Archive for the ‘ReverbNation’ Category

ReverbNation Adds Expert Human Resources

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

ReverbNation

ReverbNation, now home to more than 500,000 artists, labels, managers and venues, has partnered with an expert faculty of music marketing experts to provide its users with a selection of marketing services, such as PR, radio outreach, street team development, and Twitter or Google optimization.

Any ReverbNation member with a free ReverbNation account can automate an enquiry with an ‘expert’ in the Resources section of his or her account in a couple of clicks.  The listed ‘expert’ has committed to respond in a timely manner.

“The goal here is to efficiently match an Artist’s needs with the right service provider for them,” said Jed Carlson, Co-Founder and COO of ReverbNation.com.  “Finding credible help in the music business can be a significant challenge for Artists.  Our goal is to simplify the process greatly.”

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ReverbNation launches the Reverb Store

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Reverb Store

Yesterday, ReverbNation announced their partnership with Audiolife and the soft launch of the Reverb Store, a robust and fully-integrated e-commerce solution for artists and agents to sell directly to their fanbase.  From do-it-yourself T-shirt designs to comprehensive earning reports, the Reverb Store is as turn-key as the ReverbNation ethos.  Best of all, it includes all the social media promotional widgets and collateral you would expect as well as seamless integration with ReverbNation’s existing marketing features.  Anyone can open a store, create as many custom items as they want, and operate the store for free.  No monthly minimums, no monthly fees.

“The Reverb Store allows artists to layer a purchasing opportunity into every fan interaction they have online, whether it’s at Facebook, MySpace, a blog, or the band’s own website.”
– Michael Doernberg, CEO of ReverbNation

“Artists need solutions that can help them grow their fan base and convert those fans into customers.  The Reverb Store is the total package, combining the best of ReverbNation and Audiolife.”
– Brandon Hance, Founder and CEO of Audiolife

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Yep Roc Records

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

ReverbNation

Yep Roc Records, home to Paul Weller, Madness, Apples in Stereo, among many others, has adopted ReverbNation’s robust newsletter client, FanReach Pro, as part of a new and forward-thinking promotional strategy.

“FanReach Pro is simply the best email service available in the marketplace for Labels and Artists,” said Hank Stockard, Director of Online Promotion and Marketing for Yep Roc.  “It’s the only solution out there that can integrate content with a single click, carry out a variety of very specific marketing objectives, and track the most important metrics about email marketing.  Its also baked right into our label dashboard alongside the other critical ReverbNation marketing tools, giving us a central place to manage online promotion for the roster.”

“Yep Roc is one of the most credible labels in the industry and we are ecstatic to have them using our solutions,” said Jed Carlson, co-founder and chief operating officer of ReverbNation.com.  “Fanreach Pro was designed to make it easy for labels or artists to drive sales of new releases, recruit new fans, grow and execute a street team, promote upcoming shows, distribute widgets and banners, and much more.”

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Free Songs from ReverbNation – Sponsored by Microsoft

Friday, June 26th, 2009

ReverbNation

ReverbNation has officially launched the much-anticipated Sponsored Songs Program previously covered on this blog and, with that, revealed the sponsor behind the initiative: Microsoft Windows.  1000 handpicked ReverbNation artists are being featured on www.MySpace.com/Windows from June 24 through September 24, 2009 and their songs will be available for download for free.  Participating artists will be compensated by Microsoft for every free download to the tune of $0.50 in exchange for a Windows advertisement embedded on the digital artwork.  The three-way partnership is a potentially break-through digital distribution model, providing corporate brands with the means to tap into new, music-centric audiences and creating a fund for independent artists to finance their marketing and distribution activities.  If ReverbNation can find a way to scale this idea (i.e. bring on board more sponsors) and roll out consistent promotions, I am confident that indie artists from every musical sphere will be lining up to get on board.  While I’ve come across some cynics since the launch, I fail to see the downside.  Here is Microsoft’s point of view.

1000 Free Songs from Microsoft Windows

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ReverbNation Site Builder

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

ReverbNation

In a press release distributed today by ReverbNation’s own Jed Carlson, ReverbNation, the all-under-one-roof music marketing portal with almost 400,000 users announced the pre-launch of a new product dubbed Site Builder, a collaborative effort with Bandzoogle, a custom website building service for indie artists.  Site Builder enables artists with no technical know-how to easily create their own websites in just a few clicks and automatically integrate their content from their ReverbNation accounts and connect their websites to other supporting ReverbNation features such as FanReach, the popular newsletter client.

“It’s critical for Artists to have their own ‘home’ where they can develop fan relationships, grow their brand, and conduct business directly with their fans,” says ReverbNation Co-Founder Lou Plaia.  “Site Builder is another step in creating a true, turnkey solution for the DIY artist.   Soon we will be adding a comprehensive direct-to-fan store that will allow artists to sell merchandise, music, ringtones, and tickets to their fans through all of their fan touch points online.”

The addition of Site Builder to ReverbNation’s comprehensive, one-stop service brings the company even closer to its 360-degree vision for DIY artists.

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Sponsored Songs Program

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

ReverbNation

ReverbNation, now home to almost 400,000 artists, agents, venue promoters, and indie labels, announced on Thursday that the company will select up to 1000 of its artists to participate in a “Sponsored Songs” program.  Under the terms of this initiative, participating artists will earn a sponsorship fee of $0.50 per “qualified” download acquired by their fans.  Each song will display the sponsor’s branded message as part of the digital cover artwork, visible each time the track is played on a music device.  As the sponsored songs spread virally, from fan to fan and to new prospects, the sponsor will be able to track every unique impression and gauge the ultimate value of his campaign.

“Sponsored Songs is one of several new programs that offer musicians a new revenue stream, capitalizing on the strength of their fan relationships and offering advertisers a better way to reach potential consumers” ? Michael Doernberg, CEO of ReverbNation

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ReverbNation

Monday, April 27th, 2009

ReverbNation

I thoroughly enjoyed a recent email exchange with ReverbNation’s Co-Founder and COO, Jed Carlson, who shed some light on the company’s background, positioning and perspective on music 2.0.  The company, which has arguably taken the lead in affordable and scalable music marketing solutions over the last three years, has been consistently rolling out new features that have raised the bar within the online music industry by providing truly turn-key solutions for artists and music industry professionals of every caliber, function and style.

Although ReverbNation has been on my radar for some time now, their proposition genuinely piqued my interest when a good friend shared his enthusiasm for FanReach, the company’s free email marketing service, about a year ago.  Later and in an unrelated matter, I began researching the various players in the digital distribution realm.  ReverbNation came up.  In fact, every time I discovered a faster, better, cooler way to go to market as a musician or promoter, be it music tech or otherwise, Jed and his team appeared to have a stake in it – and a palpable competitive advantage, no less.  I needed to get to the bottom of this and do it quick-smart… how is it that I’m not in the proverbial know? Pfft.

Jed, for every ‘solution’ on ReverbNation, there’s at least a handful of small companies specializing and excelling in that particular offering.  How does ReverbNation compete, differentiate and manage such risk?

I would argue that we compete well because of these 3 things:

1. We listen to our Artists.  It sounds obvious, but over 80% of our new features come from user suggestions.  We have never claimed to have all the answers, but we do focus on asking the right questions and listening, carefully.  Lots of companies talk about how they know what the future of music is.  We fully acknowledge the uncertainty of the future landscape, and instead focus on the realities on the ground in front of our customers.  Who knew that Twitter would be important to musicians a year ago, for example?  That doesn’t mean we don’t think about the future.   But Artists need action today, or there may be no tomorrow for them. 

2. We are marketing technology experts, with a minor in music.  Many competitors are born of music experts that are trying to solve a specific music business problem of the day.  That’s fine, but it’s a bit like being an expert in 727 airplanes versus being an expert pilot.  The landscape (airplane, in this analogy) is changing constantly.   Artists need a marketing partner that will automatically take advantage of the latest opportunity that technology offers for them, versus someone that can fly that specific plane really, really well.  A great example of this is our oldest solution, the FanReach email product.  In the early days, it served the basic purpose of sending emails to fans for the Artist.  Today, FanReach can be used to specifically promote a show, grow a street team, invite fans to a CD Release Party, and can even be set to automatically ‘find’ more information about each fan while the Artist sleeps at night.  Why?  See #1 above. 

3. We take a holistic approach to our solutions.   Artists, in general, don’t sit around and craft a ‘Facebook Strategy’, think about how to position their music at Amazon versus iTunes, or worry about how to approach Twitter as a marketing vehicle.  They think about ‘promoting’ the music that they worked so hard to create.  Our job is to worry about all of that for them, use the data collected from those that came before them, and give them the best tools to execute a more effective marketing campaign than they otherwise would have.

Notwithstanding the one-stop-shop approach, how is ReverbNation aiming to change the independent music management and promotion landscape?

Our goal is to create visibility and options for the Artist.  That doesn’t mean that we don’t respect the hard working companies and individuals that orbit and support them ? quite the contrary, in fact.  Since our earliest days, we have supported record labels, managers, venue operators, and promoters in their endeavors to bring music to the people.  We even give them the same solutions to execute and track marketing campaigns on behalf of their Artists.
  
In the past, the potential value of an Artist has been a very difficult thing to measure.  Our solutions can help solve that.  We believe that the future financial value of every Artist lies in their ability to engage fans.  It isn’t just the number of fans, but how often and how deeply they can engage them.  We aim to change the landscape by elevating Fan Relationship Management (FRM) as the key to success, and positioning the company as the preeminent partner that any Artist can have in that endeavor.  But let me be clear, many Artists are NOT interested in financial success.   That’s cool too.  Our solutions can aid them in just getting the music out to their fans, and we see that as part of our mandate.

As a technology company, what propriety technologies have you incorporated into your offering to ensure a high barrier of entry for competitors?

Our barriers come mostly from the breadth of services we offer (back to the one-stop-shop), the specific innovations we offer versus other similar tech, and the traction we already enjoy with lots of happy customers.  It’s no secret that over 350,000 Artists are using the platform today, and hundreds more signup every day (90% from word of mouth).  We are humbled by this popularity, and it speaks to how we listen to our users.

ReverbNation is literally a caldron of thousands of marketing experiments being carried out every day by Artists from hundreds of countries, and all walks of life.  We are able to synthesize the best practices out of the marketing ‘noise’ and implement them into technology that can be applied by virtually any Artist, with a high probability of success.   A great example of this is the Exclusive Download Widget that we provide.  We observed that Artists were being very successful at exchanging exclusive content (a new song, for example) for a mailing list signup (something very valuable to Artists).  We codified this into an easy to use widget that Artists could place on their web pages and blogs with a simple cut and paste.  This widget exchanges song downloads for an email address from the fan.  Artists who use this tool grow their mailing list at a rate of 600% faster than those who don’t.  Do Artists want solutions like that?  Um, yes please.  We knew they would, because we observed it working for some of them already.

It appears that ReverbNation opts to develop technologies and features in-house rather than form strategic alliances to expand its suite of tools.  Why?

We are very competent at building technology (it’s our pedigree), and our strategy has always been to evolve over time in a way that was more complete and cohesive. Partnerships have an inherent attribute of being challenging to integrate into the big picture that we promote. That said, we have identified some key areas where we will partner in the near future in the best interest of the Artist.  We aren’t against partnering, if it can be done in a way consistent with Artists’ goals.

Our internal credo is “Artist First”.   If a feature or product doesn’t first help the Artist, we don’t do it.  Period.  When partnerships can work inside of this belief, they are a real opportunity.

Free email marketing was a big win for ReverbNation in terms of user acquisition.  How do you intend on riding this wave?  What are the monetization prospects here?

We are currently operating on a ‘freemium’ model where we offer up the best free services artists can find anywhere, but still provide them (at a reasonable price) the services they need when they outgrow the free stuff, and can afford to pay us for the services.  This accomplishes our goal of artist acquisition as well as our mission to get artists involved very early in their careers when they don’t have money to spend, and need our support.  We believe in helping EVERY artist succeed, and we don’t feel that we should participate in their success until they achieve it. That reciprocity ? I’ll help you now, but when you get big don’t forget about us ? model jives well with our culture and enables the ‘Artist First’ philosophy upon which we founded the company.  Artists are people.  And people don’t forget who helped them grow.

Digital music distribution, in my opinion, is an awesome offering.  Are you identifying a significant migration of users from CD Baby and TuneCore to ReverbNation?

Yes, we have users migrating.  But CD Baby and TuneCore are awesome in what they do.  Again, this goes to the core of the ‘one-stop-shop’ mentality.  When you really think about Digital Distro, the key is driving that one additional sale, not price-shopping on the service that makes it possible (we actually promote the CD Baby service if it will help the Artist sell more music).  If an Artist partners with a service that can help them sell even one more album per year, they win.  Our goal is to focus on the top line growth for artists, and our solutions help them do that.  Artists need to be everywhere fans and potential fans might be ? offering up their content and selling some of it when they can.  Fans go where fans go, and Artists need to be there to meet them.  Our digital distribution service is special in the way it helps them sell more music, not in how it transfers their song file to iTunes.   Anyone can do that.

Other than the pricepoint, how does ReverbNation’s digital distribution solution differ from the other players’?

We try to be competitive with the other offerings on pricing, but the big difference is in how we help them sell the tracks once they are posted to retail.  Every one of our widgets, for example, offers links to buy the tracks at retail, whether it is posted on their MySpace, homepage, or blog.  We even introduced a ‘retail links’ widget that automatically searches iTunes and Amazon for the artist’s merch and music and pulls those offerings into one widget they can place anywhere.  Our email solution automatically integrates the ‘buy links’ into the messages that Artists send.  These are just two examples of how we help the Artists transact more business.   Digital Distribution is really just a means to an end.  Direct-to-fan stores are gaining traction right now as an alternative to selling at retail, and we hope to be in that game.

What may we expect ReverbNation to look like and offer over the next year or two?

The quick answer is that ReverbNation will be more ‘complete’ than it is today.  We will have more artists involved, better feedback from our users, and we will be able to help with more of the ‘pie’ of services that Artists, and those that serve them, require.  I also expect to have a couple of very innovative revenue solutions for Artists to better monetize their content than are available today.  If we can make Artists more successful tomorrow than they were today, we have accomplished our mission, and the company will be a success.  We don’t expect to be successful if our Artists are not.

ReverbNation Auto-Tweet

Friday, April 24th, 2009

ReverbNation

ReverbNation, the leading provider of dedicated music commerce and communication tools, have added a simple yet crucial feature to their roster.  The new optional ‘Auto-Tweet’ feature automatically updates ReverbNation members’ Twitter accounts whenever they post a new song (with a link to play the song), post a blog entry (with a link to the blog), recommend another artist (with a link to the artist’s profile page), and/or add a show to their schedule (with a link to their schedule and tickets).  Given ReverbNation’s strong emphasis on fan relationship management, I think ‘Auto-Tweet’ will be very well received by their userbase of more than 375,000 members.  It may also pose a threat to ArtistData who developed an entire suite of tools around the auto-syndication theme.  Given the popularity of services such as Ping.fm, I expect ReverbNation to extend this offering by allowing its users to synchronize and distribute updates to several social networks and bookmarking portals automatically, not just Twitter.

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ReverbNation: Email Marketing

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

ReverbNation

ReverbNation, the prominent music marketing and promotion resource for over 375,000 artists, labels, managers, and venues, has launched FanReach Pro, a premium version of its successful FanReach email service used by more than 80,000 of its members to manage and communicate with their fanbase.  FanReach Pro boasts a number of distinct upgrades, including ‘One-Click Content’ which pulls the artist’s profile content (i.e. music, videos, gigs, press, links etc.) into any outbound message in a single click, saving much time and effort in the swift deployment of newsletters and promotional emails.  In addition, FanReach Pro includes ‘Fan360’, a semantic search feature that feeds back public data from the web about the individual mailing list subscribers.  This is especially useful when it comes to composing a compelling and targeted message, and provides a means to segment the mailing list based on subscriber characteristics (e.g. location, gender, age, and online presence).  To my knowledge, ‘Fan360′ will be the first real-time subscriber metrics feature incorprated into a web-based email client, perhaps making FanReach Pro the most powerful email/newsletter marketing tool on the market.
 
FanReach Pro is available for a 30-day free trial, and starting from $9.95 per month, which is significantly cheaper than its rivals and, in terms of its feature set, presents some serious competition for FanBridge.