Episodi
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Leah’s back! Where has she been? What’s she been doing? Where to from here for music marketing and the Savvy Musician Academy?
In this episode, Leah joins C. J. for an in-depth discussion of her new business, Mythologie Candles, and what her plans are for the near future.
But they also discuss this podcast because after a recent survey conducted by Leah of followers and students of the Savvy Musician Academy, a lot was revealed that prompted a reconsideration of our efforts.
Long story short, Leah and C. J. discuss the plan to take a sabbatical on the podcast in order to invest more in the coaching of our existing students.
BUT… there’s a ton of great principles taught in this episode, so don’t miss it!
Key Points From This Episode:
Catching up with Leah Mythologie candles is booming! How to market a sister brand Polling your audience The state of the podcast Focusing more on the students People who buy the course but fail to engage 2020 in hindsight How different personality types work together The new Instagram 4 Musicians courseTweetables:
“We know that those who have already invested in courses, if we dedicate more to them, to help them get results, that is probably the best investment of time and money.” - @metalmotivation [00:31:25]
“You can make it happen. It really does come down to, ‘How bad you want a music career?’” - @metalmotivation [00:38:54]
“That’s where musicians shine is we think outside of the box.” - @LEAHthemusic [00:41:28]
“My magic phrase, getting to half a million dollars in six months with this company was, ‘I don’t know, but we’ll figure it out.’” - @LEAHthemusic [00:42:30]
“Maybe I end up starting another podcast that’s less about the music industry and it’s just more general online business.” - @LEAHthemusic [00:48:24]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Mythologie Candles — https://mythologiecandles.com/
Instagram for Musicians — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/ig4m
Explode Your Fanbase — https://explodeyourfanbase.com/ -
Are you trying to figure out how to get more streams on Spotify? Did you know we offer a course on this? This week C.J. welcomes Dave Powers, the co-founder of the course, and Kirk Smith, one of its top students and rising stars.
Dave and Kirk tell how they started making hundreds of dollars and thousands of streams a day by focusing on getting on big playlists by building relationships with curators and sending them steady streams of singles. You could do this too and it all starts with learning more with this weeks episode of The Savvy Musician Show.
Key Points From This Episode:
Introduction to Dave Powers and Kirk Smith Why focus on Spotify? What is a curator? The power of the playlist Releasing singles instead of albums Staying consistent with reaching out to curators A steady stream of content Spotify is content marketing User-generated, algorithm, and editorial playlists Keeping users on the platform The music business is a relational business Getting past rejection Why you should be in the Spotify course Focusing on one music style Bad quality music fails quickly Having faith in yourself and the principles The Spotify course groupTweetables:
“I ought to focus on a platform that actually could make me money rather me spending money to grow.” - @Mtncitymusic [00:04:08]
“I put the record out. I probably should’ve been putting out singles, but I learned that lesson.” - Kirk Smith [00:08:39]
“I’m starting to see like, ‘Okay, I need to plan stuff out to where I’m putting out every six to eight weeks or every couple months.’” - Kirk Smith [00:11:30]
“Spotify is content marketing, and the content is the music… their main thing isn’t to get music to people. Their main thing is to get people to Spotify.” - Kirk Smith [00:11:56]
“You have to be consistent with reaching out and with making the content.” - Kirk Smith [00:18:52]
“The sole purpose of any platform is to keep people on the platform.” - @metalmotivation [00:21:22]
“Selling your music is not the end. It’s a means to an end. It’s one part of all the things that you will do in this new era of social media-driven marketing where you're sharing a lot more of your life than just the music itself.” @metalmotivation [00:22:05]
“If your desire with everything that you post is to keep people on the platform, attract them to it, and keep them on the platform for as long as possible, guess what the algorithm is going to do with your content? It’s going to favor it.” - @metalmotivation [00:22:55]
“I think in the last couple of years, there’s been a real understanding among artists that culturally people are listening to one song as opposed to albums more frequently.” @Mtncitymusic [00:24:20]
“Whereas Spotify is technically the label now. The curator becomes A&R.” - @metalmotivation [00:30:19]
“The music business has always been a relational business, but I don’t know of a time when there’s more opportunity for an artist to develop relationships that can advance your career outside the context of a record label.” - @Mtncitymusic [00:31:42]
“If you have bad quality music, good marketing helps bad products fail quickly.” - @Mtncitymusic [00:50:52]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Kirk Smith (Spotify) — https://spoti.fi/2FcCAFM
Dave Powers — https://www.facebook.com/mountaincitymusic/
Spotify for Musicians — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/spotify/ -
Episodi mancanti?
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This week is a paragon case study of a band who has been at it for awhile, doing pretty well, but looking for what they can do to take it to the next level. Insert C.J. sitting down with Elliot and Dave from the band Welter, all the way from Australia, and we have almost two hours of real discussions and problem solving in the new music industry.
From things that have worked great to things that have become problematic for Welter, there’s something here you’ve either dealt with yourself or most likely will encounter and the best advice for how to handle it is in this week’s episode of the Savvy Musician Show.
Key Points From This Episode:
Introduction to Elliot and Dave from Welter How to evolve with a tagline Growing beyond your micro-niche Being true to yourself with your posts What is the good life? Fans making their own interpretations of your songs Making the music the focal point Being resolved in yourself Promoting the music and the culture around it Writing copy to get the click Always adding value to the fans experience Creating a healthy sense of obligation Being authentic with your social media What are good metrics? 10x everything A new email campaign idea The algorithm rewards daily posting Fan page vs. fan group Nurture sequence and sales pitch balance How to get someones interest Non-clickbait engagement Creating hashtags from your lyrics The Aspirin of music Using the momentum of your audience against themTweetables:
“It's the only way I have as a person of getting the paint out or getting the chisel and the cold hammer and etching your name into the wall of time. The only way I have of doing that is by writing some songs and making some music.” - Elliot: @weltermusic [0:07:51]
“I'm not in search of a destiny. I’ve chosen the destination." - @metalmotivation [0:09:37]
“It’s about honesty, and we need to be honest about who we are and how we feel about our branding, what we post on Facebook, everything that we write, everything that we do, and everything that's seen as us needs to be honest, it needs to be who we are.” - Dave: @weltermusic [0:16:56]
“As soon as you write a song and put it out there, it’s not yours anymore, it’s for the listener and they can take on their own interpretation too.” - Dave: @weltermusic [0:25:47]
“To witness, for example, the lion attack the antelope up close, we’re taken aback as humans by the ferocity, the violence of the moment, and that’s resolved. That’s the complete elimination of self-doubt. ‘I am a lion and this is what I do.’ You are musicians, and this is what you do.” - @metalmotivation [0:29:51]
“There’s nothing more potent in your promotional arsenal than the music itself. Second to that is going to be what you have to say, your relationship, the story of the band, what you believe, your values, et cetera.” - @metalmotivation [0:32:25]
“So all we’re focusing on is writing copy that gets people to press play. That’s all we want to do. What can we say in the shortest, sweetest, most powerful, provocative way that forces them to click play?” - @metalmotivation [0:34:00]
“Everybody listens to the same radio station, WIFM, ‘What’s in it for me?’” - @metalmotivation [0:35:36]
“Which is a good thing to do, creating in them a healthy sense of obligation, creating in them a good debt, a debt they want to pay, which means buying the shirt, going to the event, attending the livestream, getting on an email list, buying the CD, sharing it, those sorts of things. That comes because you continually deliver on that promise to add value to their life.” - @metalmotivation [0:41:10]
“The funnel sits on our fan page and that’s where we’re bringing all the potential people.” - Dave: @weltermusic [01:07:39]
“I make my funnel approach very, very simple. I want to do one thing through anything that I say or post or share with my audience. I want to add as much value as I can. So I have to decide, okay, well, what adds the most value?” - @metalmotivation [01:23:16]
“So why not 10x it? Why not multiply our efforts to excel, because it’s only going to mean more people are going to hear music that’s going to lift them out of their troubled moment for a time. And that’s worth it.” - @metalmotivation [01:46:18]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Welter — https://www.facebook.com/weltermusic
Instagram for Musicians — https://www.savvymusicianacademy.com/ig4m
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
Whether it’s a top of the line music studio, just your phone and instrument, or somewhere in between, you should be using what you have to be making more music, reaching more people, and building the relationships between you and your fans. So how do you maximize your resources and abilities to increase the output and quality of your music from your home?
This week C.J. welcomes Steven Wood to the show, someone from outside Savvy Musician Academy, but someone very familiar with the new music industry. They go so deep into how to turn your home into a music factory, that by the end of this episode, you will be inspired and equipped to be pumping out more and better music from your own home than ever before.
Key Points From This Episode:
Introduction to Steven Wood Musicians dropping out of the business Studio vs. live musician Trying to get discovered on social media Mixing everyday Reverse engineering Different DAW’s Getting familiar with your gear Producing: less is more Pro’s and Con’s of perfectionism How to do a cover song The emotional impact of music Limiting your area to get things done Keeping it simple and clear The song makes the musicianTweetables:
“A live guy, he’s looking at it different than the typical studio guy. He’s looking at, do I want to continue to keep on going to these clubs and getting home 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:07:02]
“You got to think, not just with different hats of production, but also different hats you had to put on when it comes to marketing and knowing that one basket is not the way to go.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:10:15]
“Record companies can get you on radio. And to a degree that’s about the only thing that they can do for you.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:12:01]
“I think that’s what everybody right now in this new form of the wheel that we’re trying to create in the virtual world of not just music, but everything else. How do we make a living? How are we successful using a computer and a mouse?” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:12:49]
“I’ve learned to a degree it doesn’t matter which DAW, digital audio workstation, I use. For some reason, it’s still sounds like Steve Wood mixed the song.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:19:44]
“When it comes to producing, really, man, I mean, less is more. It may sound like whole lot’s going on, but it is. But yet individual parts all make up this beautiful pie. And so just let the song tell you where to go.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:21:53]
“I believe that the song is what makes the artist, then the artist has a chance.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:26:17]
“If you say, ‘Man, all I like to do is play guitar and sing.’ Well, work the hell out of that.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:34:48]
“Music is supposed to deliver an emotional experience. I don’t care whether it’s Metallica or Rod Stewart.” - @metalmotivation [0:36:20]
“If you have to explain the song before they listen to it, then you didn’t do a good job. Because the songs should be able to play on its own and take you on a journey.” - @stevenwoodmusic [0:42:56]
“I’m not talking about software. I’m not talking about hardware. I’m not talking about any of these things. I’m talking about what it takes to touch someone else, what it takes to inspire someone else, what it takes to... It’s the human aspect.” - @metalmotivation [0:50:35]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Steven Wood — https://www.facebook.com/stevenwoodmusic
Instagram for Musicians — https://www.savvymusicianacademy.com/ig4m
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
Are you having writers block? You just can’t figure out what the song is supposed to be about or what goes with that great riff you’ve had forever? It’d be great if the answer just magically fell out of the sky, making it so easy everyone could do it, but we know that’s just not the way it is!
Creativity comes from relentless hard work. You keep trying new ideas until… Boom! There it is! It’s perfect! Nothing else will do! It only took 99 other horrible ideas but the 100th one is just the cats pajamas and makes it all worth while. As C.J. puts it so simply and unequivocally, “Creativity doesn’t come from inspiration, it comes from perspiration.” Again, it’s not going to be easy, but it will be worth it. So tune in to what C.J does best, motivating you to achieve your full potential and creative ability through daily hard work, and explode your creativity with this weeks episode of the Savvy Musician Show.
Key Points From This Episode:
Fulfilling your creative purpose in life Perspiration not inspiration You ideal workspace Everything starts as a demo Achieving more output Disciplining yourself for daily work Feeding your creative processTweetables:
“The secret to creativity is not inspiration, it’s perspiration... Perspiration is what gives birth to inspiration.” - @metalmotivation [0:08:26]
This is the creative process. It’s not Hollywood. It’s a crucible of relentless, persistent problem solving, where you turn yourself inside out in order to make a… riff into a killer song.” - @metalmotivation [0:14:26]
“You’re as capable as anyone to go beyond your present output right now.” - @metalmotivation [0:14:46]
“How can you expect other people to appreciate your gifts, talents, and abilities if you’re not treating them well. How do you treat them well? By submitting them to the process of hard work.” - @metalmotivation [0:21:17]
“Be faithful to your musical mission, your calling, by working hard daily.” - @metalmotivation [0:23:58]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Instagram for Musicians — https://www.savvymusicianacademy.com/ig4m
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
This week C.J. is joined by Jason Stallworth, one of our first Elite students. There is so much experience and advice shared that it’s hard to pinpoint any in particular. Really what you get this week is a look into the life of someone who is really doing it and their best advice for you.
As Jason states, “That’s the biggest thing—you have to be in this for the long game. You have to be passionate about your music…that passionate about your music to stick it out.” A lot of people are quick to give up, but by applying what SMA teaches, and what you’ll learn in this podcast, you will see results and then scale what’s working. It’s so simple we often overcomplicate it. Well, this is one decision you don’t have to overcomplicate, listen to this week’s episode of the Savvy Musician Show to keep building your music empire!
Key Points From This Episode:
Intro to Jason Stallworth Surveying to find your micro-niche Targeting the right audience Page like ads Writing better copy Putting out organic content Using vulnerability to connect with fans Responding to all your fans Launching and promoting your album Creative ways to promote your sales Diversifying your income Committing to the long run Going back through the course Using what you learn from SMA in other placesTweetables:
“I think I made it more complicated than what it needed to be. I was like, ‘Well, what’s my micro-niche now?’ Going through the steps though, asking your fans, that’s the biggest thing that I’ve seen that’s been so helpful to me.” - @jasonstallworth [0:10:57]
“Not everything’s going to work like you expected, which is why we test things. So, just be authentic and organic. I mean, it’s your genre, so, you know how your audience speaks.” - @jasonstallworth [0:22:20]
“You have to present yourself and your music in a way that’s beneficial to them (your audience).” - @jasonstallworth [0:31:08]
“Launching your album, or I should say promoting your album, doesn’t stop after it’s launched, you have to keep that momentum going.” - @jasonstallworth [0:37:54]
“You give that message out there, that authentic message that tells what you are and what you do, but also tells that person that, ‘Hey, I’m one of you.’” - @jasonstallworth [0:45:34]
“That’s the biggest thing, you have to be in this for the long game. You have to be passionate about your music, that passionate about your music to stick it out.” - @jasonstallworth [0:48:39]
“If you’re getting frustrated over these types of things, then that frustration is going to show whenever you do put something out there on Facebook or on Instagram or wherever you’re putting it on.” - @jasonstallworth [0:52:50]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Jason Stallworth’s Facebook Page — https://www.facebook.com/jasonstallworthmetal/
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
So you’ve got a social media post to make or an email to send out, but what exactly do you say? Are you seeing the results you want from your posts and emails?
Whatever your situation is with your copywriting, it can always improve. This week, we’re sharing a live stream from the Savvy Musician Inner Circle in which C.J. teaches a packed lesson on copywriting for social media and email. If you want more results from your posts and emails, tune in to this week’s episode!
Key Points From This Episode:
Traditional copywriting Personal vs impersonal branding Compound marketing Positioning is branding Your ideal customer Audience targeting Direct response marketing Benefit-driven copy Building long-term relationshipsTweetables:
“Writing copy for your personal brand on social media and email is going to require modifying traditional copywriting. But you must still understand the fundamentals in order to know why.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:40]
“You can’t write your copy if you don’t know who you are.” - @metalmotivation [0:08:45]
“Half the battle of great copywriting is audience targeting.” - @metalmotivation [0:11:00]
“That’s your ideal customer, the person who's going to most going to benefit from what you're offering.” - @metalmotivation [0:11:47]
“Direct response marketing relies upon you targeting the right audience with benefit-driven copy.” - @metalmotivation [0:17:38]
“People are expecting results quicker than they should. And the reason being is because they don't have a relationship established.” - @metalmotivation [0:20:11]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
When people think of you and your music, what do they think of? Well, whatever that is, that’s your brand! What we want, is to design and utilize this idea to build your music business.
This idea should be personal, authentic, and we want to amplify it however we can. If you understand how important this is, then you already know the next step is to click that play button and try and learn as much as you can from C.J. in this week’s episode of the Savvy Musician Show.
Key Points From This Episode:
What is branding? Idea-driven branding What differentiates you in the marketplace? The effective marketing strategy Personal branding Brand awareness/engagement/marketing Being authenticTweetables:
“65% of those surveyed following the Savvy Musician Academy… are solo artists, not actually band members.” - @metalmotivation [0:03:23]
“Branding is not something seen. It’s something that happens first in the mind of the marketplace, in the mind of your potential super fan, when they encounter you and interact with you.” - @metalmotivation [0:06:28]
“It’s not just an issue of who can spend the most money on advertising. It’s an issue of who can most differentiate themselves, which is again, idea-driven branding.” - @metalmotivation [0:08:57]
“The new era of digital marketing is really personal branding.” - @metalmotivation [0:10:54]
“Your personal brand is something that’s already inherent in you.” - @metalmotivation [0:20:38]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
David Williams’ Facebook Page — https://www.facebook.com/weltermusic/
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
Would you keep betting on a horse that never won a race? Seems ridiculous, but people keep throwing money at advertising for posts that never did well in the first place. In this episode, C.J. sums it up perfectly when he says, “If it doesn't work organically without paid traffic, it’s not going to work with paid traffic.”
It works or doesn’t work because of how well you know your audience. C.J. explains that you need to be focusing on understanding your audience, what they respond to, what inspires them, what they will click and share and what will expand your reach. This concept is so simple it is overlooked and yet so important it needs your complete attention. Check out this week’s episode so that you don’t overlook what you should be doing everyday.
Key Points From This Episode:
Being the bright side Getting past looking for secrets and hacks Connecting with your audience This is a longterm business model Focusing on organic reach Multiplying what already works Researching friends for superfan information Putting in the work everydayTweetables:
“The whole world is learning the hard way that they should have been building an online music business.” - @metalmotivation [0:00:48]
“I almost never see questions about the very thing that creates sales… ‘How can I better connect with my audience?’” - @metalmotivation [0:06:11]
“Being an online musician is a longterm business model.” - @metalmotivation [0:07:08]
“If it doesn’t work organically without paid traffic, it’s not going to work with paid traffic.” - @metalmotivation [0:11:18]
“The person who’s totally abandoned to their audience is the person who’s going to learn their audience, and the person who learns their audience is going to be the person who sells. That’s going to be the person who succeeds.” - @metalmotivation [0:19:49]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Amy Vanessa Dullum Facebook Page — https://www.facebook.com/amygoloby/
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
Imagine selling millions of records only to end up starting from scratch in an entirely new music industry. This is the story of J.R. Richards and our SMA student guest joining C.J. this week. J.R. was the vocalist for the 90s band Dishwalla, which had two Gold and Platinum albums, and also won Billboard Music and ASCAP Awards.
Now as a solo artist with a mainstream sound, C.J and J.R. tackle how to find his audience through other ways than sub-genre targeting. If your music is more mainstream and you are trying to find your audience, this is the episode for you!
Key Points From This Episode:
Introduction to J.R. Richards Finding old fans vs. making new fans What is your personal brand? Finding your audience as a mainstream artist Focus through resolve Having an ultimate objective Expanding and targeting key audience demographics Culture-based niche marketing Writing emotionally focused copy The almighty play button Juxtaposition to find new ideasTweetables:
“It’s one thing to understand everything theoretically, it’s another thing to apply to your own music business, and connect with your fans, and figure out how that monetization needs to work for you.” - @metalmotivation [0:10:10]
“I love the idea of being resolved because resolved means there’s no second guessing, and I don't want to see someone second guess themselves when they need to be marketing.” - @metalmotivation [0:18:43]
“I really don’t care what your logo looks like because for all intents and purposes, the only logo that people are seeing is a profile pic and a blue name.” - @metalmotivation [0:46:11]
“I’m actually excited about going back through the program again just because it’s a lot, and you have to kind of mature with it in order to fully appreciate what's going on. It’s like reading a book twice that you really enjoy. You're going to get a lot out of it the second time around.” - @JRRICHARDS [0:54:28]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
J. R. Richards Facebook Page — https://www.facebook.com/JRRICHARDSMUSIC/
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
If you are building a music business, should you focus on YouTube of Facebook? Well, both honestly! But as C.J. explains the pro’s and con’s of both, you’ll find that Facebook by far has the advantage.
Would you rather have 1,000,000 video views on YouTube or 100 superfans that would buy anything in your store? If you’re serious about earning a living from your music, and not just doing this for vanity, the answer is obvious and C.J. tells you how and why Facebook is the answer.
Key Points From This Episode:
Getting a plan for your music business How YouTube is favoring mainstream media YouTube is a search engine Facebook is a share engine How Facebook is true social media How to find your superfans with Facebooks ad manager Uploading videos directly to Facebook vs. sharing from YouTube Connecting your Instagram and Facebook business profile Personal vs. business profileTweetables:
“You need a way forward to how you can find your place in this online busy world, stand out, gain a following, build your little musical empire, and earn a living making music.” - @metalmotivation [0:02:18]
“You can get millions of views on YouTube and it not make a single dent on your bank account.” - @metalmotivation [0:04:03]
“YouTube is a search engine. Facebook is a share engine.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:20]
“Unless somebody is specifically sitting down and looking for you, it’s not likely that they’re going to stumble upon you.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:45]
“Facebook is true social media. Social media, it’s the broadcasting of person to person.” - @metalmotivation [0:07:12]
“The first step now to building a successful online music business is going to be connecting with your ideal superfans, and the best way to do that is going to be with Facebook.” - @metalmotivation [0:10:03]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
Continuing our look behind the scenes here at SMA, this week C.J. is joined by our very own Steve Harnett, Leah’s wonderful husband, and our Chief Operating Officer. This is Steve’s first time on the Savvy Musician Show, but he has been with SMA since day one and his experience and insights shared today can not be overstated.
Jumping form topic to topic with lots of humor in-between, these two great minds offer something for both the beginner and seasoned online musician in this week’s episode, so don’t miss out on getting to learn something new and meeting the one and only, Steve Harnett!
Key Points From This Episode:
The Synergist’s four leadership styles Who SMA is for Steve’s bio with SMA Being your brand It’s all about the principles What it means to take ownership of your business Reasons to add an online component to your business Your music is not for everybody Updates with Tom 3.0 and The Inner Circle The psychology of sales through social mediaTweetables:
“A lot of conflicts within bands could be easily resolved if everybody just took on this sort of perspective where you realize that giftings are different, they’re natural, they’re organic, and you should be complementing one another.” - @metalmotivation [0:12:32]
“Who we (SMA) are for are the musicians who actually want to make a living with their art, which is not thing to be ashamed of, nobody should ever feel bad about that ever.” - Steve Harnett [0:21:19]
“Operational people tend to be the break pedal. Visionaries tend to be the accelerator.” - Steve Harnett [0:27:40]
“It’s about a movement, it’s about independence for musicians… and all musicians are going to be personal brands, and that’s perfectly fine, but you have to understand then that you are the brand.” - Steve Harnett [0:30:47]
“It’s really about the proven principles of marketing because that’s all Leah has ever been doing… and those principles can be breathed through anyone who applies them and knows them.” - @metalmotivation [0:33:47]
“The online aspect of your business is another leg of your table. You can’t have a table with one leg. You better have two or three legs on that sucker, four if you can.” - Steve Harnett [0:38:53]
“If you have an audience, you have capital. If you have social influence, you have capital. You have something someone else doesn’t. It is all to your advantage.” - @metalmotivation [0:41:14]
“Relationship building, culture building, lifestyle building, that’s what creates the sale.” - @metalmotivation [0:51:11]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://theonlinemusician.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
If you haven’t already, you get to meet our very own Customer Service Director, Amy Roy. This is a treat not only personally but also professionally. You name it, she’s seen it and is now giving you priceless insight into a musicians journey through SMA and an online music business.
From your first phone call to SMA to years down the road, Amy and C.J. discuss what most musicians wish they had known years ago! Get ahead of the curve with this week’s episode of the Savvy Musician Show.
Key Points From This Episode:
Introduction to our SMA Customer Service Director Amy Roy Jaded musicians not being a good fit for SMA What is seasonal and what is not Be the engagement you want to see Having a clear goal The pros and cons of the course Progressing before establishing your micro-niche Writing copy thats simple and emotionally effective The demand for your music Getting a taste of victoryTweetables:
“Success in the online music business is really about principles.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:58]
“You have to learn how to do things year round. It can still be in seasons, but you can’t just start a course or start building your business but then take six months off because you’re not feeling it.’ - Amy Roy [0:12:20]
“If you want people connecting with you, engaging with you, you better make sure you’re also in there connecting, and engaging, and encouraging.” - Amy Roy [0:22:13]
“I am a perfectionist, which means I’m also a procrastinator because if I can’t do something perfect the first time right away, I don’t do it at all.” - Amy Roy [0:30:24]
“I think another good thing to do when you do come up with something you're just stuck at is at your desk or wherever have a notepad or piece of paper and just write it down. Getting that out of your brain onto paper.’ - Amy Roy [0:33:23]
‘What’s going to sell is you communicating with someone emotionally.” - @metalmotivation [0:35:15]
“Whatever genre you do, I guarantee you someone needs to hear your music right now, and someone needs to hear your thoughts and your heart right now, and it’s your job and your responsibility as a musician to give that to them.” - Amy Roy [0:39:02]
“Selling that first shirt, and getting your website up, or your Shopify store up, or reaching your first 1,000 fans, these are big victories. What we want for you is to get a taste of that. We want you to taste victory.” - @metalmotivation [0:41:42]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
C. J. has spent countless hours coaching musicians one-on-one on their marketing and out of it he shares seven reasons why musicians fail in building an online business.
What might be surprising to discover is that the main reasons for failure or quitting don’t have to do with marketing knowledge or proficiency in technology. It’s more mindset and attitude, and most students just need to get out of their own way!
Check out this week’s episode to find out not just what these seven things are but how to understand them and more importantly what to do about them!
Key Points From This Episode:
The 7 reasons why musicians fail Not following instructions Standing in your own way/self-defeat Getting stuck on technology Not being resolved Not being consistent Not understanding the significance of social media Being afraid of the futureTweetables:
“By the middle of 2020, it should be clear that everybody needs an online business.” - @metalmotivation [0:02:49]
“The best way to stay motivated is to know how to solve your most pressing problems.” - @metalmotivation [0:08:28]
“Just do something every day, just show up every day, because if you stop and you let that go for a few days, not doing anything, it’s so much harder to start up again.” - @metalmotivation [0:17:02]
“You don’t need to punish yourself. You just need to get right back at it as if you never faltered… Stop turning on yourself. Don’t be your own worst enemy, be your best friend.” - @metalmotivation [0:19:27]
“Social media is the answer to the music problem created by Napster at the end of the 20th century.” - @metalmotivation [0:21:10]
“The key to being unafraid of the future is to strengthen yourself—to equip yourself because your best defense in life is to build a stronger you.” - @metalmotivation [0:24:41]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
The Savvy Musician Inner Circle — https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
Leah’s been devoted to so many things it’s wonderful to have her back on this week’s podcast and to hear what she’s been up to and her plans for the Summer.
As we all know, you can work yourself so hard you just burn out. Leah explains how to recognize signs of this happening and how to go about taking a break and staying healthy. Check in with Leah this week to hear more and also her plans for this summer!
Key Points From This Episode:
Leah’s quick overview of the last years The origin of Mythologie Candles Preventing a burn out Acute vs. chronic pain It’s okay to take a break Leah’s book suggestionsTweetables:
“This idea popped in my head about releasing candles to go with the music, because I wanted to create a multisensory experience and I just thought, wouldn't that be cool?” - @LEAHthemusic [0:06:01]
“When you become obsessed with your fans and your followers and your customers, that's where it becomes lucrative.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:13:23]
“And let me tell you, burnout, it doesn’t always look the way you think it looks and this is something I’m dealing with constantly.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:14:26]
“Chronic stress leads to lowering your quality of life and you can’t be in an inspired state when you’re also in a chronic state of stress and burnout.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:23:44]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
SMA Inner Circle — http://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle -
This week C.J. interviews another successful SMA student, Anna Brzozowska, an ethereal pop artist originally from Poland but is currently living in Spain. Anna shares her story of how she almost gave up on her music after the expenses of touring, but after finding SMA, she’s back to building a lifetime music career.
If you’re wondering about your artist identity, how to write your own copy, what is the basis of marketing and building your online business, then this is the episode for you!
Key Points From This Episode:
Developing your micro-niche as you go along To be yourself or a character? Why you shouldn’t just get someone else to do it for you Being yourself in your copy The principles of marketing are still the same The expenses of being a live musician Anna’s experience with Savvy The two mental blocks that every musician must get past The significance of having the right mindset and a strong heartTweetables:
“I want to encourage anyone who’s starting out; who doesn’t really know what their micro niche are, to not fixate so much on it, and just move on because your fans are going to help you discover that as you go along.” - @aniabmusic [0:02:53]
“I think that marketing, to me at least, is just learning how to get in front of the right ears.” - @aniabmusic [0:09:41]
“You’re the one who’s initiating the relationship through your ads.” - @metalmotivation [0:11:59]
“I don’'t think anyone else can write your copy for you as well as you can. Even if you think you suck at the beginning, just be yourself.” - @aniabmusic [0:14:28]
“The best motivation I’ve ever seen happen in anybody’s life is when you understand how to solve your most pressing problems.” - @metalmotivation [0:29:17]
“The education is important, but without heart; without the right mindset; without overcoming yourself, it doesn’t matter how much information you have.” - @metalmotivation [0:42:45]
“I will recommend Leah to the death to a musician, but it’s up to them, obviously. If they sign up for a course and watch videos, that’s not going to change much for them. They will need to change.” - @aniabmusic [0:43:50]
“You’re not going to get anywhere until you conquer your mind.” - @aniabmusic [0:44:11]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Anna’s Facebook Page — https://www.facebook.com/AniaBmusic/
Anna’s Website — http://aniabmusic.com/
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
The Inner Circle - https://savvymusicianacademy.com/innercircle
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
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If you were to ask someone for $20, who would be more likely to give it to you, a good friend or a complete stranger? Obviously a good friend.
Have you ever met someone and had so much in common that you immediately became good friends? More than likely.
If you can understand this, you know the foundation of building an online music business. That’s all it is, getting more and more people to know, like, and trust you, just like that good friend who’s willing to give you that $20. What do you and this good friend have in common? Your music and the culture that surrounds it. How do you find these good friends and build these relationships? Social media. In this episode C.J. discusses this fundamental aspect of the business in greater detail and is so important you do not want to miss out!
Key Points From This Episode:
Are you self-defeated? The unstoppable mindset The essential fundamental to successful online marketing How to build your relationships Funnels Why Facebook and Instagram? Studying your audience Getting comfortable with sharing yourself on the internetTweetables:
“Getting you in connection with your ideal super fan is the core. It’s the recipe for success in the online music business.” - @metalmotivation [0:02:19]
“You can’t be successful when you’re self-defeated before you even start… You have to get out of your own way.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:26]
“If you believe that there are principles the cause the kind of results that you want, and you believe that you have the ability to apply those principles, isn’t that all you need?” - @metalmotivation [0:07:17]
“Here’s the essential, basic, fundamental truth about online marketing in 2020. Getting more and more people to know you, like you, and trust you as an artist.” - @metalmotivation [0:10:06]
“Funnel is the process of taking somebody who doesn’t know you to see the first promotion that you ever offer them, bringing them along in a relationship with you until you finally create a sale.” - @metalmotivation [0:29:00]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com
-
If you were to ask someone for $20, who would be more likely to give it to you, a good friend or a complete stranger? Obviously a good friend.
Have you ever met someone and had so much in common that you immediately became good friends? More than likely.
If you can understand this, you know the foundation of building an online music business. That’s all it is, getting more and more people to know, like, and trust you, just like that good friend who’s willing to give you that $20. What do you and this good friend have in common? Your music and the culture that surrounds it. How do you find these good friends and build these relationships? Social media. In this episode C.J. discusses this fundamental aspect of the business in greater detail and is so important you do not want to miss out!
Key Points From This Episode:
Are you self-defeated? The unstoppable mindset The essential fundamental to successful online marketing How to build your relationships Funnels Why Facebook and Instagram? Studying your audience Getting comfortable with sharing yourself on the internetTweetables:
“Getting you in connection with your ideal super fan is the core. It’s the recipe for success in the online music business.” - @metalmotivation [0:02:19]
“You can’t be successful when you’re self-defeated before you even start… You have to get out of your own way.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:26]
“If you believe that there are principles the cause the kind of results that you want, and you believe that you have the ability to apply those principles, isn’t that all you need?” - @metalmotivation [0:07:17]
“Here’s the essential, basic, fundamental truth about online marketing in 2020. Getting more and more people to know you, like you, and trust you as an artist.” - @metalmotivation [0:10:06]
“Funnel is the process of taking somebody who doesn’t know you to see the first promotion that you ever offer them, bringing them along in a relationship with you until you finally create a sale.” - @metalmotivation [0:29:00]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com -
Before we go any further, do you know what your micro-niche is? It cannot be overstated how important it is to be rock solid in defining, understanding, and utilizing your micro-niche, because it is the foundation of building your fanbase and music business.
Whether you’re just learning this word for the first time, or well acquainted with it, Leah lays out some incredible insights into the micro-niche approach in this week’s episode of the Savvy Musician Show.
Key Points From This Episode:
What is your micro-niche? Standing out in the crowd Being important to the people that matter Being easy to find The difference between SEO and your niche Finding your twist Going smaller Your niche title accurately describing your sound Targeting your sub-genre fans first strategyTweetables:
“You only need to be famous in your micro-niche.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:03:07]
“My fans in my genre know exactly who I am, and that's all that matters.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:03:34]
“The nice thing about going smaller and becoming the big fish in the small pond is that it makes it so much easier for people to find you.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:05:24]
“If you think you can put up a Facebook page and you can put out music and that people will magically find you, you're delusional.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:05:45]
“There's a big difference between search engine optimization and keyword titles, say in a YouTube video and a niche.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:06:30]
“People should be able to imagine and know what your music sounds like based on what the niche title is.” - @LEAHthemusic [0:08:15]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com -
This may be the most concise, yet comprehensive, description of where we are in the music industry and what may be the greatest opportunity for artists in the last 25 years.
At the end of the 90s, Napster changed the old music industry with illegal downloading of digitized music, and a few years later, iTunes capitalized on that by now selling downloadable mp3s. And just a few years ago, another shift happened when apps like Pandora and Spotify eliminated the mp3 with music streaming.
All of this represented just more taking advantage of the artist as new companies made bundles while artists got pennies. They’re all just another version of the record labels.
But, the problem the internet created by Napster, iTunes, and Spotify has also now provided artists with a way to finally control their own careers and make the money they always wanted without a record label!
In this special episode, C.J. breaks this down in such as way that you’ll be fired up and ready to go to work on marketing your music. Buckle your seatbelts because you’re in for a ride!
Key Points From This Episode:
The impact of the internet and Napster Sad tales from the road Social media is the new music industry Why being discovered doesn’t matter anymore Dialing in your Facebook ads Getting more gigs because of your strong social media presence The super fan system Creating merchandise to sell while having no inventoryTweetables:
“Social media is the single biggest game changer for the music industry since it began.” - @metalmotivation [0:05:01]
“It’s not about potential fans discovering you, it’s about you discovering fans.” - @metalmotivation [0:10:37]
“If you have a musical brand that you can now push out to an audience and you know how to target those people, then you can build an online music business.” - @metalmotivation [0:16:45]
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
The Online Musician 3.0 — https://explodeyourfanbase.com
Book a Call With Us — http://www.CallSMA.com - Mostra di più