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« Finding Your Natural Audience | Main | MusicThinkTank.com Weekly Recap: The Next Era of the Music Business & More »
Monday
Mar182013

How to be a Rockstar at Social Media: What Every Band Should Be Doing

Are you listening?

Are you really listening?

I’ve mentioned it a few times before: treat social media more like a telephone and less like a megaphone. I’ve written about it when talking about the best social media sites for bands too. However, after talking to a few artists, I realize that some might not know how or where  to listen. This is important because like any business or organization, you want to know what’s being said about you and where are they saying it. You’ll also want to know how to respond.

Free Social Media Listening Tools

First, let’s talk about some of the free tools available to you. Here are some that I use everyday:

  • Google Alerts: Google Alerts is a basic way to discover when a website is posting about you. However, it doesn’t capture everything and it certainly doesn’t cover social media or most blog sites. Still, it’s a good, automated, entry-level way to get some feedback about any kind of search query emailed to you. Sign up at www.google.com/alerts
  • Hootsuite/TweetDeck: Both Hootsuite and TweetDeck offer some tools to consolidate and manage your social media accounts. You can also add search columns that are scanning Twitter in real time. Not everyone who tweets about you will be using your hashtag or tagging you so this is a convenient way to spot what is being discussed and reply immediately.
  • Icerocket: Icerocket specializes in blog searches. Their “big buzz” option also captures activity on Facebook, Twitter, and image sites such as Flickr too. It’s free, easy to use, and does not require registration of an account.
  • Social Mention: Social Mention collects aggregated data across multiple platforms. You’ll see results from Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, photobucket, etc. and there are some basic analytics that help you determine if the sentiment is positive or negative, how many different sources are active, etc. It’s also free and doesn’t require registration.
  • Topsy: Topsy is similar to Icerocket and Social Mention; the main focus is around social media, especially multimedia and blogs. You don’t have to register, but you do have the option of creating an email alert (it ties into your Twitter or Facebook).

None of the tools are all-inclusive. They catch bits and pieces of what is out there but don’t always get it all. If you run a search every day, it will only takes a few minutes to scan through anything new. Make a habit of searching and listening. In addition to the above, I also run searches on Google, Bing, and Duck Duck Go twice per day.

What You Should Search For

Aside from the obvious of searching for your own band name, here’s what I recommend to put in the automated alerts (for Google Alerts, TweetDeck and/or Hootsuite, and Topsy):

  • Your band members’ names: Add a few variations of your band members’ names (first name only, last name only, first & last) with your band name so you can catch interviews, mentions, complaints, or praise. 
  • Your album titles and any singles: If you release a music video, definitely include the song name. In fact, I’d recommend buying domain names related to any singles and albums as well. But you can at least get a start with “Song Name,” “Song Name music video,”and variations of that.
  • Alternate spellings or misspellings of your name: If you have a “unique” name, this is even more important because chances are, people will forget how to spell your name and typo’s do occur.
  • Your music genre and other key words. For example, adding terms like: band, music, interview, tour, review, show, concert, tickets, record, album, LP, hate, love, etc.

You might want to do yourself a favor and learn some Boolean search best practices. Not only will this make your personal searching more effective, it will help your listening systems too. While I don’t recommend doing every variation of the above terms in your daily search activities, you might want to consider doing it for the things you’re concerned about most. For example, if you are running a press campaign about your album, you might search for your band name + album on different search engines each day. Whatever you do, do not rely solely on Google or Google Alerts. Google will not catch everything.

When Something Comes Up

Listening tools aren’t just for vanity. When appropriate, it’s good to jump into conversations, post blogs, read articles, and so on. Find ways to interact with people talking about your music, thank them. If someone is posting something negative, don’t be overly sensitive or deal with it using some humor. Follow up, interact. People appreciate the transparency (and fans love the fact that you’re paying attention).

For sites that do review your music, collect the quotes/sayings/reviews/interviews in some kind of database so you can use it for your press kit or personal archives.

Make it a Habit

Have you noticed that it’s easier to keep your house clean if you work on it a little each day rather than waiting until it gets really bad and needs an overhaul? It’s the same with social media and any kind of listening tool. Take time each day to check what is being said about you online, just as you would check your email or test messages. In the world of social media, any response that isn’t immediate is too late.

Google and Google Alerts used to be the peak of the search experience. Now, it is just the baseline. You don’t have to go for a full enterprise listening system like Radian6, there are a number of great, free tools available to help you.

————————————-

Simon Tam is the President and Founder of Last Stop Booking, author of How to Get Sponsorships and Endorsements, and performs in dance rock band The Slants. Simon’s writing on music and marketing can be found at www.laststopbooking.com. He is on Twitter @SimonTheTam 

Reader Comments (3)

Simon this is such a great article! You cover so many good listening tools for artists. I like SEOMoz' Followerwonk and MapMyFollowers too, Oh - and WolframAlpha for Facebook insights. Also on my list is Google Analytics for understanding the relationship between band websites and social, and understanding the demographics of one's own site hits. Also, SoundCloud has some pretty cool built-in analytics for those of us who use that platform (as do many social media sites).

This is a nice description about what freelance musicians should do I cant agree more with you. but I'll add something that to me is one of the most important things, Having a nice sounding mix, that way you can make your band to stand out.

March 18 | Unregistered CommenterGudiker

I agree with social media, little and often is the key. Also replying to comments even if they are negative can win you supporters. With social media being all the rage at the moment you can't really afford to overlook it.

Thanks Simon some very useful information about what to search for.

Lizzy

March 21 | Unregistered CommenterLizzy

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