UK Music Jobs Blog

Build a following without a record label

February 5th, 2009 by Lee Jarvis
Posted in Lee Jarvis, Music Industry Career Advice

Traditionally, most artists and bands would dream of getting a record contract. In the modern digital music world, this aim has diminished, as it is no longer a necessary part of a successful music career. The most important part of your music career today is the ability to build a following. If you think that’s not possible without a major label spending big bucks on your marketing campaign then think again, and think ‘online’.

The internet has brought together networks of people who are geographically spread far and wide, and with a good online promotion plan you can provide a place for them to socialise on the web and ultimately become loyal fans. Artists are managing to do this with success on many levels, in all genres. Scouting for Girls built their reputation on social networking sites (plus their performance at the UK Music Jobs launch party!), and once their fans and followers started to increase, so did media interest. Both of those can snowball in the right conditions, and that will help push ticket sales of shows and so on. Generating that much ‘noise’ online can draw you to the attention of record labels, as happened to Erin McCarley. The singer-songwriter rocketed from virtually unknown to her current level in little over a year, and this was “due in no small part to things like MySpace”. McCarley goes on to add, “That stuff kind of started before I even got with a label… And so people became aware through MySpace and then [television] music supervisors started contacting [me]”. So, even if you still want that elusive record contract, these are steps that you should be taking anyway.

Putting your music out there is the first step, but connecting with your fans will help entice them back to your site or page. People crave authenticity, and this will also encourage them to spread the word about your music for you. With the array of social networking sites available, you can post photos, blogs, interviews, offer free downloads, directly message your fans asking to upload videos, and so much more. What should you be concentrating on? All of it. Which site should you have a presence on? All of them. This is not a scatter-gun approach, rather that there are many places that music-loving people hang out online, depending on their a number of personal preferences. The choice is endless, unlike a small town that may only have one music magazine (therefore that is the one to advertise in), and your fans are everywhere, therefore so should you be. What you do with the following once you have it is up to you (go on tour? sell T-shirts? start a cult?), but to get there, you must build it yourself.

Be online, be genuine, be found.

Lee Jarvis.

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8 Responses to “Build a following without a record label”

  1. Popular People » Blog Archive » Must have Compilations of 2009 | Music Picks - Music News Philippines Says:

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  2. Maggie’s Blog » Blog Archive » Transportation Music Record Company Says:

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  3. LeVar Thomas Says:

    Great article!

    LeVar Thomas
    Singer-Songwriter
    info@levarthomas.com
    http://myspace.com/lthomasmusic
    http://twitter.com/levarthomas
    http://LeVarThomas.com/Music
    http://imeem.com/levarthomas

  4. Ajit Says:

    Hello Lee,

    Thank-you for the information. I agree on most of the points you mentioned. I have always believed in the power of the internet.

    Kind regards,
    Ajit

  5. Claz Gomez Says:

    Hi Lee,

    Thanks for this article!

    I co-manage a band who are just starting up, and one of our plans for fulfilling our online promotions is to get a large number of people on the ‘online promotions’ team on a part-time basis. This way, we are hoping that we will be everywhere. Of course we are still generating material to present online, but we’ve planned the tasks for the online promotions team to get stuck in with once we’ve mastered more demos. It isn’t so much the case of securing a record contract for our band – we just want to play good music live, to a crowd that will appreciate our sound and originality.

    One thing we’re learning is that this kind of thing can’t just be done by 1 person on a part-time basis; it almost requires a team of at least 3 committed people doing it on a full-time basis – and not the band members, as they should be concentrating on making music. Like you said, there’s power in numbers – and that also applies to the team that will be generating the numbers in our following!

  6. What’s Buzzing? » Blog Archive » Lee Cullum: Dallas Arts District Thrives Amid Uncertainty | News … Says:

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  7. Lee Jarvis Says:

    Thanks for your comments guys! I’m glad you are finding the blog useful and hope to see you here again soon :)

    Lee.

  8. Record Label Contracts Says:

    Hi,
    The points are really informative and valid.
    Thanks for sharing.

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