H
Havagr8da
New member
Probably a been there done that scenario.
But I was wondering if many of you have tried the WeedShare Marketing for your music. It is the 3x plays buy if you like format. There are many websites growing on the net that have music for sale in this format. The site owners usually do a pretty good job of screening for quality content. They have to host and pay for the bandwidth so most of them are not hosting crap. If it isn't selling it is not using up space either. So to stay on the site the music must have some marketable qualities.
Heart, an 80s or was that 70s rock band released their last CD as WeedShare.
This marketing system is gaining momentum.
I have a WeedShare site, I am not posting to promote it. I just wanted that said to make clear I know a bit about it.
CDbaby has just released all their catalog for WeedShare. This will add thousands of titles to the listings on web sites providing this marketing platform.
Check out some of the sites out there and see which one your music will fit well with. Contact the owner and most of them have the ability to encode your tracks for marketing. Many will do this for free and if they do it is because they see the possibility of it selling well.
Some Stats
WHAT’S LEFT OF THE DIAL: A March survey of 5,000 consumers conducted by NPD Group reveals that radio listening has dropped 4% in the last year, while listening to music through those crappy computer speakers has increased by 22%. While the gap between traditional and online radio is narrowing considerably, the airwaves still rule: According to the survey, online radio listening increased 18% to 53.5 million, and streaming was up 37% to 46.1 million, for a total of 77.2 computer listeners (including overlap), compared to 194 million traditional radio listeners. The number of computer users ripping music was up 102% from a year ago, adopters of MP3 devices increased 127% and users of legal download services grew 93%. Said NPD's Russ Crupnick, "The rise of digital listening and storage for music continues unabated this year… Music companies are answering the call for more content, and consumers are responding positively." At the rate things are moving, the picture will look dramatically different a year from now, with more and more people embracing portable players and satellite radio and DIY programming becoming a factor. Podcasting, anyone?
But I was wondering if many of you have tried the WeedShare Marketing for your music. It is the 3x plays buy if you like format. There are many websites growing on the net that have music for sale in this format. The site owners usually do a pretty good job of screening for quality content. They have to host and pay for the bandwidth so most of them are not hosting crap. If it isn't selling it is not using up space either. So to stay on the site the music must have some marketable qualities.
Heart, an 80s or was that 70s rock band released their last CD as WeedShare.
This marketing system is gaining momentum.
I have a WeedShare site, I am not posting to promote it. I just wanted that said to make clear I know a bit about it.
CDbaby has just released all their catalog for WeedShare. This will add thousands of titles to the listings on web sites providing this marketing platform.
Check out some of the sites out there and see which one your music will fit well with. Contact the owner and most of them have the ability to encode your tracks for marketing. Many will do this for free and if they do it is because they see the possibility of it selling well.
Some Stats
WHAT’S LEFT OF THE DIAL: A March survey of 5,000 consumers conducted by NPD Group reveals that radio listening has dropped 4% in the last year, while listening to music through those crappy computer speakers has increased by 22%. While the gap between traditional and online radio is narrowing considerably, the airwaves still rule: According to the survey, online radio listening increased 18% to 53.5 million, and streaming was up 37% to 46.1 million, for a total of 77.2 computer listeners (including overlap), compared to 194 million traditional radio listeners. The number of computer users ripping music was up 102% from a year ago, adopters of MP3 devices increased 127% and users of legal download services grew 93%. Said NPD's Russ Crupnick, "The rise of digital listening and storage for music continues unabated this year… Music companies are answering the call for more content, and consumers are responding positively." At the rate things are moving, the picture will look dramatically different a year from now, with more and more people embracing portable players and satellite radio and DIY programming becoming a factor. Podcasting, anyone?