By: Bruce Wawrzyniak
Being in the entertainment business as long as I have, not
to mention writing a weekly blog and hosting a weekly podcast, plus with the
number of events that I speak at, you can appreciate the volume of questions
that I get asked, via email, face-to-face, through social media, and so
on. Some of them repeat, some of them
are, ahem, quite unique, and others deserve praise for their depth and/or
quality.
However, one question in the first half of 2020 that stuck
with me was from a performer who wanted to know if I felt they should be on
LinkedIn.
At first, we can understand why this would be asked by
someone in that capacity. After all, when
you create music you think of getting the songs themselves on platforms ranging
from iTunes to Spotify to SoundCloud and more.
And then, of course, when you turn the focus away from the music and
onto its creator – yourself – you start to envision your own website and
certainly YouTube, eventually settling on one or more out of the Facebook, Twitter,
and Instagram trio.
As I wrote last week, music creators are putting a ton of
pressure on themselves to make a go of this.
That blog of mine stressed that they want to make sure that they’re
doing everything they can to make this their full-time job.
Of course, you can be a solo artist and literally do
everything yourself at home – write, perform, and record – but there’s strength
in numbers. Maybe you’re not ready to
put an entire team around you, but you do know that there are people out
there who can help you and who you’d love to pick the brain of if not get some
level of assistance from.
It all adds up to another reminder that this is a
business!
When you talk about the connections you’d like to make –
booking agents, publishers, A&R folks – and then you ask me about platforms
that you should be on, I’m operating from the foundation of this being a business. Where online are people going to make
connections to further their business?
LinkedIn.
This is where I tell you that nobody is paying me to endorse
LinkedIn. I’m not getting any kickback
for referring people over there to sign up.
There’s no incentive for me in pointing you their way other than what it
is every week when I write my blog or publish a podcast episode – to help you
get ahead.
I’m presently sitting at more than 1,000 connections on LinkedIn. Do I have an active relationship with each
and every one of those folks? Of course
not. Do I use the platform
regularly? Absolutely. I aim for five days a week, between posting
on my page and/or the Now Hear This company page, or searching for connections
(those I’m seeking specifically or those that they – quite accurately – recommend
for me), or sometimes I’m just flat out surfing the feed.
If you tell me, “Yeah, I actually am on LinkedIn and I’ve
never seen any benefit,” then I will challenge you with, “How active are
you? Is your profile optimized?” Like anything else, you get out of it exactly
what you put into it.
Let me re-state. You
are in the music business. LinkedIn is
the app/online platform for doing business.
So yes, you should be on there.
• • •
I am a manager and publicist, running Now Hear This, Inc., an agency that has served clients across the U.S. ranging from music artists to authors to small businesses and even an Olympic athlete. Since February 2014 I have also hosted a weekly podcast (“Now Hear This Entertainment”), which has gotten listeners from 153 countries around the world. Find more about the company and the podcast at www.NowHearThis.biz. I am also a national speaker. Visit www.SpeakerBruceW.com for more information.
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