_______________________________
Guest post by Randi Zimmerman of the Symphonic BlogImagine showing up to a venue to play your show and seeing it jam packed with all your fans. Think about the energy in the room, the screaming fans who waited weeks or even months to see you perform… There’s no better feeling. But for that to happen, it takes a ton of networking, planning, and consistent promotion for your audience to be ready to go when the time finally comes.To make sure everyone is up to date on the when, where, and what to expect, you’ll have to promote the event way in advance. In this post, we’ll cover what it takes to promote your next gig and get all your fans to actually show up.Here’s every step to promoting your next show:Step 1: Reach out to the venueTo get started, the first thing you need to do is reach out to the venue and ask what they’ll be doing to promote the show. If the venue is making flyers and distributing them all over town, don’t waste your time doing the same. Whatever they end up doing is a great contribution, but whatever they don’t is up to you to take care of.Divide and conquer!Step 2: Assemble all the contacts you canIf you’ve done this before and promotion isn’t news to you, you probably have a decent list of contacts you can reach out to. If you don’t, make sure to hit up the venue and ask them to send you their media list. In most cases, the venue will have a list ready to send to bands who are out of town, so it shouldn’t be any trouble for them to send you one too. This list usually consists of emails and phone numbers for local music journalists, editors, bloggers, radio show hosts, etc. If it’s your first time reaching out and finding contacts, check out this post for 3 helpful strategies to get you started.Step 3: Contact those contactsI’m sure you saw this one coming… You really want to make sure that your show is getting as much coverage as possible. Get yourself on all the local concert calendars, reach out to journalists and bloggers in your area. (Be sure to do this a couple months in advance to be sure to give them enough time to do everything.) Additionally, make sure to be friendly, be yourself, and be respectful of their time when you reach out. If you can offer them some free tickets, that’s even better. Give them a reason to remember you.Step 4: It’s leg dayIf the venue isn’t creating any posters for your show, you’ll need to do this yourself. People generally respond better to posters that are creative and stand out among the rest. It’s not an awful idea to reach out to local artists in your area to get them to help come up with a cool design. Once you have the perfect posters/flyers, go out on the town and put them up in places like coffee shops, record stores, smoke shops, on telephone poles, or anywhere you damn well please. Anywhere that has a lot of foot traffic is sure to gain the attention of someone who’ll be interested.Step 5: Time to start emailingGuide To Promoting Your Next Show
Playing a sold out show is one of the most rewarding feelings you get as an artist. But to get there requires planning and execution. This piece walks through every. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/08/guide-to-promoting-your-next-show.html]