As an independent musician try to do absolutely everything I can to promote my music online and in the real word, I’m on all the major social networking sites, I blog, Tweet, podcast, post in forums, put out flyers and posters, hassle journalists and bloggers on a weekly basis and also inevitably, I YouTube!
YouTube’s becoming increasingly more important as a tool to promote yourself, a lot of people actually use it to find and listen to music and it’s now the second most widely used search engine in the world. Many people would rather watch a video explaining the answer to their various internet queries; I mean why just read a lasagne recipe when you can actually watch a semi-professional knock one up on YouTube?
So two years ago I created my very own YouTube account and uploaded my first ever video, which was an animation I was quite proud of at the time, having spent five days solid staring at a computer screen drawing it, and in the background was my song Prettyish, which I’m also fairly proud of. Two years later and that video has just under seven hundred views! Seven hundred! That’s at least eight days of hard graft gone into that! When I total up the recording and animation time! Part of me thinks that it was kind of still worth doing, as it’s a bit of extra content for my site and I still think it looks cool, plus it may have exposed me to a few extra people. However, another part of me thinks “For f*cks sake! Someone just filmed an infant biting his brother’s finger and they’ve got over two hundred and fifty million views! At least let me get past the thousand mark!! For the love of God! That’s something like fifty times more views that the first Moon landing! More people would actually watch this than the….” And then I go and have a nice cup of coffee and chill out for five minutes.
The outcome of this is that it’s long been an ambition of mine to try and get a YouTube video with over a thousand views, and not just because it’s been online for four years and has accidentally turned up in the search results of someone who’s searching for a lasagne recipe or Chocolate Rain. So far I’ve tried making music videos, tutorials and even comedy sketches that in my opinion should appeal to the lowest common denominators that chose to watch Thomas’s finger biting frenzy several million times. At the peak of all this I was actually making a low budget ten minute show, which was rammed with my friends who kindly made themselves look like idiots in front of a camera to help me out, competitions with cash prizes, theme music, title screens, live music and all sorts!
Two years on, and I’ve finally cracked it! I now have a YouTube clip with over one thousand views, and this is how I did it.
One Saturday afternoon I purchased some shoes, and they were slightly uncomfortable, they were quite stiff and they needed a little bit of wearing in, I knew that after a few months of wearing them they’d feel better but I’m impatient and I wanted them to be comfortable straight away. So I headed over to YouTube and searched for some videos about stretching shoes, and I came across a woman called Michelle who had a great idea about putting bags of water into your shoes and then putting them in the freezer. What a bloody good idea! Then I noticed her view stats, her video had over four million views, and then I remembered reading somewhere about making interesting video replies to other people’s videos in order to expose yourself to their viewers, light bulbs were going off all over my lethargic little brain, so I hurriedly got to work!
I filmed my shoe stretching antics, added some music and creative editing and then I uploaded the video, I then added it as a reply to Michelle’s video! Michelle never actually accepted it as a video reply, but due to the fact that I named it “RE: Stretch Shoes With Ice” it started to appear right under her video in the search results for this very specific topic and several months later I have nearly two thousand views and I’ve now added a little annotation to the video to let people know that I make music as well as stretch shoes, so hopefully I’ll be able to get some of that lovely shoe stretching traffic over to Aidy.com :-)
Well, there you have it, the feel good story of the year, I set myself a realistic and attainable goal and I kept plugging away and knocked this virtual curve ball out park! Stay tuned for more of my marketing expoits!
Friday, 5 November 2010
How to get over a thousand views on YouTube
Labels:
Aidy,
Indie,
Music Marketing,
Stretch Shoes With Ice,
Views,
YouTube
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Nice job! Think I'll try that!
ReplyDeleteI like this idea a lot. I actually got here via recordingreview.com. I'd like to re-post this on my site and backlink back to you here. My site is MusicMarketeer.blogspot.com Its a collection of the "Holy Grails" of Music marketing articles. Email me. kazanski.zachary@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteYeah, it's fine Flowetic. I've just dropped you an email. :-)
ReplyDelete