February 2010

You are currently browsing the monthly archive for February 2010.

Sachuest Point

This is an older instrumental that’s been looking for a name for a long time. Since I’ve been inspired by Kristin Hersh’s, “Kristin With an Eye” images to connect my songs to her visuals (ala “Southern Waste”), I though it made sense to finally give it a name.

Here’s Kristin’s image that retroactively inspired the song:

And, here’s the song:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


Sachuest Point

It was written many moons ago upstairs in the little make-shift studio I put together above the Ryko offices in Gloucester. I’d disappear on occasion, when the business overtook the art, to try and remember what pulled me into this business in the first place.

The sort of drone-y under current in the song is a dulcimer. While sort of thought of as the autoharp’s less cool cousin, dulcimers are actually pretty happening. Have a listen, for instance, to this:

“Everybody hit the ground,” indeed.

Creative Commons License
Sachuest Point by George Howard is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Tags: , ,

Well, it’s not been a good day; my less-than-six-month-old PowerBook appears to have eaten its hard drive.

The good news is that between moving everything up to Google Docs/Gmail/Google Calendar and doing hourly Time Machine back ups very little has been lost (though, I hadn’t done a Time Machine back up since Friday night). Knock Wood.

I’m using Marci’s MacBook until my appointment tomorrow with the ill-advisedly named “Geniuses” at the Apple Store. This requires me to get her machine to operate the way I like my machine to operate, which essentially means installing Quicksilver and getting my Triggers going.

Perhaps in a feeble attempt to overcome feeling helpless about my hard drive dying I decided to solve a problem I’ve had with Quicksilver that’s been bugging me for some time: my inability to figure out how to hide apps using a trigger.

Opening an app with a trigger is as easy as can be:

1. Pull up QS
2. hit command “;” to get to the preferences
3. go to Triggers
4. hit the “+” key
5. access the app you want to open in the top panel
6. tab to the second, “Action,” panel and (if it doesn’t already display it) hit “O” to coax the “Open” command to appear in the Action panel
7. Hit Save and then click on the Trigger section and put whatever keystroke you want as the trigger (if, like I do, you want to use the Function keys (F1, etc.), you’ll need go to the “Keyboard and Mouse” System Preference panel and check the box that says, “Use all F1, F2 keys as standard function keys”)

You can now use the function keys to pull up pretty much whatever you want; for me F1 pulls up Safari, F2: Firefox, F3: Tweetie, etc.

The problem I wanted to solve is that I’d like to be able to quickly hit a modified function key to hide these apps. For instance, I wanted to be able to hit [Command F1] to hide Safari after I’d used “F1″ to pull it up.

You’d think that’d be easy, and there may be an easier way than what I’ve come up with, but a little apple scripting goes a long way here.

To hide any app do the following:

1. Pull up QS as described above in steps 1 thru 4
2. Now in the top panel (“Select an item”) of QS type a period: “.” – this tells QS that you want to enter text
3. Use the following script and substitute whatever app you want to hide for where I have “Safari”:

tell application “System Events” to tell process “Safari” to set visible to false

4. You’ll note that as soon as QS realizes you’re putting a script into its first panel (via the words “tell application”) the second (“Action”) panel changes to “Run as AppleScript
5. Hit Save
6. As above, in Step 7, click on the keystroke area and enter in whatever key or key combination you want to use to, in this case, hide “Safari.” As I’ve said, I use a modifier of the key I use to open, so F1 opens safari and [command + F1] hides it

This may seem like a lot of trouble, but I promise you, those actions of moving your hands from your keyboard to your mouse and back again add up.

Tags: , ,

photo by Kristin Hersh

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


Southern Waste

These are songs I write to quiet the madding crowd. I do them very quickly – like sketches – and present them warts and all (or all warts).

They’re licensed under CreativeCommons, so please feel free to use them.

A note about the title/image. One of the hardest parts of writing instrumental music is coming up with titles. Happily, Kristin Hersh, in her genius, posts a new photo to her blog every day. Not only do these images inspire me, but they also provide fantastic titles. With Kristin’s kind permission, I’m attaching my little songs to her images.

___
Creative Commons License
Southern Waste by George Howard is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Tags: , ,

Something I’ve been thinking about for a while, but was really catalyzed by Fred Wilson’s excellent blog post today: With the advent of check ins (and the related possibility that emerges from this) at physical locations facilitated by Foursquare, et al., why have we not seen this applied to Web Sites?

Certainly, it’s a good sign to see email-for-content widgets being the transactional element of choice for gaining the all-important currency of email sign ups (as I discussed in my post, “The New Report Card“). However, I think people are still missing an opportunity.

If (as I do) you believe in the customer journey approach, you know that you fail if – after all the energy and expense related to getting a customer to your site – the customer visits your site once, and never again.

You must compel people to visit more than once.

The customer journey is: awareness, consideration, inquiry, purchase, repurchase. The all-important element is “repurchase.” Again, without repurchase, you fail.

So, we need to compel people to visit over and over. To do this, we have to create value propositions. As offline businesses are discovering, one of these value propositions is the frequency-related “currency” one acquires from being a regular (“Norm!!“); in the parlance of Foursquare, a “Mayor.”

It makes no sense, therefore, that I can’t become the “Mayor” of some site that I visit over and over. The logical progression is that once I build this frequency-related currency, I can potentially receive value adds beyond being dubbed “Mayor” of the Site. (Just to be clear: I’m not saying the Foursquare should do this. Rather, web sites should create their own frequency-related rewards and currency.)

This frequency-related value-add could be free songs, additional access, tickets, whatever.

I would encourage people to think in terms of celebrating the passionate user.

As we move towards more subscription-based revenue, it will become increasingly important to celebrate the people who sign up for these services. I would suggest profiling the users who sign up on the subscription page of the site; interview them, etc. PopCandy celebrates her readers brilliantly.

So…let’s remember The Straddle: look around for these offline things that are working, and find ways to bring it online, and vice versa.

By the way, I fully expect people to tell me that this is already happening. I hope so.

And now…XTC:

Tags: ,

I still wake up on Wednesdays with a little shudder. You see, Wednesdays are (and, I guess, always will be) soundscan days. Back when there was still a record business, you got your report card every Wednesday morning. I remember so well hauling my pale ass out of bed and using the sweet dial up modem to log in to SS. 90% of the time, this was immediately followed by an “ugh.” The numbers were rarely what you wanted them to be (for more on SS’s continued irrelevance, read this).

Numbers indelibly etched in my brain, off to the office I’d go. I’d hit the fax (yes, fax) machine to look for the radio and press reports from the indies, and check my inbox (and by that I mean a little box in which paper reports were inserted) for internal press and radio reports. Ugh. Ugh.

Wednesdays sucked!

And, typically (almost always) with each subsequent week after the initial numbers, Wednesdays sucked exponentially more. You see, 99% of the time, the only week you might have any type of non-ugh reaction over SS numbers and other reports was that first week.

From there the numbers tended to drop precipitously. In fact, it was often considered a win if your SS numbers only halved from week 1 to week 2. Same with the other reports: radio and press (linked, and, in many respects, taking their cues from SS) tended to start with optimism (“So and so from such and such magazine/newspaper/radio station really likes the record, and promises to listen!!!”), and got increasingly depressing (“So and so says they’re on deadline/add week, but they’re going to try to listen;” “So and so doesn’t really dig it/feel the heat/will give it a review instead of a feature/will try it on the specialty show, but won’t add yet”).

Here’s roughly what the report card looked like:

What my scrawl is saying is that in week 1 if your SS number was 1000, by week 2 you’d often decrease that number by 75% (so, from 1k down to 250); the press and radio interest would decrease by half. Week 3 would continue apace with your SS numbers being a tenth (in this case, 100) of the first week, while radio and press interest was 25% of what it had been in week one. This is probably a little dramatic in order to make a point, but it’s not that dramatic, and this is, sadly, often exactly what it looked/looks like).

Can you imagine how hard it became to do this week after week? Don’t get me wrong, I (and many more others) had weeks where the SS numbers went up, press went crazy, radio added the song, etc. But, for every one of these, there were literally dozens where it went the way I described above.

Just from a psychological standpoint, it caused a ton of psychic torment; rather than being excited and finding ways to create energy and positivity about a project, you were left sugar coating: “The numbers weren’t that bad;” “Hey, we laid a foundation for the next record.”

This type of laying it on thick was particularly important in terms of artist relations. You had to present things in some sort of positive light to artists or they’d lose their minds; they’d just spent many moons and much blood, sweat, and tears creating a piece of art, and entrusted it to you, and to tell them that the general response to their work was, “meh” was simply cruel. (In hindsight, it was equally cruel to sugar coat, but I wasn’t as evolved as I am now (hah!)).

In any case, as the negativity began to become almost endemic, the process became surreal: what were we doing? What is real?

Happily, we have a new report card, and it’s sort of the inverse of the above.

Below is a quick (I know, given the looks of it, it’s hard to believe that I didn’t labor over it; I have a gift) list of some of what I feel are the more important elements that should be on your new report card.

[The legend to my map: email addresses; twitter followers; Facebook fans; Google Analytics (you should look at visitors, time on site, bounce rate, etc. Also, you should be looking at Google Alerts); downloads; subscriptions (i.e. people subscribing to some offering, ala Kristin Hersh's Strange Angels). The calculation is just an example. Here, I've got week 1 as "X," and the subsequent weeks' numbers increasing by 20, 30 and 40% of X. So, if week one, you have 100 email subscribers, by week 2 you want 120, and so forth. This is arbitrary. You should set whatever goals are difficult but attainable, and you should adjust as the weeks go by.]

Couple of things to note: 1. You can do this daily. 2. You should measure what I’ve suggested, but you should also have your own things you’re measuring; I’m sure I’ve left off some obvious things (one thing I’d love to be able to measure is how effectively your music is being shared, I know Topspin is making some great strides with this; another is gig attendees/number of gigs played – you need to measure this!).

The big distinction, however, between the old skool report card and the new skool report card is the shift from pessimism to optimism it represents.

Where the old skool report axiomatically led to depression due to the inexorable decline in numbers (SS, reviews, spins), the new skool report axiomatically leads to hope (and thus energy): if you haven’t increased – even by a teeny bit – your email subscribers, etc., something is wrong.

The good news now is that once you realize that something is wrong you can take strides to fix it.

Not getting enough email subscribers? Do you have an email-for-content widget rocking on your site; have you done what you need in terms of SEO to make sure people know you have a site; are you leveraging Twitter or FB to go to where people already are congregating and giving them a decent value proposition to go to your site; etc.

You know what your “remedy” was for bad ss numbers? Spend more co-op dollars. Fuck. Bad radio numbers? Payola. Double Fuck. Bad press? Cry. Sigh.

Again, the real beauty of this new type of report card is that it should be exciting and encouraging. You can see incremental progress, and, most importantly, you (band, manager) are in control.

This is vastly different than placing your hopes/destiny in the hands of a sales rep, publicist, promo person, label.

You note that nowhere on this new report card is a category for radio play or press reviews. You know why? They don’t matter. Yes, a teeny bit of an exaggeration, but even if they might matter a bit (and, really, only for artists who are already established) – you largely can’t control them. Please focus on what you can control. I did, by the way put Google Alerts as a measurement; think of this as your press report, and when you see that someone blogged about your work (via Google Alerts), respond/comment, etc. Remember, markets are conversations/relationships.

In a comment to my earlier post about The Leveling I was gently criticized for not supplying specific enough instruction in my writing. Well, as much as I agree with Mr. Godin’s statement about not drawing maps, I guess this is an attempt at something resembling a map.

Map:
What you have to do is figure out what you need to measure (I’ve tried to give you some ideas). This should lead to an overall strategy (i.e. big picture goals), and this should lead to action plans (i.e. small, daily steps that help you hit those goals).

Don’t try to go from 0 email subscribers to 1000 in a week, and then deem it a failure when/if you don’t hit that. Try to go from 0 to 25 in a week. Before you can get any, you have to do some work (as above, email-for-content widget, SEO, etc. – these are elements of an action plan that lead to success at a strategy of getting more email subscribers).

Measure your progress weekly. Use a google sheet that can be updated each week. Have a band meeting and look at the numbers. Assess what’s working, and what’s not. Where things are working, there is energy; do more. Where things aren’t (no addition of FB fans, etc.), figure out what actions you can take to change it.

Do this for three months, you’ll be shocked by the results.

Tags: , ,