How to Sell Music on Myspace
Selling Your Songs in a New Marketplace
In a long awaited move, Myspace has finally begun letting bands—any band, solo artist, or xylophone enthusiast, in fact - -sell their songs via their uber-popular service by way of a website called Snocap. If you want to take advantage of the technology, now's the time; the service is new and there's a lot of proverbial ground to cover. In that spirit, here are some tips for promoting and selling your songs on Myspace successfully.Post a Myspace Bulletin
The fastest way to say something to all of your fans is a Myspace bulletin, so wait until your store is up and running and release a few bulletins about what your fans can find and how they can go about purchasing your music. Include information such as cost, tracks available, and list some ways that your fans can help you spread the word.
Recruit Fans To Help You Out
There's no better way to get the word out than to tap other people. They can describe your music in an impartial way, and they won't be ashamed to rag on their friends to get them to buy your stuff. Message some key fans and explain that you're trying to get your Myspace store going, but you need their help. Give them something to help you out; free mp3s, a free CD, free stickers, etc., and then ask if they'll spread the word and put a link to your store on their Myspace profile. The more people you can get promoting your stuff, the more successful you'll be, so try to develop a viral marketing system that can get a ton of dedicated fans moving your product for you.
Don't Sell Filler
The temptation is to sell everything on Myspace that you've ever recorded, but make sure that everything you're selling is worth the price you're trying to charge. If you're trying to sell a demo you recorded last night that's missing lyrics and used one computer microphone to make, it'd better be a really great song. More than likely, it's not something that you want to charge for. You'll gain your fans trust if you treat them with respect, and you'll get a lot more repeat purchases if you only put music up that's quality. Remember, just because Myspace will let you sell anything doesn't necessarily mean that you should.
- Go for exposure more than money - price your songs inexpensively.
- Talk to friends and fans for feeback, and recruit them to help you spread the word.
- Make sure that your Myspace store is full of quality material - no filler or lame demos.
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