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3 Major Reasons To Drive Fans To Your Website Instead Of Facebook & Social Media

image from i3.squidoocdn.com (UPDATED) By Chris Vinson, the founder and CTO of musician website and marketing platform Bandzoogle.

Do I really need a website for my music? With Facebook, Twitter, and all the musician-specific social networks out there, you might think that your own .COM is obsolete. But there are 3 very important reasons to drive fans to your website instead:

1) You own the address –

First and foremost, you own your .COM address. As long as you maintain it, it will always point to your website. This is powerful — you are guaranteed to own that little slice of the Internet. Even if you switch companies that host your website, your .COM can be transferred, so your fans will always be able to find you.

This is not the case with your social networking profile. They can get bought out, lose out to competition, or simply become un-cool. Thousands of bands relied on their MySpace page as their home base, then switched over to Facebook (after printing their Myspace URL on their merch… ouch!).

This isn't limited to MySpace. Those of you who've been online since 2000 will remember sites like Garageband and MP3.com. Who knows what will happen in 5 years? Will Facebook still be around? Twitter? Google+? It might be an entirely new social networking site that will be "THE" place to have a profile. Your best bet is to make sure that you always have a place where fans can go to find out about your career.

One last point about social networks: if you're really unlucky, you may wake up to find your social network page repossessed. There have been many examples of MySpace doing this. Time will tell if this also happens at Facebook or Twitter. And although his page was not repossessed, one Montreal artist had his Facebook page (with 80,000 fans) hijacked by someone, who then spammed his fans. It can take a while for Facebook to sort out situations like that, and it's a great example of how you can lose control of your social networking page.

2) You Own the Experience –

With your website you also own the experience. You can control what your fans see, when they see it, and the messaging that you send to them. This means:

  • No Distractions – Unlike with social networking sites, on your website there are no ads to distract your fans, and there also aren't dozens of other links vying for their attention. You're able to really focus on your music and your brand. And since you have your fan's full attention, you can then direct them to your call to action to deepen their connection.
  • No Design Limits – With your own website, you don't have any design limits or restrictions. If you want to add a blog, or put a hi-res press kit for download, or even a special "fan-only" page, you can. Your website gives you the opportunity to make a deeper connection with your fans, without the limits of the one-size-fits-all social networks.
  • A Better Buying Experience – If you sell music or merch, your own website is even more critical. Social networking sales tools force fans to interact within a tiny widget, or redirect them to another website altogether to complete the transaction. Having your own store on your own site allows you to give your fans a seamless buying experience, and full control over what that experience is.

3) You Own your Data –

On your .COM site, you can get far more detail on your fans than what you can get on a social networking site. Stuff like:

  • How many people previewed my track last week?
  • Which ones downloaded it?
  • Did they skip ahead to a specific track?
  • Where do those fans live?
  • What site brought them here?

More than stats, you also own your fan list. You probably noticed that you can't move your old MySpace fans to Facebook. That's because you don't own that fan list, MySpace does. Same thing could happen whenever the next hot social network appears. There is no easy "export from Facebook" option!

Remember, your list of fan emails is gold. It allows you to always maintain contact with your fans, regardless which social networks they might be on.


Social Networks Are Still Important

This is not to say that you shouldn't be present on social networks — they clearly have a place to interact with and find new fans. But what's even more important is to have a home base to bring your fans back to that you own, where they can always find you regardless which social networks are popular at the time.

In an upcoming post I'll talk about the "hub and spokes" method of driving fans from your social networks ("spokes") back to your website ("hub"), and list some of the best ways you can do that.

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10 Comments

  1. Agreed. And with easy to use platforms like WordPress, it becomes an simpler task to centralize your web presence. Your site can display your Facebook Like Box, your Bandcamp music player, your Reverbnation email form, your Tumblr blog posts, your Bands In Town show list, .etc. The process is still not flawless or seamless, but it is getting much more artist friendly.

  2. All true. Social networks come and go with their fishy policies and lack of privacy and TOS being changed. If you are working hard on your content published on social networks only, they’ll sell it in case of selling the whole platform or may make the whole platform access paid one pretty day. When you have your own website and somebody steals your content (considering it is really yours) then you have all the rights to sue this motherf….r 😉 I keep relying on own websites, had a few on my own, built a few for promoted bands and we’re all happy. A domain prolongation fees are pain in the ass though at least in Europe. That should be cheaper. However to make the most of the website one needs to match its functionality to the goals. If it’s an informational page only (so that not interactive, no comments, no shoutbox, no forum = no need to moderate anything, no trolling) then keep it to have the most important information at the home page, in a clean nice, readable way. It’s not that great to have it all filled with ‘patches’ (meant as widgets from other social networks) but if you match them to the website design that’s OK. When it comes to a magazine or any interactive website – use all those forums, Facebook and other platform comment plugins and be prepared for having people telling how great you are and how much you suck, or spammers pasting their links to their magic pills 😉 I have tested a lot of CMS and it’s only good if you have a lot to post and frequently. If you have a band and you’re focused on making music rather than blogging – use HTML/CSS or PHP. And again – a significant and relatively short domain name means pure gold.
    As a journalist and promoter I am looking for the official band pages first to see how creative they are and how much they identify with their music (so – how original they are). If the website looks like they care for it, then in most cases their music is well mastered, produced and published too. However there are also many horrible looking sites (aka 90’s design) but the bands come up with amazing music – because they had no programming skills or money to hire a professional but highly skilled to make fantastic music.

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