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How
to Get Targeted Traffic To Your Music Website With No Money Down
By Chris Standring,
MusicDish
Network Sponsor
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Everyone
now knows that if you are an artist or you play in a band that it
is imperative you have a website. It is now considered the norm and
a nice place to refer existing and potential fans.
However,
an artist website that sits in cyberspace and gets visited only
after bands mention their web address on stage is a website that
is not utilizing the Internet's full potential. A poorly promoted
website can be like a tree falling in the forest. It may look stunning,
have all the bells and whistles but if nobody can find it then it
is a waste of time in my view. I want to tell you how you can get
a good steady flow of regular targeted traffic to your artist website
without spending a dime. Of course there is some work to do but
it will be your time and not your dollars that you will be giving
up.
You
have no doubt heard about reciprocal link trading. This is something
that has existed since the dawn of the Internet. Essentially this
is where one website links to another. All very simple. However,
most webmasters don't utilize the full benefit of link trading and
for the most part the trade is a waste of time. Let's talk about
how to do it right. There are two reasons you should trade links
with other websites:
1)
To get a stream of targeted traffic to your site from external links.
2) To fuel the search engines and rank your site higher.
You
should only trade links with websites that are relevant to your
website. For instance, if your music is categorized in the punk
genre then you should of course target websites that are common
to that theme. If you are a new age artist there may be many more
sites you might target; spiritual bookstores, yoga and so on. Get
creative and ask yourself "Who out there in cyberspace would like
my music and where do they hang out?". Use keywords in Google or
any other search engine to find sites to trade with.
Not
all sites will trade, especially corporate commercial sites, ezines
etc. Many will however and you should propose a trade via e-mail
if a site invites link exchanges. The easiest sites to trade links
with will be other band sites, so you should do that first. You
must make sure that the websites that you trade links with have
a clearly viewable link from their home page to their links page.
It should say "links" or "resources" or "sites we like" and so on.
You shouldn't link with any site that has a links page that can't
be found. After all what good is it to you?
To
really get the benefit of this marketing tool you should start a
simple link directory. Think of your links directory as a mini-yahoo
portal, of course the links will only be relevant to your visitors.
Write down a list of categories, and add new categories as you build
your directory. For example, let's say your music is "classic rock".
Your categories might be:
1)
Classic rock bands;
2) Classic rock ezines;
3) Classic rock heroes;
4) Reviews;
5) Music biz resources;
6) Other cool links, and so on.
Whatever
genre your music is in you can customize your categories to fit.
Get creative. OK, Now I want to explain something of huge importance
and will make ALL the difference when you trade links with other
sites. You must tell webmasters exactly how to display your link.
Let me give you an example. Let's now assume you are part of a progressive
rock group called "Motormouth". Here is the right way and wrong
way to display the link:
Motormouth
Progressive rock from four piece band out of Denver, Colorado
Motormouth
- the coolest of all progressive rock bands
Based out of Denver Colorado, this four piece band are taking the
US by storm
Example
#2 is the preferred way to display your link. Not all websites will
allow this (especially directories) but you should push for this
where possible. Let me explain why. Search engines are now giving
more relevance to websites based on how their link is displayed
on external sites, compared to any text residing on their own domain.
If for example your band plays progressive rock then you should
take advantage of your biggest keyword and include it as part of
your link title.
As
a surfer, if I was interested in progressive rock I might go to
Google and type "Progressive rock bands". Now if you look
at example two above the keyword "progressive rock bands" is part
of the link title. Keep in mind that it will not help so much to
include the singular "progressive rock band" in the link
title. The singular keyword "band" is different from "bands"
you understand? Web surfers would probably not type "progressive
rock band" in Google because they might be looking for more
than one. Results will vary so think about your strongest keyword
and how surfers might find you - then get that keyword somehow in
your link title.
After
trading a good amount of links search engines will warm to your
site and start returning your results extremely high in its results,
depending on keyword competition. This should give you a nice flow
of traffic from those websites you have traded links with and many
many more from search engines when surfers enter your keyword. Please
believe me when I tell you that artists and groups are NOT doing
this right now and it is a simple procedure that will take just
a little discipline and some time on your part. As I mentioned before,
make sure that the website you are trading with displays your link
the way you need it displayed. The best way to do this is to give
them html code that they can copy and paste. Using example two above
your html code might look like this:
Motormouth
- the coolest of all progressive rock bands
Based out of Denver Colorado, this four piece band are taking the
US by storm.
When
requesting a link trade be courteous and professional. Remember
that you must target relevant sites only (otherwise search engines
will penalize you). If you want to get into this a little deeper
you might download the free google
toolbar which will display a pagerank (from 1 to 10) every time
you visit a web page. When you trade a link with a website that
has a high pagerank (IE: 4 or 5 and above) this will serve you better
in return. The page that displays your link should in itself be
pageranked (not just the site's home page) in a perfect world. However,
I do think that user relevance should take precedence over pagerank
in this instance.
Lastly,
if you want to go even deeper and manage your links directory in
a highly effective way I suggest you buy some incredible software
called Arelis. I use this and it has tripled my traffic and therefore
product sales. I created the A&R
Online band directory using this as well as four other website
link directories.
It
allows you to check on a regular basis whether other sites are still
linking back to you, enabling you to remove any broken links or
contact those sites to repair etc. etc. It manages your link database
brilliantly and will even generate the html web pages at the click
of a button. It makes a pretty dull chore actually quite fun. Costs
around 100 bucks. Money well spent if you want to really drive targeted
traffic to your band site. If you are serious about your music career
I can't recommend this software highly enough.
Oh,
one more thing. Make sure you capitalize on the traffic that you
start receiving! Rather than expect visitors to come sailing through
and buy your CD, make sure that on your home page there is an incentive
for them to subscribe to your band newsletter. You must get
their e-mail address and build your mailing list as you can market
direct to them later on. Give them a huge incentive. Again get creative.
If they have come to you from a "progressive rock bands"
keyword typed in a search engine, give them what they want! Perhaps
offer them a free eBook with articles, news and photos of your 10
favorite progressive rock heroes when they subscribe to your list.
Of course your band is on the front page of the eBook right?
You should be marketing yourself first but if you are unknown you
should piggyback off established stars.
"So
You Think You Want A Record Deal?"
The
A&R Online Guide to Landing a Recording Contract
by Chris Standring
"A spirited how to...(and how not to) e-book. A very
clever idea that is written with real-world examples
for musicians/artists by a musician/artist." - Russell
Ziecker |
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It 2004 - Republished with Permission
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