D.I.Y.

I Spent $500 Promoting My Song On Deezer [Brian Hazard]

0001In this article Brian Hazard of Color Theory details his experience dishing out $500 large to promote one of songs on the streaming service Deezer, how the process worked, and what results he say from the investment.

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Guest post by Brian Hazard of Passive Promotion

$500 is a lot of money. As much as I love testing out promotion ideas and sharing the results with you, that’s more than I’m typically willing to spend.

In this case though, I didn’t have to pay anything out of pocket. The referral link I included in my earlier article on Feature.fm (which will still get you a $10 credit) generated enough affiliate earnings to cover the campaign. Thank you!

Last time I wrote about my campaigns on 8tracks. Since then, Feature.fm partnered with subscription streamer Deezer to offer sponsored song campaigns. I promoted my single Glory Days, which as you may remember, scored surprisingly high on Crowd Review!

The way it works is, your song gets thrown into their non-interactive radio tier with a “sponsored” banner slapped across the artwork. You select who hears it by specifying their location, age, gender, preferred genres, and similar artists, like so:Deezer targeting

You can also choose a call to action. I chose “View Artist Profile” in the hope that listeners would check out my other material and add me to their favorite artists.

So what did $500 get me?

Deezer Results 1

My campaign took five days, netting 24K plays at two cents a pop, with nearly 800 engagements, which break down like so:

Deezer engagements

The 223 artist and album page views are nice, but the 574 playlist adds are likely more valuable, as they promise more plays in the future. 379 were added to users’ favorites playlists, which account for about 20% of streams on Deezer. A favorites add is similar to a Pandora thumbs up in that it tells the algorithm to play the song more often, both to the listener who favorited it, and to others.

Dan at Feature.fm emailed me links to every single one of the other 195 playlists, and about two-thirds of them still contain my song. The majority of them are titled “Loved Tracks” — essentially a secondary favorites playlist.

Deezer Age & Gender

Most of the plays went to 18-34 year olds, whereas my biggest fans tend to be males 35-54. One of these days I’ll need to try narrowing my targeting to see if I get better results.

Deezer Countries

Nearly half of my plays were in France, which makes sense as Deezer is headquartered in Paris. I only got 155 plays in the US, but the engagement rate was the same so I’m not sure it matters for my purposes. Curiously, I got triple the rate of engagement (over 9%) in Russia and Guatemala, with 222 and 194 plays respectively.

Bonus points

There are two other important considerations to keep in mind:

  1. You only pay for plays over 30 seconds. If someone skips your track before that, it’s free.
  2. Every play is monetized, so the cost of the campaign is somewhat offset by royalties.

Theoretically, those royalties should be paid through SoundExchange since they are non-interactive streams. That said, I scoured through a dozen SoundExchange statements and didn’t see a single mention of Deezer. I’ve collected about $67 from Deezer through CD Baby since 2012, with roughly 10K “sales” categorized as “stream.”

I guess those are all interactive streams?

Is spending $500 on Deezer promotion right for you?

I’d say it depends on what you’d otherwise spend that money on. Food or rent? Probably not. A new iPhone that lets you send messages as an animated unicorn? Maybe!

And of course you don’t have to spend $500. Even if you’re willing and able to, you might be better off launching a smaller campaign first to hone your targeting. Be sure to claim your $10 credit through my referral link if you haven’t already! Maybe I’ll rack up enough to try a stunt like this again.

It would be easier for me to weigh the results of my campaign against the cost if Deezer were better about updating their profile pages. I waited a month before writing this article, in the hope that my profile page would showcase some impressive results.

At the very least, I expected Glory Days to become my top track! I doubt any of my other tracks have gotten 24K plays since Deezer launched.

Unfortunately, the only thing that budged was the number of fans, up from 1320 to 1329. That strikes me as a purely organic increase, not as the result of my campaign.

Hopefully we’ll see that number jump up when my profile eventually updates. Maybe it takes more than a month, or maybe I’m too much of a small fry to deserve the server resources.

Color Theory on Deezer

As always, conspiracy theorists will argue that it’s all a scam — that it’s somehow easier to fake the whole enterprise, including links to 195 playlists, than it is to actually deliver on what it promises. I’ve been debunking those sorts of arguments against Radio Airplay for years.

Over the coming months I hope to see an increase in Deezer plays, royalties on my SoundExchange statements, and maybe a few new Patreon supporters who discovered me there. It’s too soon to say what the results of the campaign will be outside of Deezer.

My results inside Deezer are mighty impressive though! If your goal is for people to hear your song, this is the most cost-effective method I know of. Where else can you get 24K plays and almost 600 playlist adds for $500?

Feature.fm continues to innovate with new features, including a multi-song campaign that should roll out to all users in the next 30 days. It will allow you to promote an entire album or playlist, and will learn which songs perform better and adjust on the fly. I look forward to testing it out!

Have you tried Feature.fm?

Share your thoughts, results, and of course, conspiracy theories, in the comments!

 

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4 Comments

  1. Very interesting article, please update us on the results!
    I too scored a 7.6 in ReverbNation crowd review with an unbelievable 18-24 male audience with the most affinity… If you heard my music you’d be surprised. So I might try it. I still think the best way to get your music heard is to send it to DJs at local radio stations and mingle with like-minded people say on Twitter, time consuming but friendly and you know it’s real and above all it is FREE!Engagement is only real if you know the people. clicking a like button for me is meaningless. I share your scepticism about Radio Airplay -a scam!-
    I would like to know how much money you get in royalties versus the $500 campaign cost. At the end of the day what we want is for fans to buy the music or support us on crowdfunding campaigns. royalties and streaming is not real revenue for artists like us. Thanks for sharing the experience!

  2. Thanks for the comment!
    I’ll post an update on royalties at Passive Promotion if/when I see them.
    Actually I don’t think Radio Airplay is a scam, which is why I’ve spend so much time debunking those sorts of arguments over the years. I have several articles on my experiences there if you’d like to see my results.
    Let me know if you try Feature.fm/Deezer!
    Brian Hazard // COLOR THEORY // http://www.patreon.com/colortheory

  3. I’ve been using it for the last couple months. On my third campaign, and for this song I have a link to the album’s bandcamp page for downloading ( which I attribute for this song having the best engagement rate yet, at 50% of engagements being for the album download ), however my bandcamp site visiting stats don’t line up with Feature.fm results, which I find concerning. I’m going to keep experimenting with it until the September royalties come in in January and I’ll determine from there if this is really worth it to continue or not.

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