So
you think your band is finally ready to start playing more gigs.
But you need to have some basic marketing items in place first so
that you are prepared for the very competitive world of the music
industry. Below are some of our suggestions.
1) THE DEMO: For booking purposes your CD presentation does not
need to be slickly designed and packaged. It does however need to
be laid out professionally and simply. Your band name, contact information
and song titles should be easily located on the CD. With today’s
technology, there is no reason to use a tape instead of a CD or
to write your information directly on the CD with a marker. Invest
some time in creating a printed label or send your CD to a duping
company to put together cheap printed CDs in paper sleeves. (See
sponsorship section below)
2) THE BIO: Short, sweet and to the point. You should include a
very brief history of the band and its members. A descriptive paragraph
about the band’s sound and artistic vision is also helpful.
And photos of the band help to spice up any page layout. Your band
name and contact information should be easily located at the top
of every page.
3) THE PRESS: Two or three pages of press is enough and anything
less than one page is not enough. Most bands either go way overboard
with too many press clippings or don’t include any at all.
Press clippings from two years ago are a waste of paper. If you
do not have any press, start a mission to harass your local newspaper,
alternative weekly, college newspaper or online music site to review
your CD or live show. Your band name and contact information should
be easily located at the top of every page.
4) THE PHOTO: The technology to take a picture and print it out
is too affordable to justify not having a band picture. Your band
name and contact information should be easily located below your
band shot.
5) THE POSTER TEMPLATE: Any gig you book is going to require posters.
You should design a simple poster with room to fill in the show’s
specifics. 11 X 17 sized posters stand out better than 8.5 X 11,
but either is fine. It is helpful to print copies of these posters
in advance. By including one in your booking package you show that
you are ready to start promoting your gigs. Your band name and contact
information should be easily located on the poster.
6) THE FLYER TEMPLATE: It is also useful if you convert your poster
to a small, postcard size flyer. You should be able to lay out four
of these on one 8.5 X 11 sized sheet of p. It may not be necessary
to include this when you send your booking package but having one
ready is a good idea.
7) THE STAGE PLOT: A simple document with every instrument and
each musician’s microphone or monitor needs. This may not
be necessary for all gigs and can even be left out of the booking
package. But many venues will require you to either fax or email
them a stage plot, so have one ready in advance. Your band name
and contact information should be easily located on the stage plot.
5) THE FOLDER: Save your money. Talent buyers will either file
your information away or throw it out. In both cases a nice, glossy
folder for the above items is superfluous. Use them for special
occasions only.
6) THE WEBSITE: At the very least this should be a distinct URL
(i.e. BANDNAME.COM) that compiles the above information: Music Samples,
Photo, Bio Information, Press Clippings, Contact Information, Stage
Plot, Poster Template and Flyer Template. If you are technologically
savvy however your website can become your own personal marketing
team for all things band related.
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