D.I.Y.

Make More Money With Your Official Band Website

Monetize-pros-logoThere are a lot of ways to make money on the web when you have your own site. But it's easy to fall into a rut with a band or label's website, monetizing music online in the expected manner by selling music, merch and tickets, requesting donations and crowdfunding. While you don't want to go overboard and alienate your fans, there are ways you can boost what you're already doing and come up with new ideas that aren't so obvious. One resource for so doing is MonetizePros.

Official band sites serve a lot of purposes many of which have to do with building relationships with fans, getting the word out about concerts and other crucial activities that have nothing to do with directly monetizing that exchange. It's important to keep that in mind when thinking about making more money from your official website.

Making More Money With Your Official Site or Blog

MonetizePros is a resource for learning how to make more money on the web. I previously referred to one of their free e-books when discussing how to make more money with YouTube.

I've mostly been following their blog where they share posts with such imposing titles as:

50 Blog and Content Monetization Strategies for 2014 & Beyond

It can be a bit much to take in but you'll find a selection of ideas and links out to services that can help you make more money with your website.

An Example: Affiliate Marketing Links

For example, the above post includes some tips on affiliate marketing, a topic discussed on Hypebot by both The Orchard's Tierney Stout and myself.

The most obvious way to use affiliate marketing on a website is to join iTunes' affiliate program so that when people buy your music on iTunes via links from your site, you get a percentage of the sale.

You can do the same with Amazon's affiliate program for physical CD sales.

Once you wrap your head around affiliate marketing for your own music, you can use it in other ways on your site. For instance, if you read a great book and talk about it on your blog, you can include a link to Amazon or another book site that has an affiliate program and benefit if readers buy the book after visiting your blog.

Other ideas won't fit. You'll see plenty of discussions regarding ad networks and, except in rare occasions, musicians shouldn't have ads on their sites.

Such distinctions are up to you but I think you can benefit from the range of possibilities discussed on sites like MonetizePros that allow you to develop a different perspective than one typically finds in the music industry.

Coming from web publishing, the affiliate concept is really obvious to me but I'm surprised at how rarely musicians employ it on their own sites.

Monetizing Your Social Media Presence

You can find out more about affiliate marketing and other concepts in the links above. I was actually inspired to post about MonetizePros due to their roundup of 442 Tips to Monetize Your Social Media Presence in 2014.

They include links to posts with tips on monetizing Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google Plus, LinkedIn, Pinterest and Instagram.

Brainstorm Freely, Then Apply With Care

It seems kind of nuts when you look at lists like this but take some time, put on your brainstorming goggles and consider the possibilities without censoring your thoughts.

Then, once you've got some new ideas, reconsider them in light of the particular channel you're planning to monetize, whether it's your official website or a social media account, and base your choices on how they fit what you conceive as the primary purpose for those channels.

So think freely and then apply with care. At the end of the day all your points of contact should support building better relationships and improving communication with your fans.

More:

Hypebot Senior Contributor Clyde Smith (Twitter/Facebook) is building a writing hub at Flux Research. To suggest topics about music tech, DIY music biz or music marketing for Hypebot, contact: clyde(at)fluxresearch(dot)com.

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2 Comments

  1. Affiliate links to your own CD makes no sense at all… Why would you send your visitors to another site, when you can sell your own stuff on your own site?? And you can set your own price, you don’t have to pay a percentage to anyone from that money. And btw how much money you earn with an affiliate link to a CD? 5 cents maybe? And the distributor also get a cut. Makes no sense.

  2. If you look at what musicians are actually doing on their sites, you’ll see a lot of them linking out to iTunes, in particular.
    Not everybody is going to sell everything themselves and it doesn’t always make sense to start your own digital download or mail order operation.
    So if you are going to link to iTunes, why wouldn’t you want to increase your revenue with an affiliate link?
    It’s kind of a no-brainer.

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