Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Video Revenue - monetizing video and youtube promotion

And so here I am getting excited about advertising revenue from blogging and your site - you probably might still be a little skeptical about what my now $1 p/day earnings represent in the future, but then I'd forgotten all about revver and the ad supported video situation!

Youtube has begun offering in video adsense advertising and adsense offers video enabled ads so the crawl towards monetization is definitely on!

What I read into this piece for musicians is as I said! HUNDREDS OF REVENUE STREAMS!!!! You may only be making a few bucks a day off your blog, a few off your videos, selling a few downloads, selling a few CD's, collecting royalties but it all will start to add up.

ALSO I hope I get round to posting an update on our youtube promotion because I feel like we're really starting to make progress here finally!!! So check out our digital artist services if you're interested in video promotion, video promotion starts @ $US200p/month.

If you're serious about youtube promotion, video promotion, marketing your videos, and preparing for a new era where all producers of online video content will get paid - all that kind of thing, get in touch with us @ Kurb!!!
Check this out from Silicon Valley Insider:



Online video company Revver announced that it has paid $1 million in revenue share to video producers over the past year. With the help of a calculator and some additional reporting from NewTeeVee, can learn a lot from this nugget. Would-be online video producers, listen up.

NewTeeVee calculates that this payout translates to approximately $40 per REVVER producer per year, which obviously means that a handful make some money and most make nothing. One well-paid producer says he is making $1,000 to $3,000 a month. The highest paid Revver producer is reportedly EepyBird, which has "earned over $50,000 to date for the nearly 11 million views garnered by the Extreme Diet Coke & Mentos Experiments clip."

Unfortunately, after the splits, the [half a cent per view] is still far below the level needed to sustain life at most online video production shops (you could probably make more money writing short stories). So don't quit the day job just yet.




Kurb is a media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital music promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online.

Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally

All the best with your project, from KurbFor direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromoDIGITAL COACHING AND ONLINE MANAGEMENT STARTS @ $NZ250

online music promotion activity update

Okay got a bunch of blogs coming up, particularly continuing to address practical online promotion activity as I felt in responding to my clients questions there was an opportunity to get back to some basic stuff on my blog for those keen to learn and not get too ahead of myself!


lets start off with some quick titbits:


- Google PR update


- Kurb homesite shifts hosts; years of work undone: How badly will changing hosts effect my search rankings???


- Ad supported revenue rampage produces results!!!! Have already jumped to earning over $US1 a day only days after the rampage!


- Ad words is tu meke (That’s “Too Much” in Maori) had to SUSPEND my adwords campaign due to unsustainable demand on my services causing me to reflect when it’s right for artists to start using the power of adwords


The internet marketing and blogging world is going frantic as googles Page Rank system updates today which they do every 2-3 months/ Remember Page Rank isn’t directly related to your search rank, but an indicator of how much authority your site passes on to others – which determines your search rank.


That’s why having my sites and blogs rank highly is important for me passing on that authority when linking to my clients and other partners in my work.


No shift on my wordpress blog which is at a reasonably healthy PR4, or any of my dozens of satellite blogs that im cultivating for the purpose of long tail ad supported earnings but my blogspot blog did jump from PR2 to PR3.


But the killer for me was discovering this morning that the whole kurb website has been moved to another host by my guy who helps me out with the tech side of things and despite the update the whole of the kurb site . . .


IS BACK AT SQUARE 1!!!!! PAGE RANK ZERO!!!!!


So whats the take away?


A lot of the kurb home sites influence comes from the fact that I’ve been working on it for YEARS, before myspace, before I even started Kurb as a business, when I launched it as an e-zine as part of the record label I was running back in 2004.


4 years online is a really important reason why the kurb site is influential and thats why I suggest in online promotion, dont obsess over it, just get started, because it may be a long way down the line before you see the benefits. 


BUT this is why it is so important to set your website up for long term sustainability and accessability and don’t cut corners. This thing could be your bread and butter for 20 years or more!


It will be interesting to see how this effects traffic to my business! I am getting my own hosting set up straight away through http://hostgator.com just so I’ve got options.


I’ve made my website my biggest asset by slowly building, optimizing and turning it into a place where a chain of events gets put into place that ends with me making revenue. And I do!


Following the ad supported rampage last weekend where I added adsense as well as amazon associates to all my little blog projects as well as my website my blogging income has LEAPT up to over $US1 p/day!!!! My goal of having each blog earning a $1 p/day by next year might not be that far off!

And GET THIS, I have actually had to pull the plug on my adwords campaign because my $40 p/week budget was just getting more business than I could cope with.

Now adwords - googles ad platform, you see those damn little ads on myspace, everywhere - for musicians deserves a whole blogpost but the points I wanted to make is that i've been using adsense on my site for months on a website I knew already "worked" - people were emailing me, calling me, so I knew that what I had created was compelling enough for people to act.


More people visit, more people are compelled, more people act. Thats why adwords advertising is something a musician should definitely think about using but only once their website reaches that point that it is converting - people are signing up to the mailing list, people are downloading songs and engaging in ways that can be monetized either immediately or eventually.

In theory the kind of customisation and targeting delivered by Google represents a new paradigm in advertising which is an opportunity for all content creators to both grow their audience and create revenue from it. But this stuff - the highly nuanced targeting, the development of ad text, following a few marketing basics -y'know this is stuff that I've got a pretty good grasp on and I suggest this is another reason why an act might look at getting on a online promotion and digital coaching packages from kurb. if you've got the budget combined with marketing skills and experience in this area, - and of course a killer propostion - this method can be staggeringly effective.



Kurb is a media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital music promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online.


Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally 


And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster services.Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians. 


 

All the best with your project, from KurbFor direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromoDIGITAL COACHING AND ONLINE MANAGEMENT STARTS @ $NZ250

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Ad supported music revenue rampage: Amazon associates etc.

Interested in making money off your music or other digital content? Kurb provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster services.


I WAS waiting to post about a bunch of stuff thats going on including youtube promotion and stuff but coming off the back of my big time $10 Adsense earnings this month as a blogger I've just embarked on an ad supported revenue rampage. I'm sure me being proud as punch of my $10 raised a few sniggers of indifference but now I've got my foot in the door I'm going for the jugular!

I earnt this money doing nothing other than what I'd do otherwise. Write on my blog. I'm wading into this big time to help musicians and other content creators get paid for what they do.

It's a brave new world.

Monetizing free content people. That's the name of the game. No money changes hands between you and your fan base theres no hard sell because theres no sale! Attention is the value that artists and creators offer advertisers.

So my first effort in ramping up my ad supported revenue earnings as well as knowledge and experience was taking the next step - into affiliate marketing, and signing up as an Amazon associate, so I can run their ads on my sites and blogs, and if any one clicks through the ad and amazon makes a sale I get 10% as commission!

you can check out my ad units here:

http://kurbpromotion.blogspot.com/

http://www.kurb.co.nz/

Now this code is 3rd party javascript which a lot of sites like myspace won't allow, not only because its easy to slip in something nasty but also the last thing myspace wants is YOU making advertising revenue of their site, because their site is designed for them to make revenue off you!!!!

And so similarly now AGAIN we're having a problem on wordpress!!!! Blogger is an immensely popular, useful and basic platform which allows pretty straightforward integration of this advertising stuff but all the action is on wordpress!

What's to be done? What I've done for myself and most of my clients is signed up for a free wordpress blog, when what I really need to do now is learn the free wordpress software platform and the technicalities of maintaining wordpress blogs myself because by using the software platform instead of the free online platform it allows you acces to a endless host of awesome free designs and plug in applications - just like facebook - yknow - that will allow you to add all kinds of functions to your wordpress and all importantly java boxes for us to ram full of ads!!!! arhahaha

Okay so back to these ad units.

Google serve thier ads based on relevancy to the content on your page and the demographics of the person viewing the ads it's all very clever, I guess it's why they're the biggest generators of ad revenue in the world - theyre very good at it, and of course they have all the data.

We have to recognise the expanding role that such data will play in connecting users and consumers with content and products. Yes big brother is watching. But he's really only interested in selling you something.

So like Google, Amazon offers a whole range of ad unit options and I chose the "Omakase" unit because it runs on the same premise of responding to the content and the user in selecting which products to display, and also like Google, you have to cross a $100 threshold before you get your first cheque, so if you're starting from scratch thats a good 6 months away as they only pay directly on $10 threshold to US based partners.

This was the point I started rampaging and adding google adsense and amazon associates to every blog and decided with the Kurb site doing so well as a result of my SEO work, it was time to tool that up too.

You see it's important to build and mainatain your relationship with your "true fans" over time but for every true fan - especially if I do my job well - theres going to 10 or maybe a lot more people who are only passing through or who are casual fans, who are not there to make any kind of investment in what you're doing, and if while they're checking you out there's an opportunity to make 20c, I'd suggest thats opportunity, because its only a matter of perserverance over time before thats happening 100 times a day.

That way the work I do, and other promotion spends you employ to promote your website - such as adwords for example which has become a marketing staple here at kurb - not only builds your exposure and brand, not only gives you the opportunity to connect with those few rare fans who will support you directly by purchasing your music and other related products and services, but allows you to recoup from less accurately targeted traffic who click away through ads.

Now Google is what I'll be using on my website because theyre excellent at connecting your traffic with little ads just for them, but for Amazon, and Ebay which also has a similar program which I will be checking out - to make you money its about connecting your audience with stuff theyre actually likely to want to fork out for and in the future I think smart bands working with smart people (like me! haha) are going to be able to put together offers featuring the kind of products (I mean just imagine anything on ebay) that the kind of people who love your music are just going to be snapping up!!!!



Andrew Dubber from new music strategies has just gone and opened his own online music store - why wouldn't it be an excellent idea for you to sell other music from your site and recieve a commission? THEN what you're actually doing is creating value as an OPINION LEADER!!!!

This is basically ad supported revenue madness!!!! Let's crank that content people, lets get thos platforms rockin' and lets monetize!!!

Now that we're stepping up the ad supported revenue onslaught delvinging into the affiliate game, you gotta realise theres still much more to come! Learning about CPM and CPA adds, lets not forget about paid leads like myfuncards that I discussed earlier that could be used to seriously leverage a committed fanbase into a decent earn.

I still don't know what a chitika minimall is nor have I checked out clickbank but once you can show decent data for the traffic on your site (100+ unique visitors per day) even more options become available from using more specialised and high reward programmes like and even selling advertising space on your site or blog to a locla business or auctioning it online!!!

Okay. I'm excited. I'm not saying cover your sites and blogs in huge ugly ads so they look cheap and nasty. I'm not saying ad supported revenue will create a windfall.

But for musicians who are willing to persevere with creating regular consistent content it might just be a lot more rewarding and a lot less painless than pushing those little plastic discs or hauling your show around every watering hole that will take you.


AD SUPPORTED MUSIC REVENUE IS SO HOT RIGHT NOW!!!

For more, check out Marc Cohen's Ad supported music central:

The Ad-Supported Music Central blog provides news, analysis and opinion about the market for free, listener selected, recorded music that is supported by advertisers. The blog is written by Marc Cohen, founder of Lirix, Inc., www.lirix.net, the developer of on-device dynamic ad insertion and a pioneer in the field of advertising supported music.

He JUST blogs about ad supported music. His bag is more about integrating and including advertising into the download of digital products such as mp3's but i'm telling you, it just shows the scope of this new paradigm!!!




Kurb is a media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital music promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online.

Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally

And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including
CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster services.Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians.

All the best with your project, from KurbFor direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromoDIGITAL COACHING AND ONLINE MANAGEMENT STARTS @ $NZ250

Friday, April 25, 2008

spampaign ads, no biggie

Keep your blog fresh ya'll!!! Nothing to see here but a couple of posts from our new spampaign in NZ/Australia.

Like Seth Godin says . . . better to "start a conversation" as they say in web 2.0 marketing and make connections now then to wait til I really need them!!!!

I think there's something empowering about using your marketing to NOT scream "PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE GIVE ME YOUR MONEY"

NEW ZEALAND TARGETED COMMENT

Hey Y’know Digital Promotion helps the environment AND the economy?

Promoting, selling and creating new revenue streams online requires no manufacturing process, and without physical shipment, creates no “carbon footprint”.

As a musician, digital products and services give you access to a global market, and the value that is created comes back to our local economy. Now you don’t need to have industry contacts - build connections directly with fans worldwide.

We’re encouraging New Zealand musicians to get out there, get online, and take their creativity to the world. Develop content on your own websites, develop your blog, develop and expand new ways to connect and create opportunities online.

The future for creative New Zealanders is just around the corner. Make sure you’re up to date with the latest online promo news and tips by subscribing to our digital music promotion blog here on myspace

or Check out our official digital music promotion blog and subscribe by RSS

New zealand digital and web 2.0 marketing services
Kurb online music artist promotion services
cheapest nz cd/dvd services
cheapest nz posters – free delivery

kurbpromo@gmail.com

AUSTRALIAN TARGETED MESSAGE

Hey just letting all the musicians on our list know whats going on with Kurb Music Promotion!

Interested in how the music industry is changing and learning how to create income online from your music? Then subscribe to our blog to be updated everytime we post!

Either here on myspace http://blog.myspace.com/kurbpromo

Or use RSS on our official blog http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.com

Digital promotion and commerce helps the environment AND the local economy.

Promoting, selling and creating new revenue streams online requires no manufacturing process, and without physical shipment, creates no “carbon footprint”. But as a musician, digital products and services give you access to a global market, and the value that is created comes back to your local economy. Now you don’t need to have industry contacts - build connections directly with fans worldwide.

A time when musicians will generate more opportunities and earn more revenue from downloads, advertising and partnerships online than from CD sales is approaching and Kurb is leading the way forward.

Our readers know that new opportunities, techniques and connections being made in new music media and behind the scenes, are changing how artists earn money now and in the near future.

On top of offering free advice on our blogs, we also offer online promotion services supporting musicians one on one with essential basic tools and strategies for the digital era starting at $200 p/month or $500 for a 3 month campaign and we also offer CD duplication and poster printing services alongside.

As a special offer we will be giving away 1000 CD’s and promoting heavily as a free download a CD project featuring bands we work with. Sign up now for a digital promotion package and you will automatically have a song included in this cd.

Thanks for your time, all the best with your music and please get me at kurbpromo@gmail.com

Please check out our site for more info and heaps more features and articles on online promotion.

http://www.myspace.com/kurbpromo
http://blog.myspace.com/kurbpromo
http://www.kurb.co.nz
http://nz.youtube.com/user/kurbpromo

Thursday, April 24, 2008

online band / music / artist marketing and promotion diary April 08

Kurb provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster services.


I guess less time sitting around scratching my head means more time to talk about practical, hands on online promotion strategies rather than selling the idea.


But the first thing I most stoked to announce is that I am earning almost $10 a month from blogging now, unfortunately you have to earn $100 before you get paid so could be waiting awhile.

But I am stoked because it proves that ad supported revenue – which as it turns out I happen to be a firm advocate of – does have potential because I know that what I have done now is only a fraction of what is possible because ad supported revenue will scale vertically as well as horizontally


Meaning: Not only will individual income streams grow, but further income platforms related to content provided will be possible. A dozen platforms combining to create 30c a day now can be scaled long term to 100 platforms combining to create hundreds of dollars a day.

Why am I obsessed with ad supported revenue?

Not only because it is a “make money while you sleep” strategy as praised by Derek sivers recently . . .

But because it’s future proof. Whatever happens to the recorded/digital music industry in the next 5-10 years, ad supported strategies worked by the individual content generator will be able to be worked outside the infrastructure of the industry.


You don’t need to be signed to a label or any other aggregator, with ad supported revenue being developed on your site and your blog its not Myspace or Apple or anybody else calling the shots.



So with the influx of clients I haven’t quite got to the point of informing anyone they will have to join a waiting list BUT I am being picky – I’m going to be more inclined to want to work with Auckland artists, New Zealand artists, more committed artists, more experienced artists and artists prepared to commit to working with me for at least 3 months.

I’m more interested in results now than turnover.

Most of the clients have their myspace pages being promoted with targeted campaigns, and we have established 2 supplementary blogs for each artist to start building content there that will bring in search authority and traffic.

Whereas I will use sites such as Craigslist.com and Squidoo.com for SEO authority, Reverbnation.com on the other hand has tools and a vibe about it which I see as being practically useful, with revenue sharing in place.




Squidoo also has revenue sharing platforms, but the thing about social and web 2.0 marketing is you must use the double movement. Not only are you building backlinks to create search authority but you’re using content to emphasise your unique selling point.

This is where I usually get to on myspace: We’re carrying out the promotion systematically but to create a real point of engagement we need to create a concept around a unique selling point or proposition.


Will it be a free download, will it be a competition, what is the motivation for the fan to interact or sign up for the mailing list, etc.?

I have also established .info domain names for each client as we expand their online presence. I discovered a domain name forwarding to your myspace will bring your myspace up in a localised search, and a myspace page is going to blow the arse off most NZ served pages in terms of authority.

But another reason for the .info thing is the real issues I have with web designers!!! Whether my clients come to me with a website built and functioning or not, the task im attempting to carry out is to tweak the site, or the myspace page etc. slowly over time to bring visitors to the site/page and then compelling them to take actions that are ultimately leading to financial gain by the artist.

If it’s a nightmare to make these tweaks you will never bring your site to the point I have got to with
http://www.kurb.co.nz where every day the beast is slowly evolving, bringing visitors closer to exactly where I want them, and closer to creating more reward from less effort on my part.

That’s where I came up with the idea of Kurb Music – not a label, but a platform where I can freely develop search, social and revenue functions for my client base as a whole without the obstruction and complications of addressing individual clients


I’ll be looking at the way unique selling points and propositions deployed in targeted marketing campaigns can help promote the content on this platform, and how this platform can be expanded.

Right now it’s a way to contribute value to my clients as well as working towards a personal goal – a bottom up approach to implementing my business plan for the choice as NZ music portal


Yes, Kurb Music is another one of those “Matt Ideas” like kurb 50/50 or plasticast. The point is not whether the project functions practically, it is that an innovative concept has a complete model and is ready to be developed and tested under the right circumstances.



On my site, search returns continue to surge, all that SEO work is paying off and google searches are accounting for 75% of my traffic.All that really means is all the traffic I’ve lost from myspace over the last 6 months is probably now being made up for.


The issue im trying to face right now is the seinfeld issue. Either you see watch Seinfeld on TV for free or you fly to Vegas and catch him at US$200 a ticket.

Seinfeld has no mid range option.

With me either you read my blog for free or you pay me US$200 a month to help you. Kurb Music is something I’m trying to develop as a mid range promotions product of $10-20 p/week value.

What Trent Reznor did by offering so many different variables and products on his last release was create value at so many different levels for his fanbase.

By creating everything from a blog with a few google ads to DVD’s packed with multimedia content, that’s what Kurb is trying to do for artists.


Here’s an interesting link covering all the social music services.


http://www.social-music.info/


You know how I feel, DON’T waste your time signing up for every music service under the sun.

HOWEVER there is definitely a thread running through the internet marketing community right now that suggests that we shouldn’t be afraid of a little hard work.


Web 2.0 is different. It’s a vast network without the dead ends of Web 1.0, it doesn’t matter where you start as long as make a start!

Also my habit of focusing on my blogging only one day a week has produced some weird results - I’ve seen something similar before having 500+ visitors to my myspace blog alone in the course of a day or two after a series of posts.

Frustratingly, because its myspace and theres no detailed stats, I have no idea where these people are coming from or how they found my blog!!!! I only have 30 odd subscribers so . . . and it’s not like it generated a whole lot of leads – 500 visitors to the kurb home site would definitely turn out several leads.





Kurb is a media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital music promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online.


Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster services.



Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians.



http://www.kurb.co.nz/
http://www.myspace.com/kurbpromo
http://www.youtube.com/user/kurbpromo -
http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.com/
http://kurbpromotion.blogspot.com/
http://www.squidoo.com/kurb

All the best with your project, from
Kurb
For direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromo


DIGITAL COACHING AND ONLINE MANAGEMENT STARTS @ $NZ250 P/MONTH P/ACT




Business plan for the ultimate new zealand online music industry portal (extensive post)

Hi and welcome to my business plan for the ultimate local - in this case New Zealand - online music portal!!! I slaved over this over new years and I was uncharacteristically anal in wanting to keep this under wraps worried about people stealing my ideas. Well Good Luck getting it to happen without me, I say! Also publishing it on my blog does give credibility to claim it as my intellectual property.

In the past I've been very worried about local market competition for kurb but that hasn't seemed to materialise yet either. What is more important is that the ideas are out there and the possibility for opportunities, networking, and innovation exist around a positive concept.

If other innovators and entrepreneurs can engage with the ideas here or my skills personally, or both, that could lead to an equally exciting outcome.

But most importantly, readers, I am posting this simply for the rich keyword content.

Yes, I'm interested in meeting people with between 20-50k $NZ to put into this project which I feel requires a budget of between 50-100k to launch successfully. Believe it or not, there has been some initial interest but I ended up saying I didn't want to try and make it work for 20k, I wanted to know that it would work with 50k.


Lets reflect on this with some do's and don'ts of tech start ups:

Don’t wait for a revolutionary idea. It will never happen. Just focus on a simple, exciting, empty space and execute as fast as possible

Share your idea. The more you share, the more you get advice and the more you learn. Meet and talk to your competitors.

Build a community. Use blogging and social software to make sure people hear about you.

Listen to your community. Answer questions and build your product with their feedback.

Gather a great team. Select those with very different skills from you. Look for people who are better than you.

Be the first to recognise a problem. Everyone makes mistakes. Address the issue in public, learn about and correct it.

Don’t spend time on market research. Launch test versions as early as possible. Keep improving the product in the open.

Don’t obsess over spreadsheet business plans. They are not going to turn out as you predict, in any case.

Don’t plan a big marketing effort. It’s much more important and powerful that your community loves the product.

Don’t focus on getting rich. Focus on your users. Money is a consequence of success, not a goal



CHOICE AS BUSINESS PLAN

By Matt Turner. Copyright 2007. DEFINITELY Don't steal without asking or I will be MAD!!!



choice.as

So what is Choice.as? Choice.as is as much Choice.as you like.

Choice.as is a new concept in online entertainment delivery, marketing and merchandising platforms designed specifically to engage the New Zealand market, and expand then to showcase it worldwide.

The aim of Choice.as is to create a fully functioning online environment designed to monetize New Zealand entertainment content delivery, social networking online and third party commerce through:

1) Retail of digital content
2) Artist and creative / marketing and networking services
3) Advertising revenue and platforms for related business services
4) Artist generated merchandise - manufacture and retail
5) User generated merchandise - manufacture and retail +
6) User generated repackaging of digital content = user generated commerce
7) Licensing/synching of digital content

The proposal presents the Choice.as online community developing and expanding new revenue streams enabled by access to improving third party applications. Choice.as will follow a steady programme of incremental developments to the sites functions, features and uses as set out.

The end outcome is a website that functions as a marketplace for digital content, entertainment services and skills, providing comprehensive support systems and tools for creative entrepreneurs, building social functions and community around retail content, user content, shared content - both licensed and fair use.

In theory revenue would not only come from "rent" of digital space to those receiving commercial frontage and "fees" on services, but "commission" on all sales through the site and it's widgets, and "advertising" revenue from the communication of commercial messages through the site to users.

Borrowing elements from the ill fated Burnlounge and merchandisers such as cafépress or lulu.com, the goal is to eventually create fully functioning third party retail and monetized usage driven and shared by fans and users themselves.

Widgets and other third party technology used to gather and aggregate data on a local level will eventually create new possibilities for rendering creative projects - such as event management - profitable and manageable by content providers and then entrepreneurial users themselves. The theory being that the technical possibilities governing the growth and access to communication, information and applications could replace most commonly essential mechanisms of the entertainment content and performance industry over the next five to ten years.

Grounding the Choice As concept and commerce systems in the NZ environment will allow the team to be uniquely responsive to the functioning of systems and commerce for the locally based content providers, service providers, advertisers and users.


BACKGROUND

The Choice.As business plan is designed to be responsive to anticipated growth, developments and dramatic changes already foreshadowed in both the online social media sphere and business models for the music industry - and eventually introducing new concepts in third party / user generated commerce.

Social networking

Social networking is a modern phenomenon which has foreshadowed the swing from media generated entertainment to user generated media.

No site will ever dominate like myspace did, but as users take their myspace experience to what will be increasingly niche networks - a fundamental divide has already opened up between Myspace's competitors - Bebo being a predominantly teen social site and Facebook for more sophisticated social networkers - it is expected that social networking will continue to grow cumulatively as a social and media experience, but into ever more specialized niche-driven communities.

But neither of the two big newcomers has attempted to address the needs of artists and primary content creators, which in many ways, drove the expansion of myspace by having acts at all levels actively recruiting their fans to the site in for what for some was the first attempt to actively manage a growing fanbase. This is a cornerstone technique to be applied in building Choice.as.

Music Industry

The music industry is in such turmoil, that musicians and what's left of their label/management will increasingly look to the internet to provide solutions to the problems faced in monetizing emerging artists - there will no longer be infrastructure provided by labels to break new acts and the old chart topping hype won't be the same.

This is why Choice.as will look not only to monetize by providing services for artists to manage their own development, but look to become part of a new wave of digital content distributors and the first to deliver a forward looking new proposition to New Zealand - blanket access to download unlimited high quality digital content off the choice.as site for a limited duration for one set fee.

It's important to recognise that the external speed with which this transition unfolds in the global music industry will to some extent set the pace for the release and pricing of most subscription features - when it is quite plausible to conceive that within 5 years music will have become "feels like free" just "like water". I believe the big labels will respond soon by beginning to shift their business models and putting pressure on the "per unit" model.

The choice.as model allows for artists to make use of and develop the revenue models they are most happy with through the site. Initially, an Itunes/Amplifier style retail operation will give way to additional ad supported downloads, which will then give way to premium access and subscription, and finally user generated commerce.

Eventually, Choice.As will possess the group bargaining power of a big label to negotiate with media services - Internet and mobile providers to provide "feels like free" access packages.

Choice.as very much draws a line from here to there. In terms of what consumers of digital content are likely to come to expect.


THE CHOICE.AS BRAND NICHE

The Choice.as brand niche will be committed to 100% New Zealand content. As a social network, it relates directly to users networking around their involvement and enjoyment in NZ music and local crossover industries. By the time the user generated commerce concept is in full swing, it will represent a whole new concept in user participation in the entertainment industry.

In terms of the content allowed, there will be no strict enforcement of what constitutes a "New Zealand" band, as long as they meet the requirement of providing a NZ bank account from which to accept their funds. Once social networking is functioning for an increasing base of local users, the site would be opened up for international users to purchase digital products and services as well as participating with social and later, user generated commerce features.

The emphasis will remain that the sites content is solely of, about or related to local NZ acts, themes, interest or information.

Initially Choice As will be essentially a platform for NZ artists to present and retail digital content, then expanding to social networking and ad supported revenue community, then introducing premium artist services and subscription based premium access for users and content providers, and then commerce tools to enable premium users to repackage, market and resell.

As utilizing bands to activate their fanbases and contact lists to build presence on the site is a major part of the marketing strategy, the emphasis on continuing to develop community resources, tools and special offers available to artists will be strong.

TIMELINE

3-6 Months - DIGITAL RETAIL (EG AMPLIFIER) / COMMERCE PLATFORM (EG SNOCAP)

6-9 months - SUBSIDISED ARTIST SERVICES (EG KURB DISCOUNTS) / ARTIST RESOURCES + TOOLS (EG UNSIGNED BAND PROMOTION / NZ MUSIC DIRECTORY) ARTIST COMMUNITY / MAGAZINE (EG NZMUSIC / NZMUSICIAN) GIG GUIDE FEED (EG MUKUNA)

9 -15 months - SOCIAL CAPABILITIES (EG MYSPACE) - AD SUPPORTED REVENUE (EG WE7) PROFESSIONAL NETWORKING (THE BIG IDEA, LINKED IN)

12 - 18 months - PREMIUM ARTIST SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES // PREMIUM USER SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES

18 months - 2 years - VIRTUAL COMMERCE (SECOND LIFE) TO USER GENERATED COMMERCE (ZAZZLE, BURNLOUNGE)




STAGE 1 - RETAIL AND PRODUCTION SERVICES FOR ARTISTS


The first stage is to create the Choice As site functioning as a direct competitor to other local online music distributors - most notably Amplifier, in offering a platform for New Zealand acts to build page profiles from which to present and retail digital content (mp3's, videos, ringtones etc.). The key difference would be in developing and launching a storefront widget allowing bands to retail content off site.

There would be a pricing model introduced that allows artists some flexibility in the end price of each unit, however this would be capped within reason to keep pricing competitive with the other sites in the market, where commonly a single mp3 retails for NZ$2. A suggested launch model could be that Choice.As sets a fee of 50c per sale and the artist can set their fee up to $1.

Launching as a digital retailer, initially there would be no emphasis placed on the social developments planned for the site. Instead, the first wave of promotion would be conducted marketing directly to an estimated 10,000 NZ acts already active on well established international social networking sites Myspace, Facebook and Bebo.

The logistics of the campaign will be completely provided by my promotions company, Kurb promotions. The following incentives will be provided in the push:

- INITIALLY, artist sign up will be FREE.

- The storefront widget will be provided for each act contributing original digital content (a widget is an application that can be impended into web pages by users to provide 3rd party information - such as a commerce platform) from which to retail. Acts would be motivated to sign up for the site simply to provide a storefront throughout their social presence from which to collect retail revenue something no one else provides. It would also be non exclusive, meaning artists would still retail in competition on sites such as amplifier and itunes.

Developing a commerce enabled widget would be one of the first major technical projects. It would use as it's model an application similar to the nimbit storefront.

Some scale must be applied to this however as all transactions will be completed within New Zealand and only in New Zealand currency.

- A major incentive for acts to sign up is to offer reasonably subsidised prices on services I already offer through Kurb specifically for musicians - specifically CD/DVD reproduction, copy, print and poster placement, design, online promotion services, web development video, etc.

Offering a 50 CD run of Demo's for $50 to every band that signs up is a theoretically break even marketing idea, but again appeals heavily to any up and coming band who feels their material is ready to be presented. Kurb would create an arrangement with unsigned bands through the site for complete on demand disc production retail and fulfilment.

My thoughts are already in expanding and investing in more systematic operations as the volume increases, but as the site expands, partner with other businesses and advertisers to outsource services available through the site - even to the point of creating a forum for Indian freelancers! This way Choice.as becomes an absolute necessity for bands.

Choice.as would look to be entering into arrangements with other providers of music related products and services as users and advertisers, with the potential to offer alternative discount services for musicians in merchandising, design, web development, video, licensing, tour logistics etc. probably starting with a business directory before expanding later to full web 2.0 properties for advertisers and business partners.


STAGE 2 - EXPANDING ARTIST SERVICES, COMMUNITY, TOOLS

Continuing to build the momentum of establishing critical mass within the NZ artist community, the next phase would be to focus inward, on the networking, community and artist tools available to artists signing up. I believe confusion in the music industry and the crisis for emerging acts will continue to drive new artists to seek out tools and information to develop their music and musical career and given the unique local focus of the site this can be highly and specifically networked. Our job is to provide an environment for community and access to tools and information such as:

- As touched on, a business directory for local service providers, developing an expanding advertising platform from which to present their content

- Key tools artists need for management tasks beyond the Choice As site: EG, Email list management, access to recommended 3rd party widgets, tools to create and manage a low cost private domain site etc.

- An index of high quality and up to date advice, tutorials, articles on everything related to music, product reviews, promotional strategies, how to, practical videos, recording, the works.

- Forums obviously, which will be used actively to promote discussion on the direction of the site in terms of creating revenue and services of value for artists + classifieds

- The Gig guide, in it's initial basic feed form. Eventually this feed will evolve into a widget customised to provide selected users feeds

- Magazine content - bring in aggregation of offsite content local news and features, articles etc.

- Introduce Blogging Tools for artists/business partners
.
At this point, the social capabilities would already be creeping in - content providers and advertisers would be expand from basic profiles to allow for collecting and displaying contacts ("friends") and messaging / notice board ("comments" or "wall")

New categories of content provider would be established for filmmakers, writers, performers, and profiles would be established and indexed for creative industry professionals like www.thebigidea.co.nz.

At this point basic profile pages for non content providing users ("fans") would be launched in Beta for those non musicians heavily involved in NZ music and also offered to those purchasing digital products.

Once the site was complete I would be expecting to sign up no less than 200 acts within 6 months, while 1000 or more could easily be possible, if we're very lucky.

I believe it will take little effort to plug in to existing business directories and begin attracting music product and service providers, and begin building a database of potential advertisers, with adsense providing most likely initially negligible revenue.




STAGE 3 - GOING SOCIAL // AD SUPPORTED PLATFORMS

Before the big social push, beta social users would be released into full social functioning - messaging / commenting / contact lists / original content storage and presentation (Blogs, Photo Albums, Video, Podcasts etc.) so that it functions on a par with the internationally based networks that we would draw a targeted local audience from. Functionality and experience would be similar except from an initial stage, tools would be in place for user profiles to promote onsite content from their favourite providers as well as enhanced aggregation of social information related to calendars, events, gig guides etc.

Now in going to the social phase, not only do we incentivize artists to sign up their NZ fans through other established international sites, we enter into arrangements to allow kurb to access their contact lists directly for the purpose of signing up their fan base.

There will obviously be incentives included for the fans themselves but emphasis will be on communicating to and empowering the musicians to utilize their existing fanbase, mailing lists, networks etc.

Theoretically, if the average band has 1000 contacts and we can sign up 50 of them, with an incentive such as a free cd - either on demand or download - of the relevant artist . . . from only 200 artists 10,000 sign ups is almost a given.

It is at this point that the Choice.as will be looking at entering into arrangements with certain profile acts to increase exposure. Such an arrangement would most likely, again, favour the artist allowing direct contact from Choice.as to their established network contacts.

Choice.as will continue to create and introduce more tools to enable artists to manage and communicate with the local fanbase they are building more effectively through Choice.As than any other site. For acts, Choice.As will represent a place - unlike myspace etc. - where a genuine and quality fanbase can be assembled with the applications to analyse and utilize information and access.

Once the site starts creeping toward 10,000 user profiles, emphasis will then come on to developing robust advertising platforms. Rudimentary revenue streams and on site marketing tools would most likely already be in place - Adsense, per impression / per click banner advertising options, social capabilities for local business and partners providing related services, editorial content for key business partners, the events feed widget etc.

So from this point a system would be created for advertisers to create targeted campaigns, introducing the following methods of delivering advertising to targeted users similar to Adwords or Facebook advertising programmes.


But as well as banner space pay-per-click and pay-per-impression, similarly to content providers management of contact lists, advertisers would be able to purchase a targeted mail out, eventually evolving into a permission based marketing points system where users who accept advertising messages receive points that can be redeemed for products and services available through the site.

Ad supported content - represents the beginning of the next phase of transition for Choice.as with the decline of unit based models for retail of content. While streaming content is principally supported by ad clicks and impressions, ad supported platforms would also be developed for downloaded content where users could access high quality downloadable content free in exchange for first viewing or attaching short advertising messages to the download.


STAGE 4: PREMIUM SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES FOR CONTENT PROVIDERS / USERS

The goal for choice.as from this point is not to remain as a more social and network enabled version of amplifier or as a local alternative to myspace.

In delivering digital content the site is providing one revenue generating function - in supporting artists to do so it is providing another.

Premium user subscription

The next stage of Choice.as is creating a whole new value proposition for mp3's and other digital content.

Now this stage requires some foresight into the future of how digital content is payed for and delivered. It is quite clear to me from my research that the nature of music as a retail commodity is already beginning to shift dramatically, and much depends on the pace at which this shift will take place. The shift is from selling music by the unit, to subscription based services that allow complete access to download content for a limited time.

At a preliminary stage firstly offer unlimited access to download all available content from one act with price points for scaling to multiple acts, and then phase in blanket access at a higher but highly competitive price point. For example:

You could download everything from one band for one month for $10. You could choose 2 bands for $15. You could have unlimited access to all bands for a month for $50, or you could have access to everything for a year for $200.

One credit card would allow for as many downloads as requested from one ISP for the duration of the arrangement.

Now this pricing is designed to accommodate a massive drop in value as music becomes more freely accessible but there is always the ability to add more premium features to increase the perceived value of subscribing. There will quickly arise a point at which the choice.as proposition rivals that of any other, and even as music could possibly cease to function as a commodity within 10 years, the value of choice.as will still be in the brand of users supporting and creating revenue for local artists and artists communities.

In time, it is likely that "lifetime" memberships will be offered as the value continues to fall and there needs to be a new value proposition as subscription based "feels like free" access proliferates.

An affiliate scheme will also be offered encouraging premium users to generate commissions from signing up their friends - the first sign of the movement toward user promoted retail and commerce.

Premium content provider subscription

In signing artists from the "free" services already offered to a paid subscription model that allows them to open new revenue streams and features, choice.as is also asking them to commit as much of their content as they're willing for download by premium user subscribers, and that is why the a reasonable proportion of "carrots" that kurb has to supply artists must be held back until this point.

The initial motivation of acts to sign up for the $50 p/month premium artist subscription will be:

- no commission fees on per unit sales of digital content

- Share of 50% revenue generated from advertising and premium user subscriptions, based on their cumulative share of downloads requested by premium users.

- advanced features of the developing "gigwidget" - aggregating and displaying event information from approved feeds would be available only to premium members

- existing features held out as "carrots" for artists such as discounted artist services such as CD manufacture etc. would be revised to most likely only be available to premium members - from the very initial launch of Choice.as it could touted as a limited offer.

But also, after launching the social capabilities, new features would also be created to enable content providers to manage communication with established contacts.

Whereas the ability to maintain contact with fans on sites such as myspace is often carried out illegitimately with bots, on Choice.as, established social contacts can opt out of receiving messages and feeds from premium artists who will have these features fully enabled at no extra cost. But this way if they abuse the spam-friendly system, it's easy for users to opt out.

However as the site develops, a rewards system for users who accept these messages and display certain feeds would be developed. More on this later.

At this point new packages can be introduced periodically for example a premium package


STAGE 5: USER GENERATED COMMERCE

Now we're well into the development of the site, beyond the easily foreseeable future, the final step of the choice.as journey is to completely take the music industry and put it firmly in the hands of the users. The fans and the users, with the aid of advanced web applications, data analysis and aggregation, with direct access to service providers and on demand manufacturers, will have the power to organise gigs, run merchandising lines for their favourite bands and create all manner of media and product packages.

Now again in explaining how this will roll out I draw on another outside example, Second Life, the virtual world. Initially this family of widgets which represents the power for premium users to create and retail such products as:

- their own CD compilation featuring their favourite songs with their own art
- T-shirts and merchandising product lines for their favourite bands of their own design
- a line up of three local bands booked to play a venue on a particular night

But in drawing from Second Life the widgets will begin their life as virtual "games".

Users can customise compilations, merchandising lines and even run "virtual" gigs. And in years to come when I'm talking about the kids using this technology, it's only one step from allowing kids to design their own virtual merchandise, virtual media packages and virtual events and letting the computer crunch the data and tell them whether they would lose money or not, before teenage entrepreneurs are creating their own products and packages to sell their favourite bands in partnership with networks of music service providers.

Being a "virtual" designer, promoter or executive producer on a media project would be available to all social users but those wanting to play "for real" would have to purchase another special premium membership to access all the tools, including widgets with which to retail their products.

But it is also possible for users to become "workers" earning from a points system for accepting targeted mail outs and displaying ads or sponsored messages on their pages, or promoting various content through out their personal network in new ways.

The expanded applications of an aggregating gigwidget in the future are also something to consider. Initally used to promote events put together by promoters, data can be gathered and analysed so that promoters can cost the price of a gig through performance and services (venue, promotion) fees on the site, then use a widget to gauge social opinion on wether attendance for this gig would break even on costs.

However even cost may not be a determining factor where this technology is used to allow users to plan and book acts for their 21sts, birthdays, weddings etc. Eventually it may be possible for premium members to make a theoretical contribution - like the radiohead model - on how much they would pledge to the gig. If it reaches a break even threshold the pledge contribution is automatically deducted, the gig goes ahead FOR FREE and after the gig, the fees are paid.

Again it is likely acts and venues participating would need to be on a premium subscription in order to be accessed for bookings by users.

Finally, commercial platform for licensing and publishing would also be looked at so that copyright holders of original digital content can licensing reproduction and publishing to commercial entities. At which point other media artists and projects would be able to license content off the site to then be repackaged and monetized on the site. As this is not a priority revenue stream it would be developed as opportunity provided.



CHOICE.AS IN ACTION

So this proposal is designed to break down exactly what I see as the logical development and possibilities of the Choice.as concept - from what models exist now, to new value propositions that will stay competitive in a changing environment for online content delivery.

I haven't gone too much into numbers but I have indicated the role my personal experience in online and viral marketing and the provision of basic services in response to the needs of artists will play in building the community initially, and dramatically minimising the marketing expenditure otherwise required to get something like this off the ground.

Figures from Amplifier put their traffic at 36,000 unique users p/month creating 265,000 page impressions p/month from which they generate up to $10,000 per month in advertising revenue alone

My initial estimation is that an investment of between $NZ20,000 and $NZ100,000 would generate a return within two years.

With as little as 5% of New Zealand's 800,000 active social network users on board this would become highly profitable from advertising alone, while

So funding the design and engineering the technical aspects of delivering the Choice.as experience as set out is the biggest task. Many of the ideas I have set out are already functioning in some way or another, so while some features may be harder/more costly to implement than others technically, it is all perfectly possible to implement.

My next task is to seek accurate costings for this set up and ascertain what tasks can be outsourced before a beta model can be bought online and recruitment for testing can begin. I will be approaching the developers who built Amplifier and requesting competitive quotes both here and overseas. It is possible different partners could be utilized for the site platform and the commerce widget respectively.

But obviously as soon as the site is functioning at stage 1 I can begin to outline and implement the marketing campaign, and within months a critical mass of artists should be signed up, generating modest income from music sales and advertising.

Choice.as is unlikely to generate enough revenue to be profitable in the first year, and advertising revenue at first maybe slow as social elements of the site grow. It is at the point that the premium artist user subscriptions are released that the real return on investment would begin.

Once this point is reached and subscriptions could be shown to be growing steadily options to sell the concept would be reviewed.

IN CONCLUSION

New Zealanders want to support local content, and artist and users want to be involved with it. New Zealand artists want and need more of the tools first given to them by sites like Myspace, and users want the access and personalisation sites like this offer.

Choice.as is a concept which accommodates anticipated changes in the way entertainment content is delivered to offer new solutions and channels for local fans to drive consumption themselves.

It's about offering something new and exciting where old models are failing and new trends in the way New Zealanders connect and interact online offer new opportunities to create value for users.

I would not have gone to all this trouble of explaining exactly how this concept could work if I didn't believe it was a brilliant way to generate income by providing New Zealand artists with the tools and an environment to build profitable enterprise from their creations. I believe it could revolutionize the NZ music industry and reshape it collectively to the adaptions now required.

I didn't write this mainly for the sake of $NZ50,000 to get me started. It's because I know there is enough value and foresight in this proposition to make it worthwhile and whether I get the money sooner or not at all, at least I know what needs to be done.



Kurb is a New Zealand based media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online. Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally and online / digital coaching for small business. We rank #1 for "online promotion" in New Zealand. And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including CD / DVD duplication and poster services.Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians.We provide expert and affordable promotion support in all web 2.0 areas: Cutting edge Social Network promotion (Myspace, Facebook, Bebo etc.), Social Media, Blogging, Spam management, Content creation, Content management, Content Distribution, OMD, RSS, Aggregators, podcasts, Search ranking, Search marketing and PPC campaigns on Google and Facebook, Website design, Website monetization, Video production + promotion,We also have an extensive self promotion area for independent musician and talent featuring dozens of articles, how to features and blog links.
http://www.kurb.co.nzhttp://www.myspace.com/kurbpromohttp://www.youtube.com/user/kurbpromo -http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.comhttp://kurbpromotion.blogspot.comhttp://www.squidoo.com/kurb

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

music promotion and spam: A reformed Black Hat

Http://www.nickycakes.com

Nicky Cakes aka partner ZU9whatever is an internet marketer and blogs on internet marketing under the bi-line "confessions of a reformed* black hat"

I know most of you just want to write your songs and earn a living. I wanna earn a living too promoting the songs you write, what those songs and what you represent, and creating value out of that that results in income. but one of the most inefficient parts of the work I do is explaining my work and the sorts of skills I have that make me in such demand right now to the people who pay me - people who just wanna make songs and make a buck from it.

My work involves learning about how internet marketing is carried out and looking at where that intersects with marketing music online in an appropriate way. Which is pretty unique because I'm doing pretty well with it.

I say "appropriate" because to me whether something is right or wrong or black hat or white hat spam or not is not the issue in marketing and promotion. I feel that if internet marketing messages and techniques are not useful to those who recieve them, because they are untargeted, unoriginal, and disruptive, then they are spam and damaging to your brand whether you used software, bots, scripts or automated techniques or not.

To me it's not spam that's wrong or the methodology of communication but all communication that isn't thought out with the interests of those recieving the message in mind.

Thats why the richest internet marketers are not software developers or code gurus. Unique ideas and innovation still drive music marketing and promotion as it always has.

THIS FROM Nicky Cakes:

Nickycakes gets asked this question quite often. “What is a Reformed Blackhat?” Most people assume that it has something to do with spam or making cloaked pages to fool the search engines. Wrong, WRONG. First, take a look at what “blackhat” really means.

For years, the terms “Black Hat” and “White Hat” have been used to describe hackers, people who break into computer systems, etc. A Black Hat hacker is someone who breaks into systems with malicious intent. Personal gain, causing a general ruckus, or making a name for themselves are a few of the motivating factors. White Hat hackers, on the other hand, is someone who breaks into systems to help. These people are generally the ones who notify the vendors of problems in their systems, help write patches, etc.

Anyway, along came SEO. Like hacking, there were 2 sides of the SEO coin. There were webmasters who got their search engine rankings naturally by writing “good content” or developing relationships with other webmasters for backlinks, etc. Then there were people on the cutting edge who came up with creative ways to rank higher in search engines with less work. Sometimes these practices are thought of as “spammy” but generally none are illegal unless computer systems are being broken into, or can-spam laws are being violated.

So the terms “White Hat SEO” and “Black Hat SEO” were born. Neither have much real meaning, but both are thrown around quite liberally. It’s kind of silly, really. The self proclaimed “White Hat SEO” will try to build inbound links to his website by manually visiting related blogs and making comments on them with his website’s url in the comment. Someone more clever than him will write a program to automatically post comments on all related blogs with the push of one button, and the “White Hat” screams “BLACKHAT!”.

That’s really what Blackhat SEO boils down to. It’s just a term thrown around a lot by idiots who are continually 1-up’d by people more clever than they are. It’s pretty much meaningless.

Ok so that’s the end of that tangent. What does Nickycakes mean by “Reformed Blackhat?” Well, many years ago the Cakes could have been labeled as the type of blackhat first mentioned in this post. Since then many things have changed and now he’s devoting that energy to something more productive: making money on teh intraweb. Hence Reformed Blackhat.

Keep it real.





Kurb is a media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital music promotion, marketing digital content and artists creating revenue from new media online. .. ..

Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally And the best value fast turnover physical media services in ....New Zealand.... including CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster printing services. Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians.

http://www. kurb. co. nzhttp://www. myspace. com/kurbpromohttp://www. youtube. com/user/kurbpromo -http://kurbpromotion. wordpress. comhttp://kurbpromotion. blogspot. comhttp://www. squidoo. com/kurb

CD / DVD DUPLICATIONPRINTING NEW ZEALAND

POSTERS POSTERINGPRINTING AUCKLAND


Element - New Zealand Hip HopKanarek - psychedelic ambient beatnik popNow You Die - Melbourne Metal Punk! Golpe Con Classe - Latin Hip Hop SpainKoshowko - Polish Electropop in MelbourneRoger Greenaway - New Zeland singer/songwriterAzumuth - New Zealand epic modern rockbased in Melbourne, AustraliaDJ TKD - Te Puke's finest - New Zealand DJ and turntablistAl Walser - Pop/ R&B Prince - Liechtenstien / HollywoodRomantech - Liquid Drum'n Bass Auckland New ZealandGanga - Downbeat CHill out Lounge Dub - Denmark

New Zealand music industry funding whinge fest

http://dubdotdash.blogspot.com/2008/04/fade-to-gray.html
http://opdiner.blogspot.com/2008/04/welcome-to-my-world.html


This obviously amusing to me because he's whinging that NZ on Air, New Zealand Music comission, Creative NZ etc. are not doing enough to support NZ's top earning and most marketable artists such as his client, Hayley Westenra.

Auckland club culture icon Simon Grigg argues on his blog that the government has an obligation to foster the cultural expression of the nation through its funding support and that Hayley Westenrta is not of unique cultural significance to New Zealand.

Not to mention well . . . she doesnt really need the money does she?

Is it more a case of . . . well with the major labels on their knees, who's going to pay for everything??? The government?

My sore point was one bought up by departing NZ musician editor Melanie Selby, why does the lead singer of Steriogram get 50k for a band that doesn't exist? This band has no recordings. Why are they being funded for a radio hit?



One of the few key criteria to receiving one of the $50,000 album funding grants is that artists must have “two current radio hits” to their name to even compete for one of the refundable packages. Previously a radio hit was defined as "a RadioScope NZ Airplay Chart Top 30 song", but recognising the market degradation this was extended in July last year to include the published Top 40 chart songs.



Now, I know that the feelers have had more than a couple of radio hits over the past year. And I can probably name two songs released by The Rabble - so I can fathom both their $50,000 allocation.



But can someone tell me who the Ivy Lies are? They’ve received $50,000 - under the very same criteria. And I struggle to understand how Brad Carter’s “new” band Pistol Youth have gathered one radio hit, let alone two, especially given Brad has been busy touring foreign parts with Steriogram the last few months.



And despite a serious think I can’t recall hearing anything on the radio by ex- D4 Dion Palmer. He's been back in Auckland doing a few DJ sets lately but the last I heard he had left New Zealand and relocated to the US.




My argument of course is that we need a forward looking approach to funding and the thing is that the online environment not only supports a platform for many distinct voices in the community to be represented but also the opportunity for everyday creative new zealanders to actually create a supplement to their personal income by creating global opportunities to export digital products and services.

Andrew Dubber pointed me toward the white paper done on the subject done by Russell Brown which was excellent and gave me some hope.

But to me, I would hope for the kind of inspiration that put government money into developing the online tools to create income. Creating communities and facilities online for expression, involvement, development and international commerce.

Here's a link to my vision for a NZ music online community I did over new years. Lot of reading if your keen.

Choice As Business plan


GRAY BARTLETT WHINGE IN NEW ZEALAND HERALD

Musician and talent scout Gray Bartlett is preparing to celebrate a 50-year career in the entertainment industry and he is angry.



A number of issues have got Bartlett's goat but, in a nutshell, he is angry at what he sees as a waste of taxpayer money on failed government policies to promote New Zealand music.



"The government agencies haven't kept pace with the music industry. They have been more reactive than proactive; they've missed the boat over the last six or seven years."



Bartlett - a former National Party candidate and ex-Auckland city councillor - says the Government's policies are "hopelessly out of date".



Bartlett is about to embark on the first leg of a nationwide tour celebrating his career.



As well as performing, Bartlett has acted as a talent scout in recent years, with Hayley Westenra, Will Martin and Elizabeth Marvelly among those he has discovered.



He is doing a job, he says, using his own money, which the Government should and could also be doing.



Instead taxpayer money is being wasted in New Zealand music, he says.



"Why should someone who wants to finish an album in Hokitika get taxpayer funding?



"It's great for the community interest, but let the councils look after it."



Bartlett is also critical of Mike Chunn's Play it Strange, a trust to encourage young New Zealanders to develop interests and skills in music. While charitable, it does little for creating markets or promoting musicians, Bartlett says.



Bartlett concedes Chunn succeeds where he has failed - by getting government support - because of the politics of the music industry.



"I am angry because when the opportunity is there to apply for something to help an artist, I can't. I'm angry because they will waste money on absolutely ludicrous things.



"They will give grants to friends of the Labour Party - I find it disgraceful."



Bartlett says he wants to see taxpayers' money well spent, "not on policies that allow this mob to keep perpetuating rubbish".



"I would never dream of taking a grant now if I couldn't back it up with facts. The music side of it is really a shambles at the moment."



Bartlett says while he is angry about this issue, he is optimistic and positive about other things including his music and his audiences.



His anger comes in part from seeing how those audiences are largely ignored because the music they like is classified as country, a genre Bartlett says is not supported by the Government.



Bartlett lives in hope New Zealand will one day have the mindset to embrace all music on merit and not politics, like Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, who named country and western singer Lee Kernaghan as Australian of the Year.





Kurb is a media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital music promotion, marketing digital content and artists creating revenue from new media online. ..:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />



Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally And the best value fast turnover physical media services in ..:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />New Zealand including CD / DVD printing and duplication and poster printing services.



Here's a post I grabbed off NZ musician for more critiques on the national funding programme - again, along the lines of what I've been saying - the industry has changed, it's about the long tail, not the tall head, and technology has afforded new opportunities for everyday - "mum and dad" even - musicians and creative people to create and realise value around digital products and services, and for NZ on air to address that by creating platforms that we can all participate in, rather than selected profile acts - Hayley Westenra or otherwise - that are merely calculated on commercial success.



From NZ Musician observation post - anonymous source:



Many bands look forward each year to the possibility of a $5000 New Recordings grant from NZ On Air. This money is intended to be spent on recording one song in a professional studio to be suitable for commercial radio airplay. They offer four intakes a year and have recently changed it to include a $5000 video grant for the same song - but in doing so have cut the numbers to 5 songs per intake. This may seem like a good deal, but with over 200 entries each round, it doesn't seem to help many bands.



I am from a band based in Auckland. We have been going for about five years, had good press, featured plenty of times on the radio, played countless live gigs, pushed ourselves musically, worked hard to promote ourselves and just released an album.



The album was self-funded and made in one of the many home studios popping up around the country, (drums excluded). These days with this sort technology becoming far more versatile and cheaper for everyone it has become much easier for bands to record good quality stuff without spending heaps of money. Our album has received top reviews in good publications and never once was the quality of the recording under question. Indeed we know it's as good as it was when we made our first one at a professional studio.
All up we were able to record the whole album of 13 tracks and master it for under $5000. Sure we spent heaps of time making sure it was right, but the point is you don't need to spend anything like $5000 on just one song to make it radio worthy if you know what you're doing.



This is also true with videos. We so far have shot seven videos with two still in production. All good enough to be shown on music TV and one of them featured .. on C4. None of these videos actually cost more than $1000 to make. I admit I have some contacts and like to write and direct them myself but I have no real gear of my own. With sheer resourcefulness and some keen up and coming film people we can achieve the results without a budget of 5 to $10,000. Obviously they don't look like a Britney Spears video but the point is that they are good enough to be aired, and when we are facing the reality that no matter what the quality we may only get played four times anyway, it seems like a much safer option than nothing at all.



I think that NZ On Air is somehow missing the point of the current music market reality. We don't want or need $5000 to spend on one song. We don't need to use the big studio. Why would we want to waste that sort of money on a song when we can do a whole album made for that? Give me a $1000 to do a new song and keep the video a separate issue.



I am not sure what they are thinking but it sure doesn't seem to be about the average indie band that is looking to first have success on the bNet stations. Instead it tends to the consistently commercial side of things. This seems to me a waste of public money and doesn't really seem give the support that creative artists need. Instead of giving 5 artists $10,000 they could be giving 50 artists $1000 to record a song fit for the radio - or 25 songs and 25 videos.



They might even be better thinking about the bigger picture and trying to get a greater amount of music heard on the radio. If you are in Kaitaia or Whangarei and turn on the radio you are not going to hear any NZ music apart from what's on commercial stations (besides National Radio on Sat afternoon and 11pm Mon). If Kiwi FM or any of the bNets were able to somehow increase their network, that would probably do us all a lot more good. Hamilton can't even get their student radio stations into the bNetwork cause of a lack of funding. Hamilton's a big city by our standards.



So anyway, NZ On Air, as much as I love them and what they stand for, to me seem not really in touch with what is really going on in the music business at ground level. They are too focused on commercial success of commercial bands on commercial stations, the safe bets, and don't really do enough of the job they set out to do. No one often knows why a band suddenly gets big as it can happen for all sorts of reasons and it goes the same for those that don't make it when we all think they should. Some bands you can pick, others just come out of nowhere. Lets be open minded and let the public decide. It's time for some fresh ideas and some fresh faces in NZ On Air. They seem to be stuck in their own world and not in ours.... and then there are the radio stations themselves. But that is another story.







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