Forget the artists for the moment – forget about what the DJ  wants, what the band or their manger wants and let’s focus in on you – the fan –  the customer.  What do you want?  It’s great to get a hand written note from  your favorite player – maybe a signed T-shirt or a retweet from the lead singer but what if they were so busy interacting with their fans, with you, that they  didn’t have time for music?   What if you  demand so much of their time that their next album sucks?

We all know there has been a huge change in the Music  business over the last decade – it’s not just about music – this affects any  business where the product can be digitized and replicated for zero cost.  Everything changes – production changes,  distribution changes and marketing sure as hell changes.  I’m currently studying at the Berklee College  of Music: Online Music Marketing with TopSpin and it is fascinating.
The core discussion is centered on Direct to Fan marketing;  we know you all love an acronym so we’ll refer to it as DTF marketing from here  on.  DTF marketing is brilliant – it means  you don’t have to pander to anybody else, no dealing with coke addled label  reps or bigger picture politics – you can do whatever you want.  You can release your album – call it a  ridiculous name and stick candy covered elves on the front and the only people  you need to answer to are your fans.  It all  sounds utopian doesn’t it?
Except there’s a problem; what if you don’t have a lot of fans?  What if you weren’t “broken” by the existing  label system and you’re sitting in front of your laptop wondering who to email  next?
The concept being pushed by the TopSpin team is that of the  Middle Class musician – basically in the old days (like 2 years ago!) you  either made it - i.e. signed with a label, got your album funded and got promoted  through the system (and even then it was unlikely that you would actually “make  it”) or you didn’t make it – i.e. you didn’t get signed, didn’t get to make  your album and didn’t get hot groupie sex.
The middle class musician falls somewhere in between the two  extremes – you might not become the next John Mayer or Death Cab, but you do  get your album made and can quite probably make a living from having a couple  of thousand fans – if you’re a sole artist.   However – the minute you start to scale – the minute you have 5 members  in the band you need more fans and without access to label cash and label  established marketing channels – how the hell do you get them?
The answer is through hard bloody work, one fan at a time,  making real relationships with your audience, answering their emails,  responding to their tweets, viewing their videos and listening to their  mashups.  By becoming accessible you  deepen the bond between band and fan and when you have something new – the fan  will talk about it and share it with their friends – the marketing of your  music spreads organically through the fan base – your fans are your marketing –  not the radio station.
But each fan demands your time – the story of Jonathon  Coulton scares the hell out of me – great indie artist, started writing and  posting a song a day, got some traction, grew his fan base by developing  immediate online relationships with them, was super smart about his career and  now probably makes around $100k a year as a truly independent artist.  So – what’s scary about that?  Well – The last I heard, Jonathon was  spending 6 hours a day at his laptop maintaining the relationship with his fans  which is great – but – where’s the time for music in that?  Not only that – how can he possibly scale it  any bigger using the same model – surely more fans means more time online and  eventually he’s going to reach a point where he can no longer maintain a deep  enough relationship with his existing fans, let alone his new fans and  ultimately things will slow down and then decline.
Add on top of that that if you’re a 4 piece rock band – you need  4 times as many fans as Jonathon has in order to get a decent lifestyle, which  requires 4 times as much work and we haven’t even touched on upfront costs.
There has to be a middle ground – there has to be a way for  the fan to feel that they’re connected with the artists and that they’re not  going through some lame corporate PR house and likewise there has to be some  way for the artists to wake up in the morning, smoke a doobie and pick up their  instrument without worrying about the 170 emails in their inbox.
That’s the challenge and over the next few weeks, Alex and I  are going to be developing our solution for this – we welcome your comments.
Image Credit:  Source Flickr Author: Amarand Agasi