Archive for the 'Marketing – Product' Category

UserVoice survey of topic requests for this blog

I just discovered UserVoice and their great feature suggestion/survey tool.  I set up a free account to try it out to have readers suggest and vote on blog topics for Social Media Marketing in Music (this blog). You can find the link both in this post (below) and always find it from the right hand side navigation column directly under the author’s picture.

Suggest or vote on future topics

In order to tempt you into checking out the topic request survey, I’ve pre-populated it with a few topics I’ve been considering (but feel free to add your own suggestions):

Compare the new HD video services out there
YouTube now offers HD formats but YouTube is not the only game in town. What are the players? How do you embed a video in a blog, webpage , Facebook, or MySpace?

Creating a Musican/Band webpage on Ning
4000 new web sites are being created every day on Ning by ‘regular folks’ . It isn’t that hard to make a page … and it’s free.
http://bit.ly/16xW1
… and their Music Player can be embedded in both MySpace and Facebook
http://bit.ly/mnKuH

Music sites (the new ones)
http://mashable.com/2007/11/08/tools-independent-musician/
For this blog, I’d spend some time using Google trends to see which ones are registering traffic.

Digital Music startups
Check this list: http://musically.com/blog/2008/12/17/200-digital-music-startups-from-2008/
Any of these interest you ? If yes, don’t just vote for this topic… but rather create a “new idea” in this forum with this tool and suggest the one that interests you as a “New idea”… more

Mixcloud player
http://bit.ly/zg4He
I met Mixcloud founder at a Facebook Garage event. He offered some free user account codes.

Jamzee – create a playlist of YouTube videos
Jamzee is a service that allows you to create a playlist of YouTube videos that you can share on other websites like your own blog or MySpace.

How musicians/bands can use twitter … and why
By adding a twitter feed from this blog, I’m now getting views from other followers tweets. Might this work for you?

———————————————————————————-

Reminder, please don’t comment here, but rather use the survey tool to vote or add your topic preferences.

Suggest or vote on future topics

Invites to Hippity to ‘be my friend’

I’m finding that the current viral marketing process that many bands/recording artists use today is to look at other bands/artists MySpace pages and invite their friends to “come check out our music” with a friend invite. My avatar, Hippity, is getting as many friend invites now as the Playlist Power app is getting new users. So now, when I get one of these invites, I accept and send this message:

Try the new app Playlist Power and let your friends do your viral marketing for you.
Install the Playlist Power app.
Share one of your playlists with randomly chosen friends/fans.
Encourage them to do the same.
Your songs just may reach friends of friends (and their friends)

Seriously leveraging MySpace

How to get Britney’s and Jonas Brothers attention?
My first thought for promoting the Playlist Power app is “If I can only get our app noticed by a major artist or even get noticed on a major artist’s fan page, we might get hundreds or thousands of new app users!” How do I do that? Britney and the Jonas brothers have nothing better to do than read all their messages from fans, notice mine, and think “Yeah … that sounds like fun, I’ll add the Playlist Power app and spend the next few hours sending my playlists to friends.” Right. That’s not going to happen. Think. What’s our best draw for a new user? How about that cute “thumbs up” bunny character Geri designed for Playlist Power?

Hippity

(Character design by Geri Wittig)

Hippity MySpace Avatar spokesperson account for the “Playlist Power”
1. Figure out a name for the spokesperson character. Hippity Hopmop.
2. Get a new email account so I can create a MySpace page and separately track Hippity’s message activity.
3. Create Hippity Hopmop’s MySpace account
4. Create profile information so any new friends can learn about the Playlist Power app.
5. Start adding major recording artist’s as friends.
6. Post forum messages.

Please make me a “top friend” !
Ok, so now I have the cute Hippity avatar that … maybe, just maybe … I might get the major artist’s attention. So in my “Friend invitations” I add a few sentences about the Playlist Power app and how “if you add me as a ‘top friend’, your fans can discover how to share their playlists ‘with your songs in them’ with other friends. Viral marketing!
No response. In fact, some artist’s automatically add new friends. That message I added won’t even get read.

Ok, let’s try a label
I add Jive Records as a friend. Jive Records is Britney Spear’s label. Also, Backstreet Boys, Buddy Guy, Jordin Sparks, Justin Timberlake, NSync, Nick Carter, Outkast, Pink, R. Kelly, Usher, “Weird Al” Yankovic, and many other artist’s I’m not familiar with (my musical tastes are a bit more eclectic … definitely not mainstream). It was an “automatic add” as Jive records immediately showed up as a friend. When I tried to send Jive Records a playlist to rate with Playlist Power, I got back a response “Jive Records is either not a friend, currently not accepting messages from apps, blocked this specific app, or does not have HTML enabled for comments. The requested message or comment from this application will not be delivered.”  MySpace shows Jive Records last login is 1/13/2009 (more than a month ago).  They are not checking  messages.
I also attemped to add these record labels and CAA as friends:

  • Virgin Records
  • Sony/BMG
  • Capitol Records
  • Universal Music Group
  • Warner Music Group
  • Creative Artists Agency

One week later, none have accepted my invitation to be a friend.

Noise Pop artists
Changing my strategy to up-and-coming indie artists, I noticed there was a Noise Pop Festival happening in San Francisco. Looking at the lineup, there were links to most of the performing artist’s MySpace pages. It took quite awhile, but I managed to invite most of them to be Hippity’s friend. I was also probably one of the few people to hear 15 of the bands play a song simultaneously by opening each of the MySpace pages in it’s own tab. 15 browser tabs playing music all at once is quite a cacophony of sound. It reminded me of Seattle Artist Bret Marion’s A Spectacle of Concerns Soundtrack (about midway through). But I digress. By the time I finished adding all the Noise Pop artists I found myself distracted from making “marketing progress” with the pleasant diversion of trying to create a playlist with one of each artists songs. Then I tried creating smaller playlists and sending out a few playlists to be rated by my new friends. While I now have many recording artist friends, none of the playlists I sent out with the Playlist Power app returned with a rating. I am however getting invites to be friends from other musicians, so there is something of a viral nature going on here.

How about a real person at a record label?
Maybe I can just get to a real person at a record label? Larry Rudolph is listed as Britney Spear’s friend. OK. With my experience so far, my guess is that no industry heavyweight is going to care to hear my Playlist Power app viral marketing pitch from a MySpace friend invitation. I’ll try a LinkedIn trick I figured out. If the person you want to send a message to is not in your network of contacts, try joining a LinkedIn group they might belong to.  However, a LinkedIn search of Larry Rudolph gave me:

  • Larry Rudolph -VMware & MIT. Researcher
  • Larry Rudolph – VP Business Development at Kuna Foodservice
  • Larry Rudolph – Project Management at US Steel
  • Larry Rudolph – Three Rivers Dental Group

Ok. Let’s stop for a minute and think. Britney Spears has a huge fan base. She has 36721 friends on MySpace. If even 1% of that number “really wanted to meet Britney” or thought they had what it takes to be a star as big as Britney, if I were Larry Rudolph, I’d probably be as far removed from any internet networking database as I could get. If Larry has a LinkedIn account at all, it’s probably under an alias that he only gives to close friends. Something like ‘Rudolph Laurence – Three Rivers Dental Group’ just to be safe. But wait a minute. Maybe joining some LinkedIn groups is not such a bad idea even if I abandon my quest to connect with Larry Rudolph. Some of those LinkedIn groups are pretty big.

Full Disclosure
Before I go further, I must divulge the urgency from which my marketing actions result. One of the prizes of the WeekendApps is from MySpace and it is a week of heavy rotation promotion for two of the applications developed at Weekend Apps (winners to be chosen by MySpace). We figure that sheer uptake from MySpace users may be a considering factor. Our app Playlist Power was 1st to launch and, on day one, had gained an impressive 300 new users in just a few hours. But Fluffy Puffy Cloud Pets was right on our heels. 24 hours after launch, Playlist Power has 1300 users but Fluffy Puffy Cloud is closing fast. I guess its really hard to resist “Showin’ your carin’ side!” by adopting and nurturing a virtual cloud pet. By day 2, that darned Fluffy Puffy Cloud has passed us up. Now you can see why I was determined to find a way to get MySpace users to add our Playlist Power app by the hundreds.

Recently Popular

Result:  Sunday Feb 22 – Playlist Power  is live !

The Playlist Power team is first to have their app go live on MySpace. It now shows up in the app gallery near the top of the “Recently Popular” apps list. Bemmu says that lots of MySpace users sign on and regularly go see what new apps are installed and which ones are being downloaded by other users.  We watch the downloads of Playlist Power grow.  100 users … 200 users … nearly 300 users in the 1st 3 hours.  24 hours later we have 1,300 new users.

This is the beauty of Social Media Marketing.  MySpace listing the application in “new apps” and “recently popular” gives us a good start. Any new user sending a playlist to a friend makes their friend aware of the Playlist Power app.

… and if you’ve gotten this far in the blog without checking out our Playlist Power app, what are you waiting for ! Go for it. Get a new MySpace account or login again if it’s been awhile. Download our app.  Build a music playlist. Use the Playlist Power app to share it with a friend.

Name, Tagline, and Graphic

Name:     Playlist Power

Tagline:  Playlist Power is a cool new way to share and rate playlists with friends!

Small Graphic:

playlistpower_icon_64x64

Not much to say here except that coming up with a good name, tagline and graphic is important.  When users go trolling for apps to check out, this is all they see. I could share the other name possibilities, but why bother. You might remember the wrong name. For a one line description, this tagline Chris came up with pretty much describes it.

Product Development (in a weekend !)

So after the presentations, we started talking about our application concept. Bemmu Sepponen, our only software developer on the team with MySpace app development experience, suggested we do a much simpler app; Friends share their playlist with other friends and get a thumbs up or a thumbs down.  Good. Something that is simple enough to finish in a weekend and has the “share with friends” thing happening.  But what makes it appealing ? We need some cute characters to give a thumbs up or a thumbs down. Geri Wittig, our team’s talented artist/designer came up with some great character sketches which she continued to refine over the course of the weekend. With Bemmu and Alex Yarmula coding into the wee hours of the morning (neither of them left Google that weekend) the goal of completing the app in a weekend was realistic. Carl Heiney and I (Peter Huboi) spent most of the weekend “rediscovering MySpace”, writing taglines, creating and testing playlists, thinking about app ports to Facebook, thinking about viral marketing strategies, and blogging. I wrote a short blog entry entitled Start,Adapt,Do detailing my observations on what it takes to successfully launch a product within the tight schedule constraints of a weekend.

To give you some idea why we followed Bemmu’s sage advice, look how many users he has with with his MySpace app called Coolest Friends !

… and here are some of Geri Wittig’s awesome graphics she created for our Playlist Power app:

playlistpower_profile_banner_350x350 

canvas_banner_940x112

OK, it’s Cute, but is it Viral?

Friday evening started with some excellent speakers before the teams began the application design phase. Dave Westwood was one of the featured speakers that evening. Dave created Buddy Poke, an OpenSocial application with over 30 million downloads.  If you look at Buddy Poke, it has several things going for it. For one, it is delightful and cute, instantly appealing to the MySpace demographic.  A second important feature is that it is social. You can send a virtual hug to a friend. If the friend had never seen Buddy Poke before, the 1st thing they’ll do is install the app and send a hug to one of their friends … and on… and on. Now you see how you get to 30 million users in less than a year. It spreads virally (in a good way).

Challenge (from previous post): Develop a product that will appeal to the target market. We picked our target market, the “Under 25″ demographic.

Action:  Develop something that is cute, fun to use, and that you share with friends.

Target Market Matters

I came to the WeekendApps with a brilliant concept to develop. Other than the fact that my idea was too complex to develop in 48 hours, had we developed my original idea, it would have likely been a flop. Why? My idea appealed to me. It might even appeal to you. So why is this a problem? We were writing an application for MySpace. Think for a minute. Who uses MySpace mostly? Teenagers and young  adults.  My application would appeal to someone probably 30 or older … someone who invests in stocks and mutual funds. 

Challenge: Develop a product that will appeal to the target market.

Update:  Maybe my original idea might have worked after all. If you look at all the apps that are being uploaded, you might think that most of the users are under 25. But I found a comScore stat (from 2006) that says  ”More than Half of MySpace Visitors are Now Age 35 or Older, as the Site’s Demographic Composition Continues to Shift”.  Further questions might be:

  • Of those over 35, how many have acounts that mostly sit dormant?
  • Of those over 35, how many frequently look for new apps to install ?
  • Should our development team consider adding other “thumbs up” and “thumbs down” icons as choices for users to add to a Playlist Power user profile ?

There is a product out there called MyFriendStats that might be useful for a recording artist with thousands or more of friends who want to better understand their fan base demographics. 

If anyone has any MySpace demographics information they’d care to share, feel free to comment.


 

May 2012
M T W T F S S
« Nov    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.