How to write social media copy for your music

How to write social media copy for your music

Don’t waste your hard-earned money on ads until you know how to write an effective copy. An effective copy is to your music what a mini skirt is to an endowed damsel, short and attention-grabbing.

Let’s skip the part where I try to sell you the generic facade that I’ve written “thousands” of copies that have brought in millions of dollars for my clients just to get you to stay glued to your screen for the next five minutes. While it is true that I know my onions and I’ve been doing this for a long time, I’m pretty much an avid learner just like you, and I believe there’s more to learn about copywriting regardless of how much you know. In this guide, you will learn about the nitty-gritty of copywriting, how you can upgrade your copywriting skills, and the little tricks you may have been missing all this while.

Are you set? Let’s go!

The purpose of copywriting for musicians

The purpose of copywriting for musicians is to draw listeners closer to an artist’s music/merch (without letting the copy distract them) using social media captions, images, or videos.

How to write social media copy for your music

Copywriting is simply the act of writing an ad copy. A copy can either be short-form or long-form. Short-form copywriting aims to convert listeners or create awareness using a minimal number of words. The word count for a short form copy can range from 5 words to 1000 words. Examples of a short form copy include captions, brand names, product names, direct mails, CTAs, Banner ads, PPC ads, magazine ads, etc.

On the flip side, a long-form copy utilizes more than one thousand words. However, the ultimate aim is to convert listeners just like its short-form alternative. Examples of long-form copy include website copies, eBooks, guides, white papers, lengthy articles, and many more.

Every industry has its unique ways of getting the attention of its targeted audiences. For example, the way a doctor would write a copy is different from how an artist would write a copy. In addition, some professions require a certain level of formality while others use informal words like ‘lol’, YKTV’, ‘LMAO’.

Also, the demographics you are targeting will determine the words and phrases you can use or not use.​For instance, when LGBTQ singers want to target their community, they use gender pronouns more.

Generally speaking, there is no one-size-fits-all rule for copywriting. You have to first understand your audience. Determine your aim, and make your rules along the way. When writing to a specific audience, you must consider their age range, sex, race, and interests. You cannot afford to use a slight misnomer, as such mistakes can ruin your brand.

How to write an ad copy like a professional

When promoting your new release, understand that your goal is to sell an experience. The choice of words you use, the slang/slogan you chant, and the story you tell must be in sync with the music. If you use trap terms to promote a soul track, the trap fans would angrily leave your Spotify page or dislike your music on YouTube.

Research

The first thing you ought to do before writing your copy is to research. You can use platforms such as Reddit, Facebook, or YouTube to see what copies are working and those that have failed.

Facebook ads work well because it allows artists to target potential fans where they are gathered, meaning you can target music-related groups and fan pages of other artists. Before targeting them, check those groups to know what the trendy conversation there is. Note their likes, dislikes, and different cultures.

You can do this by searching for a specific genre or popular musician fan groups. You don’t want to duplicate another artist’s copy as they can take down your ad. Searching for the most successful captions can give you an idea of what works and what doesn’t.

For instance, if I wanted to write a copy for a new Afrobeats track, I would search for keywords like Afrobeats, Wizkid, or Burna Boy on YouTube. The second and third keywords are names of popular Afrobeats artists. For your genre, you can use the names of popular artists.

When you search for the keyword on Facebook, you will be shown the popular groups, pages, people, images, videos, forums, events, related searches, and infinite posts on that particular genre.

Define the essence of your copy

Whether you want to trigger your audience to comment, like, follow/subscribe to your social media channel, or you want to tell a story about our upcoming release – setting a goal for your campaign will help you boil the copy ideas down to the slogans and sentences that matter the most.

Use powerful headlines

Your copy headline is the title of your copy. Frequently, it is the first thing people see before proceeding to read your copy. The headline can be designed with your art cover (the picture or video accompanying your copy) Many people would forget the message of your campaign. However, if your headline is good enough, it will stick around for a long time. For example, we all remember Nike’s “Just do it” campaign, but many have forgotten the campaign’s details.

Paint an interesting picture

A good copy seeks to engage and paint a picture. Copywriting is like poetry because the two fields require telling a story with the briefest words possible. The only difference is that copywriting aims to sell an idea without the use of ornate language. As a copywriter, you must use simple words, not complex terms.

When writing your copy, opt for words that stimulate a gut feeling or a visual image. Also, ensure the first sentence of the copy makes the readers curious to read more. In line with the impeccable advice of a legendary copywriter, Joe Sugarman, “the main purpose of the first sentence is to get you to read the second sentence.

Structure your copy using the AIDA model

The AIDA is an acronym for attention, interests, desire, and action. A good copy must;

  • Make the reader of the genre, song, or artist.
  • Incite the consumer’s interest in the music using stories they can relate to or mirroring their lifestyle.
  • Seek to bank on the consumer’s desires. To know their desires, you need to be an excellent researcher.
  • Propel the consumer to act.

Use CTA at the end of the copy

People love to be told what to do. When someone enjoys your 30 seconds music snippet on Facebook, you would expect them to automatically like or save the song on Spotify, but the reality is that they won’t do so if you don’t tell them what to do. If you want them to listen to your new song, use captions such as “listen on Spotify now, check out my new release on Spotify” or “join the release party on Spotify.”

If you want the audience to comment, you can tell them to drop a fire emoji in the comment section if they love the snippet. You can also ask the listeners for ideas since everyone wants to be heard.

Keep Rewriting

No matter how ridiculous your first idea is, pen it down. Then, keep rewriting. Don’t be fooled into thinking professional copywriters get it right at the first trial. Your first thoughts are like unrefined gold; the more you refine it, the more it sparkles. According to David Ogilvy, a British advertising tycoon, I am a lousy copywriter, but I’m a good editor. So I go to work on my own draft. After four or five changes, it looks good enough to show the client.”

How to get on Spotify DJ mixes

How to get on Spotify DJ mixes

Dance and electronic music slap harder when multiple tracks are sequenced and mixed in a way that creates a live sonic experience that is way different from what listeners would typically get from playlists.

Once listeners get used to a Spotify playlist to the point of being able to predict the next song, the music experience becomes boring over time. DJ mixes come with unpredictability, smooth transitioning, and intelligent live mastering. These qualities are missing in regular Spotify playlists. The Spotify DJ mode helps create fading transitions between tracks in a playlist; however, the feature does not match professional DJ services. Third-party DJ controller apps like Algoriddim DJAY used to be a go-to option for listeners who wanted to create DJ mixes, but Spotify discontinued the DJ apps in 2020.

Return of Spotify DJ Mixes

Spotify cannot continue to run away from its consumers’ cravings. Considering that Apple Music is doubling down on its devotion to creating DJ mixes, it’s only a matter of time before Spotify starts losing dance and electronic music fans to Apple Music.

Spotify DJ mixes returned to Swedish audio-streaming last month. The Spotify DJ Mixes feature allows DJs in 8 countries – namely, the United Kingdom, Australia, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the Philippines, and Indonesia – to create DJ mixes for Spotify listeners. The feature will allow listeners to have a different feel of their favorite tracks, discover new music from unexplored terrains and interact more with artists.

The DJ mixes feature is still in its early stages, and Spotify tipped fans on their blog to “expect” a better experience as time goes on.
On the first day of the launch, the original DJ

mixes for Spotify were curated by DJ Adam Beyer, DJ AmyElle, DJ Shingo Nakamura, DJ Moti, and DJ Noise.

How do Spotify DJ mixes work?

For the time being, it is still unclear how Spotify DJ mixes works for the upcoming DJs who may not yet have enough clout to be invited by Spotify. The DJs who made it to the first row during the launch were handpicked, and it seems Spotify is still testing the waters.

The feasibility of Spotify DJ mixes would depend on its audio identification, payment, and clearance model.

How to turn a potential listener into a fan

How to turn a potential listener into a fan

Stop wasting your money on ads that won’t convert. Learn how to reduce your Facebook ad costs and maximize the impact of your campaign in no time.

The first thing you must realize as an artist is that nothing is stopping your targeted audience from zapping past your audio commercial on Spotify Marquee or scrolling past your Facebook ad. They have the remote control and they can choose to ignore you regardless of how many times your ad appears on their screen. That’s heartbreaking but it’s the truth.

A reliable fanbase is a reward you get for doing not just one thing but a lot of things right. In this guide, we will teach you how to drive your streams up to the maximum using the “heating” process explained in this guide. Interested? We thought as much.

Guess whose attention span sits beside that of a Goldfish

Your potential audience – you heard that right!

While the comparison of a human attention span to that of a Goldfish (which is 9 seconds) is a truthful lie (an unverified assumption); one open secret we cannot deny is that our attention span has decreased spontaneously since the internet was made public in 1993.

In line with the beliefs of Neil Postman, a renowned American educator, modern technology is successfully taking the human attention span to its nadir.

Also, Seth Godin rightly stated in the Nordic Business Forum, “We have branded ourselves to death”, thereby giving our audience no choice but to turn a deaf ear to our ads. Hence, the average artist must “warm-up” their cold audience before they can get the opportunity to sell merch, ask for users’ data, or ask for a Spotify follow.

What are Cold Audiences?

A cold audience is simply an infinite group of social media users who have not heard of your brand before online or offline. A CNN news consumer who has seen your infomercial on TV is not regarded as a member of the cold audience. A driver who has seen your Billboard ad is not considered part of the cold audience. Do you know what a cold audience looks like? Regular students in India who have not listened to your trap track before and don’t know if your brand exists.

Some blogs will limit the definition of a cold audience to online users who have an interest in a certain genre. However, we live on an all-inclusive sonic planet where most songs fit into multiple genres and many artists are still trying to find their unique sounds. To limit their potential audience(s) to a certain interest/genre is to shut out the vast potential fans out there. For the sake of this guide, we’ll like to keep the hope of finding new listeners alive.

What are Warm Audiences?

A warm audience is a category of internet users who are familiar with your brand to an extent. These are people who have read a blog article about your brand, watched your YouTube video before, followed you on social media, or engaged with your content online.

On a scale of 1 to 10, the warmth of an audience varies, where 1 is mildly warm and 10 is very hot.

How to warm up cold audiences

Like we mentioned earlier, artists need to educate their targeted audience about their brands before trying to convert them to fans. Facebook (or Meta, LOL) gives artists the opportunity to specify their audience based on specific interests, so as to help them find users who are more likely to enjoy their sound. Follow the steps below to warm up cold audiences;

  • Put your best foot forward by creating a static/moving video that features the most memorable/melodic part of your song.
  • Ensure that the art cover (if it is a static video) or your background (if it is a freestyle video) tells a story and puts the listener in a unique mood. For instance, a freestyle video at the beach is very suitable for an acoustic guitar song.
  • Write a short caption that gives the viewer a sneak peek at your brand. And don’t forget to be personal when composing your introduction.
  • Give them a good reason to follow you for more without sounding desperate.

When heating up the cold audience, do not try to get them off the social media platform. Your first goal is to get their attention and turn it into brand affection.

How to keep engaging the warm audience

Like the cold audience, the warm audience needs to be sustained with great content to prevent them from growing cold. You have to create a content calendar and ensure you keep adding value to your established audience.

Don’t bombard them with sales posts about your merch or live shows. Entertain first before asking them for a favor and when you try to sell them something, don’t overdo it.

Increase your Spotify Engagement with Canvas Tool

Increase your Spotify Engagement with Canvas Tool

Get a 200% boost in track shares on your Spotify discography and future releases with the aid of the new Canvas Tool recently launched by Spotify. The tool is available for all artists regardless of region or genre. Take advantage of this secret Canvas tool while it is still effective, and most artists don’t know about it.

Great artists don’t just make good music; they create an unforgettable experience that will get the press and their fans talking for a very long period of time. Following the wise words of Maya Angelou, a three times Grammy winner, People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will not forget how you made them feel.

When it comes to audio consumption, the visuals matter too. Artists like Billie Eilish and Poppy have used Canvas to help fans understand the original concept behind their music. In addition, canvas makes sharing artists’ projects more appealing to fans, hence enhancing your word-of-mouth marketing plan. Listeners can share these creative canvas backgrounds besides primarily sharing your music to their Instagram stories by clicking on the three dots (…) icon on the top right corner of their screen while listening to your tracks.

The Biggest Winner

Currently, Spotify claimed that Artists who used the Canvas Beta saw a 200% increase in track shares plus an undetailed increase in streams, artist profile visits, and track saves. Like every new tool, the Canvas tool will prove highly effective until every artist adopts the same tactic. While artists can make different canvases for their songs, the immense increase Canvas users enjoy will likely decline when Spotify becomes oversaturated with Canvases.

However, in this tussle for more plays, the biggest winner remains Spotify. They will get more people to subscribe to their platform and stay on the app without spending a dime on visuals or a visual-creation tool.

Making a professional visual per track can cost from $300 – $10,000 on freelancing platforms like Fiverr or Upwork. Most indie artists will have to settle for an album/song art cover as uploading no visual is better than using a bad one. Those who would gain immensely from this tool are the big labels and artists with big budgets.

Spotify aims to keep people on its platform for as long as possible. With the aid of looping visuals, the Spotify app will become a universe of its own.

The Ultimate Reward of Using the Canva Tool

While it is true that Spotify will get the biggest share when the Canva idea pays off, it is a win-win situation for both parties (artists and Spotify). Do not forget that the Spotify algorithm is designed to reward tracks that keep Spotify users on its platform. Inevitably, the algorithm will smile upon artists who can keep users glued to the Spotify platform and bring in more subscribers. A boost from the algorithm will ultimately translate into more playlisting, streams, saves, and followers.

While the number of people who interacted with the shared Canvas video will not be recorded, artists will get Canva metrics when a user uses the Canva link.

Apart from increasing followers’ engagement on the platform, you can also announce a new project, concert, or new video to listeners directly when they are listening to your track. 

How TikTok is becoming a Music Streaming Giant

How TikTok is becoming a Music Streaming Giant

Don’t miss the opportunity of going viral using the tools and platforms created by TikTok to make it easier for indie artists to connect with music fans.

TikTok announced on Music Business Worldwide that they will be launching a beta program (known as SoundOn) that will help upcoming artists move from phase A to B in their music careers. The major problem with attaining exposure on TikTok is that its audience is so vast that artists find it challenging to define their fanbase, sell merch, and hold concerts in physical locations. A good example is Coi Leray, a female artist who is struggling to garner loyal fans among the hip-hop communities despite releasing successful singles and collaborating with established rappers like Lil Durk, Gunna, Wale, and EARTHGANG. With the SoundOn platform, TikTok hopes to bridge the gap between its online platform and the world stage.

Also, they are working with UnitedMasters, an American music distribution service, to help indie artists distribute their music to all music platforms directly from the TikTok app. UnitedMasters is home to popular artists like Lil Tecca, NLE Choppa, Lil XXEL, Tobe Nwigwe.

TikTok hopes to grow its commercial music library as a result of the UnitedMasters deal. TikTok’s commercial music library is a collection of pre-cleared and royalty-free songs approved by the owners (upcoming artists and established music houses).

The short-video sharing app doubles as a social networking platform fast becoming a music streaming giant. Unlike other audio-streaming platforms such as Spotify, Apple Music, or Deezer, TikTok has over 1 billion users across planet earth. Gone are the days when TikTok was dubbed the kids’ app; nowadays you can now find users of all ages on the platform. According to Wallaroo, 26% of the 80 million US users on TikTok are within the age range of 25-44 while 80% are between the ages 16-24. TikTok is a digital village consisting of all types of people from diverse backgrounds, age groups, belief systems, or gender. 

Engagement Not Consumption

TikTok pays artists per engagement, not per stream, meaning artists get paid when their music is used to create video content on the platform. Therefore, the amount of views generated by the video content has no impact on the royalty payout. Also, the amount received per engagement is determined by the market share as opposed to the standard metric view system used by Apple and Spotify.

Most artists are generally interested in the TikTok model since it can give their music more exposure. In an interview with Genius, Xeno Carr (a member of the iLOVEFRIDAYS duo) said the exposure TikTok offers on their future projects is far more valuable than the royalty payout they would have gotten from the usual pay-per-stream model.

Where Social networking Intercepts ShowBiz

Although upcoming artists in the music industry can afford to trade music royalties for viral exposure, established artists who will get heard with or without TikTok prefer to get paid by their distributors. Aside from the money obtained from the distribution deal with Tiktok, another possible way of making money on TikTok is by monetizing live streaming. While the idea of paid live streaming is still in its baby phase, it is a promising one.

When artists plan to hold live-streamed concerts, they don’t have to pay for a physical space, plus they can also make tickets very affordable for fans. The reason artists charge $200 – $5000 for concerts is because it is expensive to rent stadiums and halls for shows.

While TikTok has yet to monetize its live streaming platform, it plans to do so after attaining an impeccable user experience. Artists like Ed Sheeran, Justin Beiber, and J Balvin have held separate shows using the TikTok Livestream platform and gained huge success. For example, the J Balvin live stream has about 4.5 million unique views. Finally, the artists in the future can tour with ease and earn more money using the Livestream platform. 

5 Reasons Artists Should Never Buy Fake Streams

5 Reasons Artists Should Never Buy Fake Streams

It might be tempting to buy fake streams in a bid to impress your peers and the labels, but do you know about the disadvantages of getting artificial streams?

Have you been finessed by playlist curators who promised authentic streams and in the end, all you got was valueless streams from bots?

Do you want to know how to differentiate between fake bot streams and real Spotify streams?

You have come to the right place. This guide will help you understand why buying fake streams is harmful to your career as an artist and the best ways to identify playlist curators who bulk up their playlist stream count with bots.

You make your rules in the music game, but one rule you must adopt regardless of your tribe or genre is common sense. There is nothing commonsensical or profitable in getting fake streams from bots. For one thing, Spotify will not pay you a dime for racking up artificial streams, and at worst, your artist account can get banned for life. Yeah, you heard that right – for life!

What is a fake stream?

A fake or artificial stream is derived using bots and scripts (automated machine processes). These automated machine processes create unusual streaming patterns that are not congruent with the behavior of an average human listener. Money paid to dishonest artists is money stolen from the hardworking ones who get their streams from genuine Spotify listeners. Spotify can adjust stream count, limit exposure, remove songs, and withhold royalties of artists who are caught in such fraudulent acts.

How to detect fake streams

Spotify’s fraud-monitoring team is purging artists using fake streams from their streaming platform. The major victims of this Spotify purge are artists unaware that the streams they got from 3rd party listener playlists are artificially generated.  When reaching out to independent playlist curators, be sure to vet the playlist and toss them off your list if you find any unusual listening patterns.

These dishonest playlists can be identified by following the down-to-earth steps given in this section. It is important to note that Spotify does not provide a tool that helps artists distinguish between fake streams and real streams. Hence, the methods recommended in this guide are based on gut instinct and rationality, as there is no accessible foolproof method of identifying artificial streaming.

While paying money to get into an independent playlist is illegal, according to Spotify, the major downside of getting on these playlists is that some use bots and fake Spotify accounts to grow their playlists. So even if you are willing to risk getting caught by Spotify and intend to pay for a playlist placement, you have to ensure the streams from the playlist are real. Follow the steps below to vet a playlist.

Ask for their Playlist Growth Strategy

If your track is getting free placement from an independent playlist, it is odd to ask them for their playlist growth strategy. However, if you are going to put your money on it, it has to be legit. The healthy ways independent playlist curators grow their page are through Facebook ads, Google ads, influencer promotion, or social media engagement. If a playlist curator cannot provide you with evidence of how they grow their playlist, it is safe to assume that the playlist is fake.

Reach out to artists who have been featured on the playlist

When you want to order a piece of furniture (let’s say a chair) from a furniture company, the first thing you do is search Google for reviews from their customers. The same applies to playlist shopping. Reach out to various featured artists and ask them about their experiences with the playlist. Like every disgruntled user, any artist who has been a victim of a playlist would gladly provide you with the necessary information. Also, ask if the playlist followers saved their songs or followed them. If ten featured artists tell you the same thing about a playlist, they are most likely right.

Look for unusual followers spike using Chart metric

Chartmetric is a tool that allows you to get information about a Spotify artist, playlist, or track. Using Chartmetric, you can view the changes in the follower count of a playlist within a specified amount of time. All you need to do is copy the playlist link on Spotify and paste it into the search box on the top right of the Chartmetric website. If you discover an outrageous and sharp increase in the playlist followers count in a short period of time, the playlist might be getting plays from bots. Also, if you see a sharp decrease in followers count, there is a good reason to believe that Spotify corrected the follower count and removed fake accounts from their platform.

Disadvantages of buying fake streams

Buying fake streams is one of the few moves that have no pros and lots of cons. You can end your career by engaging in such activity. Below are the five major reasons you should never buy fake streams.

You will miss out on valuable data

There have been a ton of success stories from artists who were able to pull off a successful tour with the aid of the data gotten from Spotify. The simple way to know the best location to tour is by checking your Spotify for Artists dashboard for the cities where your music is streamed the most. However, if your streams are coming from bots, how do you want to know where to tour? Artists who opt for

such alternatives are merely deceiving themselves and hurting their chances of growing big.

Fake streams do not fool big Labels

The major reasons artists fake their age, hair, status, Instagram followers count, and Spotify monthly listeners are to get the attention of the big labels. Lol! The funny thing here is that industry insiders can easily spot fake streams. The moment they see that your streams are coming from bots, they will get pissed off. For real!

Spotify can limit your track’s exposure

According to Spotify, they will shadow-ban your song and prevent it from going viral once they detect artificial streaming activity on your account.

You can get sued

In a case where you were able to get a huge payout from Spotify using this method, Spotify can sue you. For example, in 2020, Spotify sued an indie label named Sosa for using millions of fake Spotify accounts to increase the streams of their content.

No long-term growth

Unless you make music for bots and scripts, I think there is no point buying fake streams. You cannot fool the labels since they know better. You cannot fool the labels since they know better. Also, you cannot fool music fans because random people on the internet will expose you.

Final Thoughts

True artists seek to connect to an audience that appreciates their body of work. Faking your stream count cannot get you a true fan base that will show up for your concerts and purchase your merch. These days, music fans can tell when an artist is getting streams from bots, and no one wants to listen to a fake artist. 

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