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Today is the big day. Here is your very own PDF copy of my promised e-book, How To Design A Winning And Profitable Music Business, absolutely yours for free. 

Click Here to Open or Download the PDF E-Book 

Copyright: I am the copyright owner of the report, so that means you can’t sell it or steal it. But otherwise, you are welcome to quote from it or share it with others. You can also upload a copy of the document to your own site, as long as you include a link back here and don’t change the content.

*** How You Can Help Spread The E-book ***

If you find this brand new e-book of interest and worthy of attention, please forward the links to your music friends, share it at your blog, share it by twitter and let’s get this information to as many deserved musicians as possible. I really appreciate your support. 

*** Questions & Comments ***

Once you’ve read the e-book, leave all your comments and questions at the end of this blog post. I’ll respond to you here and we can have a really good discussion on any of your points.

 

Popularity: 80% [?]

Popularity: 55% [?]

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Things are getting a bit busy here at Inner Rhythm as we gear up for an exciting few weeks. My posting is going to speed up for two weeks as I’m working to release my latest publication, a brand new e-book entitled How To Design A Winning And Profitable Music Business. Keep reading to find out how you can get it free.

I’ll send out a short preview of the e-book (even though it’s free in its entirety!) so if you’d like it, make sure you’re signed up to my mailing list by entering your name and e-mail address on the right.

Tuesday 9th is the first big day. I’m posting up the link for you to download the e-book that I’ve spent months researching and hours writing, editing, tweaking and polishing. It is about 30+ pages in its entirety.

All this is in the run up to the 2nd big day on Tuesday 16th September when I’m celebrating the re-launch of my much improved, action-packed, content upgraded program, the Musicians Mastermind. No matter whether you’ll be interested in it or not, don’t turn away without soaking up all the free material I am going to share with you.

Already up on the site are two great interviews. One with Patrick Faucher, CEO and co-founder of Nimbit technology, and pianist Grace Nikae who uses social media successfully to share her music, just as the program teaches. Read and soak up both those interviews and leave us your comments and questions.

Before life gets completely busy, I thought I’d let you know my schedule and what you can expect over the next few weeks. You may even want to put the dates in your diary or phone to remember to read the stuff right away.

Monday 1st Sept - Video presentation on Music Business Planning published. 

Thursday 4th Sept - Video presentation on Social Music Marketing published. 

Tuesday 9th Sept - E-book is released. Available for download.

Saturday 13th Sept - Video presentation answering Most Common Questions published. Watch it online.  

Tuesday 16th Sept - Musicians Mastermind re-opens. 

Monday 22nd Sept - Interview with another artist (name TBA) on how she uses social media so successfully.

Bookmark the dates.

 

*** How You Can Join The Party ***

If you find any of the material (videos, e-book, interviews, articles, etc) of interest and worthy of attention, please forward the links to your friends, share it at your blog, share it by twitter and let’s get this information to as many deserved musicians as possible. I really appreciate your support. And if I haven’t earned your support yet, wait till Tuesday 9th. Read the e-book and decide for yourself. I’m sure you’ll really enjoy it. Then send it out to your music friends. 

 

 

Popularity: 44% [?]

side1-1.jpgI’ve presented this workshop many times before in and around London. It’s back again for a new and fresh audience. The title of the event says it all really.

It’s only three hours long, one of my shorter events, so it’s going to be fast-paced, intimate and interactive. Participants have left with pages and pages filled with notes - it’ll probably be the same as well for you. No two events are the same so if you’ve been to this one before, you may want to come again.

Amongst other things, we’ll cover some of the following topics:

  • - The importance of creating your own music business plan with incredible vision
  • - Discover that you are not just a musician, but a music business owner in charge of your results
  • - The importance of getting niched
  • - Understand how to create your music marketing plan and the two crucial steps for successful music promotion
  • - Understanding how to “funnel” your music
  • - How to grow a successful street team around you
  • - How to start locally and then build nationally
  • - Plus much, more more…

Here’s what John Gerighty said. He attended in January this year.

“I found Kavit’s workshop to be most inspiring. He had lots of practical ideas, but also I found that having been there, my motivation had increased immensely. Within six weeks I had more than doubled my previous year’s gigs total for the year. Fantastic!”

Details of the event:

  • Date: Saturday 13th September 2008
  • Time: 2.00 PM - 5.00 PM
  • Location: Exeter Phoenix Centre, Bradninch Place, Gandy St, Exeter, EX4 3LS

Find out more and sign up here.

 

Popularity: 38% [?]

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One of the things that I value in people I meet, work with, do business with and perform with is authenticity. I have been hearing and reading about this in the comments section of some of the blog posts from other musicians too.

In this new age of social media and using tools like Facebook, Twitter, Myspace and others to grow a following, the value of being authentic in your communication with your fans over simply promoting yourself is paramount. It is the difference between being a success in using online communities and being a failure.

It is first useful to understand what authenticity is. As I understand it, authenticity is being real and genuine in the way you communicate. It is about your underlying principles - are you first looking to make and share great music and art, or is money your motivating principle? Usually, the way you communicate is a reflection of that. Authenticity in your communication is like the natural flow of conversation you may have when talking with a best friend.

I believe that my success with Inner Rhythm is down to the authentic communication via my blog, newsletter, products, speaking and even sales messages. It is the same with my use of social media sites Facebook and Twitter. It is how pianist Grace Nikae has been successfully using online communities for her music.

Being authentic in your communication can be challenging if it hasn’t been your normal way of looking at music strategy and promotion. It can bring out our fears in not having enough money or not getting the results we want. Especially the fear of rejection.

What is most important is a compelling clarity in what you’re setting out to achieve. That’s what we look at in the Musicians Mastermind program too. A serious clarity and vision of how you want to design your music career and music business is vital for being confident in authentically creating financial success and personal fulfillment.

Seth Godin recently wrote a post about The Dead Zone of Slick in which he writes about a live duo he heard and because he was inspired by their authenticity and music, he went on to buy their CD. He hated the CD. In his own words, here’s how he describes it:

Faced with the excitement of making a CD and all the knobs and dials, they overproduced the record. They went from being two real guys playing authentic music, live and for free, and became a multi-tracked quartet in search of a professional sound. And they ended up in the dead zone. Not enough gloss to be slick, too much to be real. 

Here are a few points to being more authentic in your music conversations, both online and offline:

1. Write and speak personally. Use I/me rather than we/us. Authentic communication to your e-mail list or Twitter following is about speaking specifically, rather than abstractly. Be aware, however, that life is not about me, me, me.

2. Listen carefully, and respect what is being said. Listen actively. Don’t disrupt others and don’t formulate a response whilst listening.

3. Look and listen for the heart of a person behind his or her words.

4. Laugh - both at your words and other’s words. 

5. Be transparent. There is nothing to hide. When you’re open and transparent, people will come to you more. If you don’t know something, just accept it and let them know. Transparency is key.

Please share your own tips to being more authentic in your communication…

 

Popularity: 45% [?]

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Using the web 2.0 social media tool Twitter, I got to meet a young and talented pianist Grace Nikae whose performances are electrifying audiences and whose music is being welcomed all over the world. There are a lot of musicians like that, but what impressed me most is how she is using the internet and social media to grow her following and build relationships. Here, in an exclusive interview, she tells us how she uses the web tools and how you as an independent musician can and should do the same.

1. Welcome Grace Nikae to Inner Rhythm. I came across your work and particularly how you use social media quite effectively from chrisbrogan.com and wanted to ask you a few questions so my readers, primarily independent artists, can use it quite well. Would you mind starting off sharing a brief background to yourself?

Sure – I’m a concert pianist and I’m very fortunate to do what I love in a career that takes me around the world performing piano recitals, or as a soloist with orchestras, or in chamber music performances with friends and colleagues. Your readers can find out more about my life on my website.

2. How do you define “social media” to an artist who is looking for new ways to connect with their followers?

Basically, social media helps me to engage with fans by connecting me with both people who might not get to hear me play live, and also with music audiences who want to extend the emotional excitement and connection they originally felt from being at a concert. I have also talked extensively about my thoughts on the connection between social media and music on my blog here.

3. Which social media sites do you use in particular and why?

I use different sites for a variety of reasons. I’m on MySpace simply because a lot of my younger fans and classical music students and supporters are on it, and it’s a nice way to engage with them. I use Flickr to share behind the scenes photos from my life and my time on the road. My YouTube channel allows me to share and host videos from concerts and live performances as well as from rehearsals and other behind the scenes footage. My Delicious links allow me to share some interesting stories I find around the web on my blog. And of course, Twitter has become a part of my life…

4. You and I both struck up this interview through twitter messages… probably just 4 or 5 limited to 140 characters each. Not bad. What do you think of Twitter and how do use it as a musician?

Twitter has become a great way for me to effectively share small things that are going on in my life in real time, and has also been a way to connect with fans who want to ask me questions about my life or about classical music. It has been wonderful to interact with them and answer some of their questions through Twitter.

I started out spending a lot of time on Twitter, and getting caught up in the responses from other Twitterers. Nowadays, I use it every couple of days to share news, what’s going on in my life, and interesting links. I also catch up on any replies and answer questions.

5. Can you give a few quick examples of successful experiences you’ve had with social media?

One of the most surprising discoveries that came about from my foray into social media has been meeting so many people who enjoy and like classical music, but are in many ways intimidated and frightened of it. This feeling has led many of them to not attend their local symphony orchestra concert, or to support the classical arts in their community. By connecting with them through social media, answering some of their questions, sharing aspects of my life and my creative process, I hope to bring classical music closer to them. I have also had artists in other creative fields connect with me and say that they realized something about their own work by reading something I wrote. This is really wonderful because it means that social media can also be used as a means of education, and as a means of contributing something to the arts in a way that extends far beyond me. There is a great satisfaction and fulfillment in that.

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8. With social media, musicians today evidently need to create a two-way communication rather than just a one-way conversation. What are your thoughts on this and how do you feel social media has helped you achieve this, if in any way?

Social media can be overwhelming, and once the conversation starts becoming two way, it can become easy to get lost in all of it. I think it’s important to always maintain a balance – the most important thing will always be your music and artistic quality. Social media provides us with tools to reach out to different people, but you shouldn’t be spending all your time on it.

This leads me to the most important idea I would like to stress about social media – it’s not about marketing. I have seen so many people talk about it like it’s some kind of marketing strategy, and it simply is not. Social media is a set of tools that genuinely allows you to connect and share with others about your music and your art.

9. How did your managers, team, and others in your industry help in your implementation of social media?

I was very intent on trying out social media because I enjoy technology and being at my computer, and I wanted to find new ways of staying connected with my audiences who were spread out all over the world. No one in my field had yet tried out what it was that I wanted to do, to the extent that I wanted to do it. It was a bit risky because the classical music field is quite conservative and tradition oriented, and I wasn’t sure how my colleagues and those in the industry would react. After speaking with the people involved with my career, we decided that social media would allow me to be accessible, stay engaged with fans, and really share who I am - this could only be a good thing.

10. You write a blog called Stretching Intervals and I’ve followed it for a very short while. From what I see it’s very personal, about you as an individual and who you are rather than just the music. What are your thoughts on blogging for musicians and could you share some of your thinking behind it?

An interesting question - I feel that my blog is a reflection of my artistic approach and who I am as a performer. I discuss many aspects of my everyday life as a musician and some aspects of my personal life because I believe that who we are as individuals and how we choose to stretch and grow - emotionally, spiritually, mentally – is what colors and deepens our music and our work as artists. My blog has also become a space in which I can challenge myself through the writing medium, and work through some of my thoughts about music, interpretation, an artistic life, etc . It is a lot of work and I often cannot update it as often as I’d like, but I feel that there is something special about communicating through your own written words.

11. That’s all for now - thanks for the time you’ve taken to answer my questions. I’m sure many of the musicians who read this interview now and over the years will find it thoroughly enjoyable and informative.

Thanks Kavit – it was my pleasure.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Please leave your questions, comments and thoughts for both Grace and Kavit. 

Popularity: 67% [?]

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Recently, I had the pleasure of putting 10 questions to co-founder and CEO of Nimbit, Patrick Faucher. For those that don’t know about Nimbit, it is what I believe is one of the best technologies in helping independent musicians manage their careers and use an all-in-one technology service to grow their fans list and make more sales at their site. This interview has some real gems, so get your favorite drink, sit back and read through the entire interview.

1. Patrick, thanks for agreeing to do this interview. So you’re a co-founder of Nimbit. Give us a brief intro into yourself, your music background, Nimbit and what motivated you to start it.

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I’ve been a musician my entire life, as a horn player, arranger, vocalist and sometimes guitarist. I have education in both music and technology and was into computer programming in the early days of the PC, way before the MAC and Windows were around. I graduated from Berklee College of Music in the early 90’s and gigged around professionally, then decided to figure out how to apply technology to the music business and make it easier to make a living at it. I ended up being part of some of the very first e-commerce applications on the Web for people like Aerosmith, Phish and a few others that were pioneering the world of online sales back in the late 90’s.

The concept of Nimbit [New Ideas for Music Business & Internet Technology] came from discussions I had with collegues at the time. We wanted to find a way to make it possible for any emerging artist to manage their content and market themselves more effectively online. So, my friend and Web guru Matt Silbert and I started working on Nimbit in 2002, building out a website and content management system that was easy to use and cheap.

Two years later we met Phil Antoniades who was running another company [Artist Development Associates] that was somewhat similar to CDBaby at the time, but also offered a number of other great services to indie artists. We quickly decided to put the two companies together to form what you see today as Nimbit, a complete marketing, sales and distribution system for artists and labels at every level.

2. Can you talk a little about some of the features Nimbit offers and perhaps share a few tips on how musicians can best make use of the Nimbit?

My favorite topic, not only because I am proud of what we’ve built but because one of our biggest challenges is to get artists to use everything they have available to them on Nimbit. Here are my top 5.

Tip #1 - be sure to put your entire catalog of products up for sale. Nimbit supports the direct sale of cds, t-shirts, downloads, tickets, books, just about anything through our storefronts, so that your fans can get whatever they want.

Tip #2 - put your Nimbit storefront everywhere you are. Our storefronts work on Facebook, Myspace, blogs, fan sites and of course, your official site.

Tip #3 - TELL PEOPLE TO GO AND BUY FROM YOU AT YOUR SITE! I can’t emphasize this enough. If a fan simply finds you on iTunes and buys a track, you will never know who that person is. With a Nimbit storefront, you get ALL the customer contact info, so you can re-market to them the next time you have something to release. Do I even need to mention that you keep more $$ when they buy direct also?

Tip #4 - continually give fans a reason to come back to you online. With today’s technology, there is no reason you have to let fans wait 2 years for new material. It’s a great idea to put up live tracks from the road, unreleased songs or songs in the making, anything that keeps the fans engaged between major releases.

Tip #5 - use your gigs and your fans as the biggest marketing tool you have. Get out there and mobilize your fans, give them incentives and praise. They want to connect to you, so let them. Use our new nimbitCard program to give away promotional tracks in exchange for email and cell phone numbers. Use our store tracking tools to run a contest to see which fan can can sell more of your new album from their own fan blog, using nimbitOMT’s share. Get creative and find other ways to use your fans to help promote and sell.

3. What major changes in the music industry do you see in the next two years?

Certainly more of what is already happening with regard to ongoing fragmentation and volitility at the upper levels of the market and significant expansion of what I call the middle class of artists in the market. While it is arguably just as hard to rise above the noise as an indie musician today as it ever was, making a solid living as an artist is more acheivable than ever today because of exposure to fans through various venues online and offline coupled with access to distribution and sales platforms such as Nimbit.

4. What are you top three success traits in independent musicians?

Perseverance, dedication to your craft, and ability to understand and manage the business aspects of your career.

5. What do you believe is the number 1 reason why many musicians fail?

They are unrealistic in their expectations and the amount of effort it takes to win.

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Patrick, I asked my readers to share some questions that they would ask you and I didn’t want to throw them at you so I picked my top five and here they are.

6. Question from Steve Pasek: Is it still worthwhile for an independent artist to try to get retail distribution, and if so, what is the best way to go about it, and the best practices for billing to make sure you get paid?

It’s really not worth it for an independent artist to try to get retail distribution. There is simply less shelf space and more competition for that space so an artist must “pay” to get a position and must move significant numbers in order to break even on the initial distribution expense. In the end, that money would be better put to use promoting the release. If you are going to sell direct to small stores, sell outright for a low wholesale price instead of putting product up for consignment. You are better off getting $4 a disc in hand than having to track down payment in the future. Other than significant airplay, as in charting for a while, there is no reason to go after a bricks and mortar distribution channel.

7. Question from Clebo: I am comparing Nimbit and Catapult distribution. With Catapult 91-95% of all proceeds go to the artist, and they distribute your music to over 60 music stores. They charge a simple $25 fee for a album set up and no monthly fee. Tell me why the nimbit retail packages would be better for the independent musician who merely wants some way to sell and distribute their music.

91-95% of what? My guess is that is of the amount of money that the distributor will pay you. So a with $.99 download at iTunes, iTunes pays the distributor $.69, you get 95%, so you get $.65. With nimbit you get $.80 for your $.99 download but more importantly you get the customer information. My next question would be how many sales actually come from the 59 other stores that aren’t iTunes? We don’t see a huge value in putting undiscovered artists into 60 stores where they will remain undiscovered. Moreover, will you know who buys your music? Our focus really is on getting the artist out selling direct to their current fans and expanding from there. We aren’t against broad distribution but be sure to sell direct as much as possible so you know who bought what from you! We see iTunes and a couple others as necessary places to be for fans that opt to purchase at those outlets, but our real value lies in all the direct-to-fan sales and marketing tools we offer, which is not what Catapult does.

8. Question from Brenda: Apart from retail placement with other digital retailers (eg. iTunes), how are current nimbit artists making the most money using the nimbit OMT? In other words, where/how are successful sellers placing the nimbit OMT, and what kind of marketing are they doing with it, to get the most sales?

We see most of the nimbitOMT sales coming from people who have done a good job marketing from their Myspace page and using the OMT. We’ve helped over a hundred artists makeover their Myspace with an OMT and seen great results. For an example you can check out a band called The Mile After at www.myspace.com/themileafter Other sucessful artists are using their official site to sell, using nimbitSkin and those sites tend to have higher sales than those artists just selling from Myspace.

9. Question from Jon: Searching for music to buy online (retailers, myspace, etc.) can be time consuming and inefficient. A person could spend hours sifting through music at any given site, then decide to just “buy what’s popular” in the way of major label artists. How can an independent artist proactively increase their potential to be found with such large databases of music?

Your best bet is to think small and viral. 40+% of music recommendations are coming from blogs. You need to find your niche market. You need to nurture your fanbase to spread the word. Submit your music to be reviewed at any site that will have you. The more pages that show up with your reviews, the faster you fly up the search engine rankings.

10. Question from Pat: CDBaby is by far the oldest and I believe the best in the market for online distribution of independent music. As someone who uses CDBaby, I’d like to know your opinion on CDBaby, and what Nimbit offers me that CDBaby cannot?

First of all, I have a tremendous amount of admiration and respect for Derek and what CDbaby has done to push the evolution of this industry. I like to consider Nimbit as the next step in that evolution. One key differentiation is that with Nimbit, the artist can sell virtually ANY type of product from any website, all with the same storefront solution that gets managed within the Nimbit dashboard. For example, you can sell an MP3 with a T-shirt or an eTicket with an album, etc. This opens up a number of marketing and bundling opportunities for the artists catalog. Also, we are rolling out integrated marketing programs such as nimbitCards, that fans can redeem for music directly in the artists storefront on their website, driving more traffic and sales directly to the artist. It’s all about driving the fans to the artist and engaging them with compelling offers and a great buying experience. With Nimbit you can do that very seamlessly, quickly, for very little money which is something you won’t find anywhere else.

11. Any final thoughts or messages, Patrick?

If you have talent, know-how and determination, there is no reason you can’t be sucessful in this day and age. All the opportunities are there. Go. Create. Prosper.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Please leave your questions, comments and thoughts for both Patrick and Kavit.

Popularity: 76% [?]

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I spent most of my time last week writing up my new report. It’s going to be titled along the lines of this: “How To Design A Winning And Profitable Music Business” and its one of the best pieces of work I’ve ever produced. (I’m releasing it in the first week of September and it’s only for e-mail subscribers). It’s going to blow you away and fill up any of the gaps that my first report left behind. Best of all to you, it’s going to be free.

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A profitable music business is a winning music business. A successful music business needs to be well planned - it needs to have a good operations, marketing and finance plan. Let’s look at each in brief:-

A good operations plan will show what your music business will do to generate revenue - daily, weekly, monthly small gigs, conference and festival gigs, recording and distribution, workshops, teaching, etc. It will also detail your ideal way of operating your music business - will you have an office or will you outsource? It will also answer who you want to have on your music business team - your PR, your booking agent, your online community manager, etc

A good marketing plan is required to show how you get exposure for your music, your gigs and your launch. You should strategize for your online marketing efforts as well as what you will do offline.

A finance plan is all about creating a budget of what you spend and what you’ll make. Without a budget, any decisions made are risky. A good budget lets you see your business on paper so you can take calculated risks and no when to expand or employ staff or interns. My accountant often tells me that the success of my business is equal to how well I can understand the numbers on my cash flow sheet. He is right and I pass this advice on to you.

Although these are three main areas you must plan and execute to have a good music business, the foundation to all of this is having good music. Without good music and hooks, you probably won’t be anywhere near to a profitable music business.

A profitable music business also needs to have a good leader - someone who has a vision, direction and the passion and motivation to move forward and drive a team. A good leader in an independent music career is usually the musician him or herself - the musopreneur. 

A musopreneur is simply a music business owner - someone who is in charge of their business and leads the decisions and strategy planning. A music business owner thinks and acts like an entrepreneur. He or she sizes up opportunities when they arise and makes a decision as to whether or not they will be taken on based on how they align with the overall music business strategy.

A profitable music business also needs to know how it is different from the rest. What are the strengths of your music business and what are your weaknesses? What is your niche? What makes you stand out amongst the crowd and what will make people remember you? You’ll need to know and promote what makes you unique from others who do similar work.

Having a winning and profitable music business is testimony to how well you can get ordinary people who love music to love your music. Read that sentence again. There are millions of artists and billions of tracks out there - how does yours hook and retain the attention of your listener and what will you do to aid this process? Once you have raving fans, then word spreads because people like to share things they love with others.

This article is far from complete because as we all continue to learn and grow, we’ll continue to understand the elements that make a business profitable. I want to know your thoughts.

Please share what you feel makes a music business profitable. 

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As you’re reading this, I’m celebrating my partner Rupa’s birthday with her on a short trip to Barcelona. Follow us on Twitter. I’ll respond to all comments on this blog when I get back in 4 days.

Popularity: 49% [?]


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