D.I.Y.

Could You Be Making A Record Almost No One Will Hear?

2You can pour your heart and soul into a record and create some of the best work of your life, but creating good music in no way guarantees anyone will hear it. Here we look at five common pitfalls artists make when releasing new music, and how can avoid making them.

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Guest post by Janelle Rogers for TuneCore

You’re really proud of the record you’ve just made, and you think people would like it if they heard it. In fact, you may think you’re doing the best work of your life. You’ve put nearly a year, if not years of hard work and cash into your album, so it would be amazing if someone actually heard it.

It’s clear you absolutely want to get your music heard, but are you falling into common musician pitfalls that keep you limited to an audience of one or a couple dozen at most?

Below are the five common mistakes artists can make when it comes to releasing a new EP or album, and how you can avoid them:

1. IGNORE YOUR FANBASE

This is one of the most common mistakes we see while bands are in the studio. They let the social media slide completely.

Most often it’s because they find it impossible to pay attention to both recording and managing their social media simultaneously. The problem with that is that your fanbase will also forget about you while you’re hunkered down in the studio recording your next masterpiece. This is in fact a great opportunity to start teasing your fans with the new music you’re working on as you’re working on it.

Ideally you’re still posting daily, but even if it’s just once per week, you should be posting about the songs you’re writing or recording, what’s happening in the studio and what excites you about the new record. This of course doesn’t get around the challenge of trying to balance studio time with social media time. I recommend planning in advance a schedule of what you could post so that you know what you need to post when (that’s half the battle with social media!). If you’re in a band, divide the responsibility between band members. One member always posts on Mondays, another on Tuesdays for instance. Of if one is better with a specific type of content, focus on posting based on content ideas. Either way, you’ve built up a fan base who’s ready for your music once it hits.

2. BAD TIMING

Let me guess: you have no real timeline for your album release campaign.

“Campaign?” What’s that?” you say?

You were just going to release it once you received your masters back – essentially winging it and having a lot happening at once without any real strategy to manage it all. Sound familiar?

First off, you need lead time before releasing your music so you have time to build awareness with both fans and media if you’re trying to secure press coverage on your record. Four to six weeks is recommended for a single and three months for an album or EP. Media who isn’t already aware of you will most often need a minimum of seven impressions to even pay attention. And you most certainly don’t want to rapid fire contact within a short period of time. Fans most likely won’t see the first social media post announcing the record.

And lastly, there are simply better times throughout the year to release singles or albums based on a multitude of factors. You can find a monthly guide to release your single, EP or album in 2019 here.

3. NO POST-PROMOTION PLAN

Your record is finished so your job is done. Now you just need to sit back and wait for people to discover your band and the masterpiece you created.

I wish it were that easy.

There’s not a credible record label on earth who releases a single or album without creating a strong post-recording promotion plan in advance. They know that new fans won’t listen to music they’ve never heard without making sure there’s a strong music promotion strategy to connect with new fans. This will be done through publicity efforts to secure blog coverage, radio airplay and sessions, Spotify playlists, touring and other avenues that will help spread the word about the band.

24. NO BUDGET

I get it if you’re in a band who is self-financing, budgets are going to be a challenge. But if you really believe in your music as much as you say you do, you need to make an investment.

This can be done by budgeting your time to take care of all the facets of promotion that need to happen if you really can’t find a way to raise the money. Ideally, though, you’re able to focus on what you do best – make music while hiring the experts who can more effectively and efficiently promote your music with faster results than you’d receive on your own.

This most often means hiring people who can pitch you to music blogs and Spotify curators. If you’re social media engagement if flatlining, it could mean working with social media companies who can effectively increase your engagement. The cost range is pretty wide for these services, but as a general rule you’ll want to budget a minimum of $2,500 to promote an album or EP and $1,000 for a single if you plan on hiring a team to promote these releases.

Of course, there’s the DIY route (ed. note: plenty of advice on that throughout this blog!). You can do it for less, but also expect the results to reflect that. You can also do it for more, but make sure the package you choose makes sense for a band at your level.

5. ALL OR NOTHING EXPECTATIONS

By now, you may be convinced you need to put a music promotion strategy together for your album release. You know you want coverage in BrooklyVegan, Stereogum, NPR Music and Gorilla vs Bear. Anything less than that will feel like a giant disappointment. Although there are times blogs like those will utterly and hopelessly fall in love with an unknown band on first listen, it’s also unlikely more often than not.

Just like you have to take steps throughout a professional career before becoming company president, you need to do the same with your band. That first time out, maybe you only receive press in small to mid-sized blogs while the Pitchfork’s of the world completely ignore you. That is not a failure. That is a first step. You need to take that first step to get to the next one and the next one.

There are also surprises that come out of promotion that you may not have first expected. For instance, we once had a band covered by a small blog who on the surface seemed insignificant. The owner of that blog also booked a major Brooklyn festival and was able to get the band on that bill. It wasn’t so insignificant after all.

The name of the game is careful planning and execution. If you really want your record heard, don’t ignore all the steps it takes to get there.


Janelle Rogers is the founder of  Green Light Go Publicity, a music PR firm which helps up-and-coming musicians reach their audience.

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2 Comments

  1. This article is hysterically funny. $2,500 to promote an album? $1,000 for a single? Fine if you make a mainstream genre and have some kind of label or rich parent backing. The vast majority of musicians releasing music currently, however, have literally no money to pay for this kind of promotion. Name acts who’ve been around for years are starting to use crowdfunding deals just to record let alone promote. So those of us who are good but totally unknown have no hope. Also, if you’re releasing non-mainstream genres that will never be on radio or TV because of the industry’s complete lack of imagination, then the timings mentioned are meaningless too.
    Someone writing articles for Hypebot should pay attention to niche-genre, ultra-low-budget musicians. There are a great many of us, producing great music of good quality but with no way to get heard. Some genuinely new, innovative and very cheap strategies are needed.

  2. I am in a non-mainstream 3 piece band (primary band)
    None of us has a rich daddy or a are on label.
    When we started out we saved up any extra money from gigs, and day jobs and recorded 15 songs. We had some money for merch as well.
    Each of us 3 were able to get a credit card with a $5000 credit limit and have $15k to use for marketing and doing shows. We spent about $10,000 on a release and marketing campaign using Facebook advertising–yes you read that right,we spent just about 10k on facebook ads–we sold out 200 cap venues, and within a 9 month period sold, yes sold, enough music and merch that we made not only the 10k back from advertising, but covered the costs of recording, and had a profit that we reinvested into more music and merch.
    It took us about 7 months from the FINISH of the music to line everything up, and in between were writing new song as well.
    Once we had our strategy in place, and pulled the trigger, things went fast! You can’t stop and start. You have to continuously be living in your audiences universe with new and engaging content
    So, yes, there are ways, to do it. Inexpensively and effectively. We relied almost exclusively on Facebook advertising. We used OPM-other people’s money in the form of credit cards. However, I will caution you, if you go this route, and do not spent the time planning out every part of your strategy – and i mean writing it down, and referring to the master plan daily, you will go into debt and be in a deep hole you won’t be able to climb out of. (Part of that advertising with Facebook included buying books and attending training on using FB ads)
    Keep moving. Don’t let excuses get in your way.

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