2006 - Mental Music Calculations
Think about these three consumers (A, B, C). In each of these scenarios, the consumer has never heard of your band or listened to your music before.
Consumer A: Consumer A encounters a flier advertising your live show.
Consumer B: Consumer B encounters a Google search text advertisement for your band.
Consumer C: Consumer C encounters a Google search text advertisement for your song.
Consumer A’s brain says to himself: new music, live show, travel, parking, security, cover charge, loud, $50 for the night including beer, girlfriend needs to be talked into it, lots of work, could be fun, etc.
Consumer B’s brain says to himself: new music, band website or band MySpace page, multiple songs, multiple photos, band biography, slow loading web pages, unreliable music players, reasonable amount of effort to digest, $10 to $15 CD price; interesting, but I will come back when I have time.
Consumer Cs brain says to herself: 30 seconds to evaluate, $.99 cents to buy, minimal time, minimal work.
The purchase decision (the mental calculation of time plus cash commitment) to go to a live show is substantial, the purchase decision to get to know a band or an album is moderate, but the purchase decision to evaluate and buy a song is absolutely minimal.
You should be promoting your songs on the Internet first, your band on the Internet second, and your shows third. A SONGboost SONGpage is a great destination to promote a song. Moreover, your promotion money and your time will go much further when you are marketing songs.
The more time and money people have to invest in making a decision/purchase, the more time and money you will have to invest to convince people to purchase what you are selling.



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