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The HostBaby Blog

Music, Technology, and The Independant Artist

Intro to Blogging for Musicians


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HostBaby has recently launched a new blog page feature in the HostBaby Wizard.  More on that here.

What better time to address how musicians can use a blog to advance their career then right now?

Most of you know that a blog (short for web log) is a web page that allows articles, videos, and pictures to be posted in a journal-like format. Blogs also typically allow users to leave comments and therefore are a great way to interact with fans.

Blogs can also be subscribed to by clicking an RSS icon and using a ‘feed reader’ to view the content. Most browsers have a feed reader built in–so you shouldn’t have any trouble viewing and subscribing to feeds right from FireFox, Safari, or Chrome (IE is an exception, but it’s not our favorite browser anyway).

Most internet phones also have feed readers available. A feed reader is a great tool to channel all your favorite news in one place.  It’s like creating your own newspaper with only the articles, subjects, and writers that you like. If you haven’t tried using a feed reader and have a Gmail account, Google Reader is a great tool and a good place to start.

Why is having a blog important for musicians? Because a static page isn’t enough to generate return visits. A website that never changes isn’t worth visiting very often. A website that has new videos, new music, new pictures and new articles every week is far more likely to generate return visits and more sales.

Another great thing about blogs is that every post you write has the potential to be picked up and re-posted, distributed, and talked about online. Yes, blogs can go ‘viral.’

It’s the viral aspect of blogs that you should keep in mind when you are writing your posts. Don’t just write for your fans and friends, write for the world.

Say you write an article about how you got this really cool effect on a certain instrument in your last recording by doing X, Y and Z. Say one of your readers thinks it’s an awesome tip and pastes a link on Facebook to all 200 of his friends. Say one of his 200 friends is an audio engineer and she reads the article and posts it to her audio engineer buddies. Suddenly, you get 4000 people hitting your site trying to listen to the song that you wrote about. Say 300 of those people download the song. That’s how a blog can become viral.

If you hope to use the viral aspects of blogging to promote your music, write for an audience that has no idea who you are. Write as if your content is going to be published in your favorite music magazine. Write about things you are interested in. Be careful not to treat your blog as a walking advertisement for your music and your website. Most people who visit your website already like your music, so you don’t need to convince them. Sure, if you had a great show, a new single, or some cool pictures from your tour, you should post them–but look for the STORY. People loooooove stories! If your van broke down and your drummer dropped out mid tour–write about it. If the opening act at your concert spontaneously gets naked on stage–write about that. If you find yourself telling your friends this same amazing anecdote over and over again–write about that.

Being a blogger means that you are running your own publication. You are the reporter, editor, designer, photographer and publicist (Luckily running your own blog costs a lot less then running a magazine or newspaper). If you don’t like wearing all these hats, share the responsibilities with your band mates.

Most of all, have fun and experiment. A blog can be whatever YOU want it to be. Read other blogs by musicians (Check out Finger Tips) and see what works and what doesn’t. Ask your friends to submit articles. Ask other bloggers to ‘guest blog’ and publish their articles on your blog.   And, no, you don’t have to be a great writer to blog–just a good entertainer.

  • 9 Comments

    • Chris Flew says:

      Nice work on the blog feature guys, been waiting on it for a while.

      Couple of early thoughts:

      :: The CAPTCHA box is really hard to read with the colours, maybe thing about using a different method?

      :: As far as I could tell, there’s no confirmation that your comment has been submitted, which could result in people posting multiple times or assuming they have failed the CAPTCHA test.

      Other than that, looks good.

    • Chris says:

      Thanks Chris. I’ll pass along your suggestion. We do have some updates for the blog coming soon.

    • Becky says:

      Hi:

      I’m having trouble figuring out how to add in comments people have left me on the blog page. I’m not sure if they are using the contact page, guestbook or blog comment, but it’s coming to my email storysongproductions@gmail, and I can’t figure out how to post.

      Help!

      Thanks!

      Becky

    • Chris Bolton says:

      Hi Becky,

      Comments are represented as a number next to each blog entry in the Wizard. You can approve or disapprove them after clicking on the numeral. Email us or give us a call at hostbaby@hostbaby.com 888.448.6369 if you’re stuck.

    • Sakis Gouzonis says:

      Chris is a really nice hostbaber!
      I’ve got one question. After the updates, will we be able to use html code in the blog section? Thank you.

    • Chris says:

      Thanks Sakis! You can use HTML on the blog, BUT right now it is disabled in the blurb that appears on the front page. When you click to *read more* the full html should be rendered.

      We do this because truncating the text will mess up some HTML. We’re going to work up a better solution in the future. Hold Tight :)

      Chris B

    • Chris says:

      Chris, I believe the confirmation message has been added.

      In my experience Captcha’s are always hard to read. heh. But if we find a better Captcha version we’ll definitely employ it!

      Chris B

    • Chris says:

      Becky, give us an email at Hostbaby@hostbaby.com and we can help you figure it out :)

      Chris B

    • Reuben Correa says:

      Thanks for all the new things you are doing for us and teaching us ie. dragging us through the learning phases of how to do this stuff in a manageable way. I still don’t understand alot of stuff that I am doing but I’m having fun learning it.
      When I get beyond what I do with my strings it really stretches my mind.
      Any chance that some day we could get a moving banner, kind of like a moving news banner to create some animation with speed control, my fans are kind of old and read slowly.
      Thanks you people are great.
      I promote hostbaby to all of my musician friends
      Reuben

    • Trackbacks

    • Trackback from Put your website on top of the heap!Improve your site listing on search engines @ Hostbaby Musicians Blog
      Monday, 17 May, 2010

      [...] Blogging is a great way to communicate with your fans. If you enable comments to your blog articles, you have the potential of building an active online community fans. This takes a commitment as you will want to make sure you submit new blog entries as well as respond to fan comments, but the more traffic generated, the more your internet search engine score will be increased. Here’s a blog entry giving an introduction on how to blog. [...]

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