop your CD being listened to its shrink wrap. It might sound crazy but the easier you make it for music professionals to access your music, the higher the chances it will get listened to. Make sure your contact details on the CD, or if they don’t appear put a post it note on the inside of the jewel case with your email and telephone number. Don’t put it on the outside of the CD, it’ll fall off and if your CD gets separated from your cover letter no-one will know who to contact.

If you are sending a digital press kit, make sure that you attach an MP3 to the email, or a direct link to a download. Ensure the file size of the MP3 is as small as possible (under 5 megabytes, otherwise it will probably get rejected by the recipients server) and make sure it’s a full track not a clip. Don’t sent a link to a player, its going to confuse the recipient, they want to hear your best track not your entire catalogue, remember music professionals are short on time, so hit them with your best track, not your entire catalogue. If they like you’re best track they’ll make time to listen to the others.

Include a bio with a photo of the artist or band!

When you send your press kit out, always include a biography of the artist or band. Keep it to one page, and include all the successes however big or small to date. Don’t make your bio cheesy or clever, music professionals don’t have the time to work out esoteric messages, they want to know where you have played, what your goals are, and what you have achieved so far.

They also want to SEE YOU. When you are sending out press kits, you are selling your product, and sales transactions are built on trust. If you want someone to do something for you like review your CD, or come see your gig with a view to record company interest they want to see WHO they are dealing with. Human interaction is still the number one way people judge whether to do business with people. Include a good artist or band picture, if you can’t get a professional photographer to take a headshot or band shot, then do your best with a good quality domestic camera and print it on 4 x 6 glossy cards on your home printer. Never print it on cheap letter paper, it looks plain awful.

I can’t stress enough how important a picture of the artist or band is. I understand that many musicians want to hide behind the music, whether due to a lack of confidence or for artistic reasons, but if you are going to hide, nobody will find you, music professionals don’t play hide and seek – period.

Compliment slip

Include a simply designed compliment slip or short cover letter, clearly explaining what you would like the music industry professional to do. I can’t tell you how many media kits I receive anonymously that I have no idea what the sender wants. If you want the recipient to review your CD, tell them, if you want them to listen to your CD in consideration of licensing, tell them, if you are pitching to a compilation or a publisher, tell them what you would like them to consider you for. The easier you make it for the recipient to instantly understand your message, the more likely they’ll take notice of you.

What else?

That’s it, really that is all you need to send. Don’t send stickers, don’t send gimmicks, don’t send bribes, don’t send T-shirts or merchandise, don’t send freebies. They’ll all end up in the bin guaranteed, and that’s your hard earned cash that the music professionals throw away every day. Save that money and invest it in something more worthwhile like extra promotion, petrol for the gig van, or a good nosh up for the band after one of your great gigs!

Your approach

First and foremost the most effective way of making sure that your press kit gets missed is by unsolicited mail or spam. Nearly all major record companies, publishers or other music industry professionals are extremely wary of unsolicited packages simply because of the threat of plagiaristic law suits. If an A & R person listens to a song, and one of there future artists comes up with a similar sounding song or set of lyrics, whether its connected or just synchronicity you can be sure a law suit will follow. How does an A&R avoid this, simple, just don’t open any unsolicited package or email. Yes tha’ts your press kit I’m talking about here, and that’s the sound of it hitting the trash can…

Number one rule for your approach to music industry professionals, ask them if they will accept your submission before you send it. If you don’t follow anything else in this seminar, do this one thing, it will save you hundreds of dollars and countless hours of your time.

Send an email to the media professionals first politely asking them if they accept submissions, and remember the key word here – ASK! Have the courage to just outright ask them if you can send something, you’ll be surprise how many will say yes when you simply ask their permission. If they say no then you have saved yourself the cost of sending your press kit to someone who doesn’t want it. Good job! If you ask questions, you will also be surprised at the answers. Music industry professionals are born networkers, so even if the person you are contacting is mismatched, the simple fact that you asked permission for their time will probably illicit a response with some leads that will be matched. People are always willing to help and feel privileged to receive an email asking for their help first.

Do your research too though. I can’t tell you how many people send me press kits asking to be signed onto my label. Is MyMusicSuccess a record label? No we are a publicity and promotion company, we don’t sign artists or release records, so what do you think the success rate of these applicants are? Of course, Zero. Why? Because they didn’t do their research. I told you some of this would be obvious.

Here’s a great exercise. Pick a respected music industry professional who you would like to comment or write about your CD. Look them up on linked in, Facebook, twitter, and other social networks. Follow them for a few days; think about what it would be like to be them for a day. What would their routine be, what would their current likes and dislikes be? If they have a website or blog, the most important page for you to visit is their ABOUT US page. It’ll tell you all about the company or individual and what they do or do not do.

LinkedIn is a particularly good site to research industry professionals, it will give you a good overview of their background and what they have worked with before. Humans are creatures of habit, and music industry professionals are no different, they tend to lean towards areas that they enjoy working with themselves. If they haven’t worked in the genre or field that you are in before, the likelihood that you will convert them is very small.

When you are writing your one sheet or Bio, don’t put words in people’s mouths, never assume anything and don’t make decisions for the reader. Telling them you are the greatest band on earth is probably true, but people like to make their own decisions, and that is certainly true for music reviewers. The more you try to force someone to write what you want about your band, the more they will either ignore it or write the complete opposite.

Simply introduce yourself and keep to the facts, making sure you highlight your successes and explain what goals you are trying to achieve, that alone will catch people’s eyes. Keep it honest, by all means embellish, talk up and promote your previous successes, but never ever lie on your one sheet or Bio. In the digital information age it’s just a mouse click to Google that will verify whether your Bio is true or not. No one will deal with a dishonest person, period.

Make sure that your one sheet has full contact details at the bottom of the page, with a contact person’s name, telephone number, email address and website. Check that your phone number, email and website are working correctly too. Out of all the email I receive from bands every day I would say at least 20% of the emails I reply to bounce back as undelivered, just because they didn’t send themselves an email to check if their mail server is working ok. Broken website links, bounced emails, or out of service telephone numbers do nothing to help your credibility or reputation, and are a guaranteed way of killing your submission campaign stone dead.

Follow up on your submissions too. Remember that music industry professionals are busy people and are usually swamped with both their own work and the mountain of submissions they receive every day. If you asked their permission before sending, they wont mind you contacting them after a week or so just to check that they got your CD ok. Drop them a quick email or call them and ask if they got your package. If they did they and they are willing to give it a look, they’ll tell you when, if they do, respect this.

If you’re told for example “I am going to be taking a listen to this next week when I fly out to a conference”, then thank them, and tell them you look forward to their feedback after they have taken a listen. Note the conversation down and book into your diary a follow up with a call or email a few days after they said they would listen to your submission. Be consistent, persistent and resistant. If you receive an outright rejection, ask them why they think that you were mismatched. Listen to the answer, you’ll gain excellent intelligence from their answer, and this intelligence will help you identify better targets in the future, saving you even more time and money.

If you follow these simple rules when sending out your press kits, not only will you save yourself hundreds of dollars, and countless hours of time, you will also get a better response rate, more reviews, and a huge amount of respect from the professionals you contact.

Get serious about your approach to submitting your press kits to the music industry, and be professional. Music industry professionals will treat you seriously and professionally back…

Found this article useful? There are 101 more great ways to promote your music in our latest book “101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web”. Get your copy by clicking the link below!

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How to get music reviewed, promoted and plugged on the radio as an independent artist or band.

Found this article useful? There are 101 more great ways to promote your music in our latest book “101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web”. Get your copy by clicking the link below!

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PR and promotion is such an important part of your music. You can make the greatest music in the world, be the coolest or tightest band in your genre, but without PR and promotion no one will ever know about you. PR and promotion is all about shouting about yourself to everyone who will listen.

There are so many great ways to promote yourself using the internet that if you are not doing at least some of the ideas listed in this section every week, then you may as well pack up and stick to a day job.

A great way to get promotion that will help your sales and boost your ranking in the search engines is to get your releases reviewed in the appropriate section of the website About.com. About.com is run by the New York Times, and is one of the world’s most respected online sources of information. There are sections of the website that cater for every type of music, so to increase your chances of getting your music reviewed, make sure that you research the site to identify the correct target category.

Each section of About.com is run by a host, who edits and manages his section, the host is usually a leading industry figure or freelance journalist who knows their field well. The host should be your first point of contact, and occasionally they have a number of people working with them that deals with specific areas, such as live work, sub genres, music releases etc.

Radio promotion is also a key factor. Radio DJ’s are your sales team, getting your music into the ears of new listeners and hammering home your music. Although online radio is gaining ground, FM and AM radio still rules most peoples lives (think about it, when do you listen to the radio? in your car, on the move, in the shopping mall…) Major record labels spend hundreds of thousands of pounds getting their songs onto play lists worldwide, so how can you compete with this? The main way is to know your market and build up contacts on local stations, college stations and make personal contact with DJ’s and station programme directors directly. To make a serious impact on radio you have to be in a lot of places at once. Internet radio is one of the fastest ways of getting your music played to a hungry audience. In our book 101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web we discuss some great ways to get thousands of spins on internet radio stations to help drive new fans to your iTunes store and website.

Another important way of generating online awareness of your music or band is by writing regular press releases. Get into the habit of publishing one press release every week, and you’ll soon find that not only does it increase the ranking of your website on the search engines, but it gives you a regular reason to keep peoples interest in your band. Sustaining interest is one of the hardest things to do so regular press releases really help you focus on this part of your PR strategy.

Press releases can be about anything regarding your music or band or band members. Maybe one of your band members is involved in a charity run at the weekend, maybe you have just finished rehearsing one of your new songs, have you got a gig coming up at the weekend, did you just publish a new website, maybe you got your track played by a DJ at a club, whatever the story big or small, get it out there every week.

Don’t forget to archive all your press releases on a section of your website, as this will show constant activity and updates to your site, visitors to your website will always be able to see new information weekly. This also means that most search engines will see changes to your site so send a robot off to your site to rescan it again, and depending on the content of your press release, this could also increase the ranking of your site on the search engine.

Found this article useful? There are 101 more great ways to promote your music in our latest book “101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web”. Get your copy by clicking the link below!

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How Independent Artists And Bands Can Get The Best Out Of Music Industry Trade Shows And Events

Found this article useful? There are 101 more great ways to promote your music in our latest book “101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web”. Get your copy by clicking the link below!

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Just as in all industries, every year a number of trade shows take place where you can gain information on the music business, meet companies and people that will help you make your music career more successful.

Music business trade shows usually have a conference attached, where you can hear the latest requirements from A & R executives from both the independent and major record labels. The conference will also include seminars from leading industry figures talking about the latest trends in the music industry.

The seminars will give you invaluable business intelligence from within the music industry and will give you an edge when it comes to trying to sell your music. You will know who wants what and why, and you will have more success in the music industry because you are focused on the facts of what the industry wants from you, rather than hoping someone will “discover” you.

Recent topics at PopKomm, the leading music conference in Berlin, Germany for example related to getting your music sold independently online, getting filmmakers to use your music in their films, and selling music through mobile phones direct to the consumer.

All these ways of making money from your music are now available to independent musicians like you, thanks to the power of the internet, and you don’t have to be a big multinational company any longer to do any of these things. Some of these ideas are explored in more detail in the chapter of this book covering independent distribution.

Use trade shows as ways to meet potential partner companies and people who can help you take your music to a wider audience. When you register with the trade show organisers you will get access to the names, addresses, email, website, and direct telephone numbers of all the companies, executives, and people that are attending the show.

Make sure you plan well in advance by researching each person thoroughly to ensure you are a good match – do not meet people who are not matched to your music, concentrate only on the relevant people in your genre to ensure the best use of your time. After you have researched the prospective people relevant to your music, you should email each person on your list, and follow up with a phone call. Be persistent, they will be keen to meet you but you have to pester them to get a firm meeting time as they are usually very busy people.

Ask them for a meeting at the conference, get a firm time to see them, make sure in your initial contact you screen them again by asking lots of questions about what they are looking for at the show, and see how your music would fit to their needs. Get them to commit to a time to meet you. You now have a chance to do real business with the people that can take your music to the next level, your future business partners with whom you will share your success!

Plan each meeting at the trade show by writing a list of 10 questions you want to ask so you feel confident about what you want to get out of the meeting.

Make sure you take a list of your meetings to the show, with everyone’s mobile numbers written down. Trade shows can be crowded places, and it’s easy to miss people when there are hundreds of people crowded in the lounges and stand areas, so 5 minutes before your meeting give each prospect a ring so you can make sure you don’t miss each other.

When you have the meeting keep it to no more than 15 minutes. This is a great marketing ploy, which shows that you are busy with other appointments, and you have no time to waste because you and your music are in demand.

Make sure that you make an action point review on what any next steps might be after the meeting, and one week after the trade show, follow up with an email or phone call to the person you met to progress your actions.

You will be surprised how quickly opportunities within the music industry become available when you follow this plan. Just like any business, it’s made up of people communicating with each other, and trade shows offer an ideal opportunity to get out from your rehearsal room, recording room, or just from behind your computer screen and meet the people involved

Found this article useful? There are 101 more great ways to promote your music in our latest book “101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web”. Get your copy by clicking the link below!

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Buy 101 Ways To Market Your Music On The Web eBook Package
Limited Time Offer Includes Free Bonus Material + FREE ENTRY INTO THE GLOBAL MUSICIANS DIRECTORY 2012 Worth Over $450!

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Many artists and bands feel frustrated with their music career because they find making progress a real challenge. One of the main reasons they feel like this is simply because they haven’t made a proper plan for their career, and haven’t learnt the methods that all the most successful artists who have already reached the top have followed.

There are a set of simple steps that will help you take the brakes off and enable you to learn how to make progress in your music career faster than you could imagine. I’ve used this set of steps myself to achieve chart positions for my own band, Billboard chart positions and coverage in the music press for artists I have promoted in the past and achieved so many things that I would not have had the opportunity to experience without using these steps. It seems to work every time if you apply these techniques to everything you aim for.

The techniques I’ve used to create the successes I’ve enjoyed in the music industry have now been captured in a new audiobook published by N2R Media, which you can now get for yourself via the link above. I hope you take the opportunity to learn these techniques for yourself too and enjoy the same success too!

I’m donating 5% of all sales of this audio seminar to The Red Cross to help them continue the incredible support they provide to others in times of crisis. Thank you for your help in supporting their cause.

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Musicians, Singers, Bands, Actors Is Your Talent Going Unnoticed?

Record Deal,Publishing,Contract,Independent Musician,Band,Artist,Label,Get Signed,ManagerDid you know that you’ll never be discovered in the music industry if you never become discoverable?.

Are you aware that all of the most successful musicians, artists, bands and singers have got to the top simply by committing to be inside the industry instead of choosing to remain shut out?

Do you believe that you have what it takes to reach the top with your special talent, if only you could get yourself in front of the right people?

Now you can by securing your place in the number one music business guide The Global Musicians Directory 2012.

This exclusive music industry publication is made available to worldwide record producers, record labels, A&R talent scouts, casting agents, film and video directors, TV executives, PR and press agents, recording studio owners and many more top decision makers inside the music industry.

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Submit Your Music For A New Compilation “Independent Artists For Japan”

Our sister company N2R Publishing is putting together a music compilation to raise funds for the Red Cross to help them help the victims of the recent natural disaster in Japan.

All Genres may be submitted, we are looking for songs around the themes of hope, encouragement and perseverance.

Submissions must be original songs, NO COVERS and you must own the full rights (inlcuding publishing rights) to the song submitted. Use of successful artists songs will be on a non exclusive basis.

You can enter your songs for consideration at our submissions page by clicking here

Entries must be submitted by 6th May 2011

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