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Guest Post by Jessica Allossery on Soundfly's FlypaperHave you ever sat around listening to music on the radio and thought to yourself, wait a second, how can I get MY songs played on this station? Whether it’s satellite, internet, out-to-sea pirate radio or your local college FM station, getting your music played on the radio certainly isn’t easy, but… there is hope! With some solid research and a lot of perseverance, getting air play is certainly within your reach as an independent artist, especially if you follow these four steps.1. Do Your Homework.
Before wasting your time cold calling and emailing a million stations that will never work out, spend some time figuring out which stations actually play your type of music. You also have to make sure that the specific song you are pushing is a perfect fit for the channel. We are all artists, so it’s natural for our songs to vary quite a bit stylistically. One of your songs may be perfect for a particular station, or a particular show or host, but the next song you put out might be just different enough that it isn’t a fit. It’s a lot easier to sell a station on a song they know their audience will love, than it is to sell them on trying to go in a new direction. So be sure that the song you’re pushing is a good match with the content that they play on a regular basis.+ Learn more: Getting radio play across the country is a great way to expand your audience base while on tour. Learn more about DIY tour booking and marketing with our free course, Touring on a Shoestring!2. Find Your Person.
After finding your ideal station, your next main focus should be to find the person responsible for the programming on that channel. Use Google, LinkedIn, social media channels, and any other available platforms for this research, including of course, the radio station’s website. And please remember that at this stage, you shouldn’t actually be pushing your song out to your person just yet. Blitzing piles of unsolicited content almost never works. You need to build a relationship with them first. Remember that both programming staff and hosts get people shoving emails promoting songs at them every single day. It quickly gets old! So, you need to find a way to stick out. And how do you do that? More research!Once you know who your contact is, start Googling them. What are their interests or areas of expertise? Don’t be a stalker, but take time to inform yourself! Do they have articles they’ve written in the music community? Have there been videos or interviews published about them? Make yourself familiar with their work, reference it in your outreach, and show a genuine interest in what they do.
3. Ask Your Fans for Help.
If you’re treating your fans right, they will want to do everything in their power to help you achieve your dreams, so ask them for help! Post your goal on your social channels and ask your audience to like it, share it, retweet it… The whole shebang!! You can also ask them to email and call the station on your behalf. The more people you can get to make requests on your station, the more likely it is you’ll get noticed.Another route to consider is asking your fans to tag their own favorite local radio stations on your post, and call attention to you as an artist. If they call and request your song on smaller local stations, it will be way easier to get radio air play there as well.+ Read more on Flypaper: “Poetry in Motion: Lyrical Layers in Frank Ocean’s Endless“4. Don’t Give Up.
I tried for 5 years to get on SiriusXM radio, and got turned down many times before I actually succeeded. I thought I had tons of ideal songs for the acoustic Coffee House station because I was really proud of my music, and I knew my overall sound was “Acoustic”… But not all of my songs actually were. I was so attached to my music, that I never stopped to think that some of my tracks might not actually work for their channel.Once you realize this, you don’t have to be as attached to every single song you’re promoting, because you know that it simply can’t fit on every single station. Radio doesn’t work like that. But you must also be confident in knowing that there is a station out there waiting for your song to show up on its doorstep, even if you’re a DIY musician without a manager. All you need is to find the perfect match. Keep your head up, stay persistent, and keep trying.
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