Friday 7 August 2009

Marketing a Metal Band

Different bands have different ways of coming up with promotional strategies. Many bands take a look at how their favorite successful band is promoting itself... then borrow some of those tactics to apply to their own marketing campaign.

There's nothing wrong with that. It's perfectly acceptable to model the steps others have taken to move up the ladder.
However, you do run the risk of blending in with the mass of bands trying to get ahead.



SlipKnot


Mushroom Head

To stand out, you must take a fresh approach and do something different from what everyone else is doing. But you don't have to reinvent the wheel. In fact, I suggest that you still borrow successful marketing techniques -- only you borrow them from non-music fields. Good ideas are everywhere. Sometimes, the best ones are not in the obvious places.


Here's an example. Enterprise Rent-A-Car is one of the biggest and most successful rental car companies. Enterprise became successful because it catered to a specific niche within the industry -- insurance replacement vehicles. If you're involved in an accident or your car goes into the shop, you need a rental car to drive until yours is fixed. And that's the type of rental upon which Enterprise built its empire.


So what high-tech marketing technique do you think Enterprise uses to get that business? The answer: donuts. That's right, employees from local branches regularly visit repair shops in their area and bring free donuts for the shop workers. It's simple, it's cheap and it keeps Enterprise at the top of the list when repair shop customers need rental cars.


So what high-tech marketing technique do you think Enterprise uses to get that business? The answer: donuts. That's right, employees from local branches regularly visit repair shops in their area and bring free donuts for the shop workers. It's simple, it's cheap and it keeps Enterprise at the top of the list when repair shop customers need rental cars.





Ok Donuts arnt the most metal of all items but you get the idea tho, so from now on, be on the lookout for marketing ideas from any and all sources -- hair salons, dentists, dance troupes, fast food joints, plumbers, you name it.

Looking at the music industry for new ideas is fine. But don't overlook the wealth of ideas you can borrow from other industries as well.

2 comments:

  1. Might be worth getting your artwork/demos into a local independent video or book shop; Japanese horror has a huge following both in written and celluloid form so by association, you might find you build up a following...

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  2. Not a bad idea!!! thanks man weve managed to get some merch in a local shop that sell metal t-shirts etc, but the bookshop & Video shop idea will definatly be looked into

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