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A Little Moneymaking Music Advice
By Jeffrey P. Fisher
http://www.jeffreypfisher.com
Use these five moneymaking music tips to make your music industry
career better right away.
[1] Barter products and services
Let's say you need a guitar part for a project studio track, but have no
money to pay the player. Offer the guitarist free studio time in exchange
for her playing on one of your tracks. The guitarist can use her time to
record a demo, for instance. You need to be aware that the IRS has
specific rules covering bartering in business situations. You must record
these exchanges as regular business income and expenses. However,
when this trade is like/kind, the affect on your taxes is zero. Following the
above example, let the guitarist bill you for her time on your track and
then you bill her the same amount for your studio time. The two invoices
effectively cancel each other out. She owes you no money and you owe
her none either. More importantly, you both have the legitimate
paperwork you need for your tax preparation.
[2] Always look for new business
Never stop promoting. Make it a permanent part of your music business
career and the major focus of your time, money, and effort. Build strong
relationships, too. Make customers, not sales. While it's always tempting
to go after quick bucks, the real money is made by treating people fairly,
giving more than they expect, and cultivating long, profitable
relationships. Keep watching for opportunities because change is
inevitable. Pay attention, stay informed, and use information you
discover to improve your situation. There may be voids in the market
that your music products and services can fill. Do you see them? Also,
listen to your customers. They'll tell you what they want. Make sure you
give it to them.
[3] Use e-mail to promote
Don't send spam, but do send promotions to people who have already
identified themselves as wanting to hear from you. Be careful what you
write in the subject line. If it looks like advertising or other junk e-mail,
your message might get deleted before being read. Try to personalize the
letter. Either write to a person one-to-one or use a generic description:
"Greetings to all yourbandname fans". Make sure the e-mail is easy to
read. Use short, simple words and short paragraphs. It's OK to include
some hard-sell, just make sure you liberally sprinkle in plenty of benefits
for your readers, too. Try to include testimonials or other endorsements
that support whatever music products and services you are selling. You
can increase response by including special offers that also have time
limits: "Hurry! This offer expires on April 1". Don't forget to encourage
immediate response and ask for the order: "Get your copy of our latest
CD now." Make it easy for people to respond by providing a clickable
link or two in your message. To make that work, be sure to write the
entire address e. g. http://www.jeffreypfisher.com . Include a P.S. to
restate your most compelling offer and to reemphasize your call to take
action. Optionally, you can include a money-back guarantee or other
additional information to support your promotion.
[4] Phone profits
Picking up the phone and calling past clients to remind them of what you
have is the single most effective way to generate new sales. When you
have something new to sell (or you sell a service that people buy
regularly), use your phone to make contact. I generate 90% of my repeat
business through phone calls. Making cold calls is another necessity.
Break through your fear. You don't have the gig now, right? If you call,
there's a chance you might get hired. Take the chance!
[5] Samples sell
Samples allow people to try before they buy. Free samples will help you
sell more of your music, too. Create a sample CD with a few (2-3) cuts of
your music and use it as a promotion. Use this sample to convince
skeptical buyers that you have what they want. With the sample, people
can hear your music first before they either come to your show or buy
your full CD. Label these CDs with your full contact information and
encourage people to listen AND pass them on to other people they
know. Keep your costs down by burning these CDs at home, adding
sticky labels, and putting them in cheap, see-through paper envelopes.
Distribute these CDs like Halloween candy. Put them everywhere: stick
them on bulletin boards/kiosks, hand them out on street corners, give
them away at performances (including other people's performances), and
more. Get creative!
That's just a sampling of tips available through my "Moneymaking
Music Tip of the Week." Check it out at
http://www.jeffreypfisher.com/tipofweek.html.
Jeffrey P. Fisher is the author of "How to Make Money Scoring Soundtracks and Jingles", "Ruthless Self-Promotion in
the Music Industry" and "Profiting From Your Music and Sound Project Studio". Get more information from http://www.jeffreypfisher.com or
send e-mail to [email protected]. Also subscribe to his FREE "Moneymaking Music Tip of the Week" by sending an e-mail to
[email protected]
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