5 ways to build your Brand around music
While branding may seem like a new concept in this social-media-fueled industry, it’s always been an important part of bringing art to life in our modern world.I also recommend writing out a list of your values as an artist. For example, does your band have a political stance on something that seems to be a running theme in your lyrics? Getting clear on your values as an artist/band will help with so many things from song and video themes to deciding who to bring onto your team. If a manager or agent doesn’t hold the same values as you, it may not be the best business decision for you to work with them.
5. Understand that you have a personal brand
Your personal brand is about how people perceive you as an individual. It can influence how people see you as an artist/your band, in a positive or negative way. Whether you like it or not, everyone has a personal brand.
Some things to think about to foster a good personal brand are:
What is your reputation?
Are you cool to deal with or do you often turn up late or gossip about others in your scene? The music industry is smaller than you might think, even on a global level, so it’s really important that you’re professional and don’t make life harder for anyone else you work with.
The age of the rockstar is over. The market is too saturated and people have been through enough over the last 2 years to deal with any nonsense!
What do you bring to the scene outside of playing music?
Are you a photographer, graphic designer, or music teacher? Are you always supporting other artists at local shows? How can you bring these things into say, what you post on social media so that it creates more depth to your brand, and helps people get to know you.
A good personal brand can lead to more exposure and business opportunities
As a career artist you’re on the path to becoming a public figure. If your social media profiles are private, you’re basically holding up a neon sign telling people not to follow you. Therefore, you could be rejecting potential fans that could be led back to your artist page, as well as business opportunities.
Your personal pages are such a good tool for free organic marketing. They can also be leveraged for sponsorships and endorsements down the line. If in a band/group, you should treat your personal social media pages as subpages of your band page and try to build them alongside it.
As you can see, branding goes far beyond visuals. It’s how you speak, your reputation and what you stand for. But the brand you create now doesn’t have to be forever. For example, you could use different colors and symbols for every single, whilst keeping the overall theme/motif of an EP or album the same.
What is most important is that you aren’t wishy-washy about your branding and that you stay consistent for the entirety of one release.
Your core values and mission will change less frequently, if at all. But even these things can even be tweaked over time as you grow and evolve as a person. You are entitled to reinvent yourself at any time, so don’t overthink things because you are worried you might be stuck with one particular image forever. Just do what feels most representative of you and the music right now, commit to it, and you can’t go wrong!
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