Showing posts with label email marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label email marketing. Show all posts

Monday, November 2, 2020

How to NOT Have Success Via Email

By: Bruce Wawrzyniak


Let’s do something different and dive into the mailbag for this week’s blog.

If you read what gets published here every Monday, you know that at the end your feedback is always invited through a variety of channels.  However, for this post I won’t be referencing something written to me about a blog that has been published on this site.  Instead, I know there is a teaching moment in pulling out other emails that I have received soliciting airplay or something similar.

By presenting you with these examples you can learn from others’ mistakes.

And of course, as was the case in last week’s “Anatomy of a(Missed) Interview Booking,” the names are being withheld to maintain anonymity.

In the first example, an artist wrote to me and said, “I am a fan of your show, Now Hear This Entertainment.”  That had my attention until they said, “I’d love for you to listen to, and potentially play our new track (title withheld for privacy) on your show.”  Hmmm.  If you were truly a fan of NHTE, you would know that it’s an interview style podcast and you would be talking about wanting to get interviewed rather than your new song getting played.  This sounds to me like someone who bought an email list and/or is contacting radio stations blindly, seeking airplay.  The implication is that they didn’t take the time out to actually check out what “Now Hear This Entertainment” is, but rather, figured that if they wrote that they’re a big fan, I would listen to the song.  However, as the saying goes, I was born at night, but not last night.

Moving on, email #2 came from an artist who wanted people to check out their new song, providing a Dropbox link to such.  Mind you, while it’s always widely suggested that you don’t send an attachment to someone you don’t know (since it’s always widely suggested you don’t open an attachment from someone you don’t know), it’s also not advisable to send someone a zip file, which is exactly what I was able to see that I was going to encounter if I followed the Dropbox link in the email from this artist.  Still being open-minded, however, I figured I would at least look at their website and social media to learn more about who they are.  Except that there were no links – at all – in their email to any social media, and when I replied to kindly suggest they include such and that by having written from a Gmail account rather than having a branded email address that would’ve tipped me off to their Web address, the response I got back said that they didn’t even have a website.

Not good, kids.  Not good.

It’s 2020.  It’s a given that as an artist (who’s contacting people asking to have their music listened to) you’re going to have a website and more than just a Twitter account (which is the extent of the social media I was pointed to in the response).

The third and final message I’ve chosen to pull out of my inbox was from someone whose email to me began with, “Bruce – Is there a reason you don’t have a podcast?”  I wrote back and said that I typically don’t respond to these types of solicitations, but had to let this person know that I was insulted to get an email that starts off that way, seeing as how I’ve released a new episode (of “Now Hear This Entertainment”) on-time, every week since February 2014, not to mention having done a bi-weekly podcast for podcasters and streamers from August 2017 to February 2019, and, being a national speaker with podcasting as one of my major topics.

Do your homework, people.  Please.  Know who you are writing to and do your research first before you hit ‘Send.’

In a year when countless people have had to stay indoors and work from home, it’s understandable that artists especially have had to rely on using email to try to connect with people electronically to get more exposure for themselves and what they’re creating.  However, those that are going about it through attempts like those described above are going to really hate 2020 for the lack of results that those efforts will produce.

Put in the time.  Do the work.  You’ll get out of it exactly what you put into it.

Tell me about your successful email outreach.  Tweet to me via @NHT_tweets, or, share it on Facebook or LinkedIn, or even write to me through email.  Need help with promoting yourself?  Take advantage of my years of experience and let's have a private, one-on-one videoconsultation to get you on the road to success.

• • •

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.

Monday, August 3, 2020

How to Get Results from Your Email Pitch


By: Bruce Wawrzyniak

Last week on Episode 338 of “Now Hear This Entertainment” you heard Jack Forman, the president of BiCoastal Productions, a New York City-based concert and theatrical booking agency, talking about (among other topics) cold calls that he receives.  He referred to unsolicited phone calls, U.S. Mail, and, of course, email.

I mentioned to him that as an artist’s manager and as the host of NHTE, I too receive similar outreach.  Sometimes it’s a bit overwhelming to the point of, “Am I going to open them all or am I going to open just one.”  To the sender, the answer is, “I don’t care, just as long as you pick mine.”

Do your homework, folks.  If you write, “Your Now Hear This Entertainment podcast” on the subject line, I will likely open it.  If you start your subject line with “Re:” because you want to fool me into thinking that you’re replying to something I sent you, or that it’s ongoing correspondence we’re having, I’m not going to fall for it and will actually be turned off by your attempted deception.

If your subject line says, “Music submission” (and believe me, lots and lots of them do), and then you refer in your email to getting your songs heard on my “station,” you’ve ticked me off because I can tell you’ve been sending to radio stations and somehow think that I am one.  Delete!

But that’s only half the battle.

Once I do open your email – and again, the subject line is going to have a lot to do with whether your message gets opened or not – there had better be something inside that’s going to make me want to get back to you.  Opening it is one thing, but reacting to it beyond, “Nah. Next!” is another.

Last night an email came in that, inside, actually started like this:
Hey [name],

Wow.  Way to not do your homework.  The sender claimed, “I found you on Instagram.”  Well, if that’s really the case, you’d either click the proverbial link in bio and go quickly investigate or, even easier, tap on one of the pictures that I’m tagged in to see my first name so that you could write Bruce instead of [name].

Inside the email, whether you’re wanting Now Hear This to consider managing and promoting you or you’re trying to get booked as a guest on the podcast, tell me what your hook is.  Is there a new single, EP, or album or a new music video that you’re promoting?  Don’t think that, “I’m a recording artist” is your story.  That’s like me pitching a radio station or TV show or newspaper or magazine to interview me because I have a podcast.  Really, Bruce?  You and hundreds of thousands of others!  So, tell me what your angle is.  Again, to repeat, “I’ve shared the stage with Rascal Flatts, Kellie Pickler, and Scott McCreery,” is not a hook.  What’s new now?!

This is going to sound contradictory but is different.  In addition to the hook, I do like to see a short bio that gives me some highlights, such as if you’ve opened for big names, like the example above, and maybe a reality TV show you were on, perhaps your Spotify numbers, any major features you’ve gotten (i.e., Billboard, CMT), and even touring that you’ve done and/or major events that you’ve performed at.

Next, do have links in your email.  I want to see your website, and, make it easy for me to get to your Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.  Any more over and above that is a bonus.  Yes, an EPK (link) might get my attention, but – to me, at least – it’s not a deal breaker if you don’t have one.

Don’t start giving me mp3s and photos and/or Dropbox links until I ask for them.  And don’t give me your whole life story.

As the saying goes, you’re going to get out of it exactly what you put into it.  If you’re just copying and pasting from one email to the next and not tailoring your emails to the recipients, then don’t be surprised and don’t complain when you get little to no response.

How are your pitching efforts going via email?  Tweet at me to @NHT_tweets to let me know.  Alternatively, use Facebook, LinkedIn, or even email to continue the conversation.

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.