| The Way of the Indie is a
hard road to travel filled with distractions. Follow these signposts
and be consistent in your dealings.
1) Active Crew = Support Staff
2) Get a Real Manager
3) Be Accountable For Your Own
Actions
4) Shows Are The Engine
5) Buzz & Word of Mouth
6) Hustle Smartly
AN ACTIVE & SUPPORTIVE CREW
No Man is an Island. You need a crew, a support
staff, a safe harbor among a band of friends that believes in you
almost more than you believe in yourself. Most successful artists
have stable, productive, established crews. That crew should be
extroverts, chatterboxes, Netheads, hard workers, problem solvers
and can network their asses off. You need someone in the crew who
can man the merch table, collect names, hand out flyers, do graphics, site designs, can comfortably move and post in
message boards, can talk their ways into clubs etc. Mostly, you need
that guy or girl who can talk you up and sling a CD anywhere,
anytime and to anyone. If you already have an following, that crew
member has to realize that being in your crew is not a shortcut for
their own career. Always give back and acknowledge your people.
Respect and a shout out can go along ways. Drop the yes men. Listen to the constructive input of a crew, they are your most
valuable asset.
REAL MANAGER
When it's time, get a functioning manager you can go to for
everything or do without until you need one or find the right one.
You need someone dedicated to chasing sponsorships, ringtone deals,
helps maintain your websites including your myspace site, manages
the email database and has a regular plan on how to keep that
database active, vibrant and in tune to your needs. Someone who has
even more contacts than you and submits you to all festivals,
conferences and related lifestyle events as well as the main contact
for booking agents and promoters to make sure shows get booked and
promoted as they should. A manager that can roll corporate when
needed and can write a bio or biz plan as needed and has your artist
profile written and ready for anyone who asks. You need a manager
who is thinking two steps ahead of you every step of the way. Most
importantly, someone who can help shape your career and knows their
way around the word No. A good
manager is worth their weight in gold, treat them well.
BE ACCOUNTABLE
Be 100% responsible for your own actions, your
career and your lot in life. It's too easy to blame everyone else,
you are in control of your own destiny. If you've made a mistake or
an error in judgement, own up to it and make it right. Solid careers
have been built on artists that take full responsibility for their
actions,
know their own strengths and weaknesses and how to address them. You attract more flies with
honey than vinegar. An artist that's easy to work with and doesn't
flake at the first hint of trouble attracts good people into his
orbit. Balance yourself against a realistically similar artist (Not
a 50 Cents or Coldplay) to compare your profile to theirs (tours,
active fanbase, buzz, amount of music released etc). Comparing your
status and profile to superstars backed by million dollars campaigns
is simply counterproductive for everyone involved. Stay positive, be
solution oriented instead of a finger pointer, shoulder the load and
people will go that extra step and will be there for your when you
are in need. Know yourself and keep your work ethic strong because
it's a long road to travel. Be a beacon of light.
SHOWS, SHOWS, SHOWS
Playing shows are the engine that makes everything
else work. In the Way of the Indie, shows are the principle way to
convert fans, build a base ,create buzz, sell music direct and
network like your life depended it (be sure and say hello to the
club owner, bar keep, etc) . A transcendant show and stage banter can turn fans
into believers and create an honest buzz. Not all gigs are equal but
the stage is your #1
outlet to personally deliver your message (remind them you have
music they can buy right then) and to continue to refine and hone
your craft. The promoter can be a valuable ally
as a decent one makes up postcards, has a street team to make sure
it gets out there including online and may even by print ads in the
local rag to announce the gig. Always make sure they have album art
and logo, not some random photo a fan will never see again. The
getting and playing of shows can't be overstressed. Your next superfan, manager, friendly journalist and/or DJ or otherwise
important connection could be in the audience. A great show and
attitude can lead to a steady paycheck and chances are your best
paycheck when you include selling cd's at the show.
BUZZ
Buzz is word of mouth that marketing converts into
sales. Money can't buy buzz and brilliant marketing campaigns have
been felled to a lack of or even a negative buzz. Buzz is the word
of mouth you and your crew have steadily built by months of steady
and consistent touring backed by non stop networking. Buzz is your
and/or your crew 1) constantly working the 2 to 3 clubs or venues
that your crowd is at 2) building a rep for a great live show and
related parties 3) using connections to build relationships with
DJ's that can help your cause 4) creating clever mixtapes or digital
releases and
making sure they get into the hands of the fans you want to convert,
onto various websites as well as into the local indie stores you
respect and visit. 5) do and thoroughly complete every interview opp
you can do, however small, because every bit of visibility adds up.
Overall, get out there, mingle with your fans and be seen.
Most important, make sure your music is on point and your are as
prolific as you need to be. That could include slinging some tracks
free if that's what it takes to start the buzz up.
HUSTLE SMART
Nowadays, it's not uncommon for an artist to be
working a music career with aspirations for Hollywood or DVD's as
well. Having a diverse game plan is great but be sure
you complete building your foundation first. Get the main career in
gear first and dedicate all your initial energies to that purpose.
Hustling Smart is 1) building and maintaining a productive, active
crew 2) tirelessly seeking out promoters and tweaking your
presentation to keep your pitch strong 3) getting to know the people
that can directly impact your career. That's indie store managers,
regional promoters, DJ's, barbershops, cool indie clothing stores or
related lifestyle store, cheap print vendors and more. 4) getting a
day job if that's what it takes to pay the bills to keep your
momentum. Hustling Smart is staying focused and making sure
your daily actions advance your album and profile. Hustling Smart is
staying on message with the appropriate parties.
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