Head to http://www.spreadthenoise.com to find out more - and drop us an email for our surpisingly cheap fees...dubstep is especially big on the blogs so great chance to showcase your sound

Which usually means "Tommy Sunshine isn't paying for the services... he is being comp'ed in order to whore his name".iamnoiseporn wrote:as recommended by tommie sunshine
maybe that's in the major label world, but i haven't seen it in the underground dance music genre.mad ep wrote:Which usually means "Tommy Sunshine isn't paying for the services... he is being comp'ed in order to whore his name".iamnoiseporn wrote:as recommended by tommie sunshine
By the way- for all the up & comers tempted by this type of "investment"... let me share some knowledge. Equally, if iamnoiseporn disagrees with anything I say- I whole-heartedly welcome them to offer their differing points of view. The more the better in my opinion...
But just to put this into perspective... I used to work for one of the top 3 talent agencies in the world... and we never worked on a retainer, only on a percentage of earned-income. After all- how can you put a value on "putting your name out there"?? Answer is - you can't. You can only put a value on income brought to the table. So if an agency brings you £10,000 of income, of course they are entitled to their 15-20%. They can demonstrate exactly how they brought in that 10k, so give em their cut. However, if some one wants to be paid X amount without being accountable for their results (ie- what exactly are you paying for? what profit have they guaranteed from their "work"?), I would be more cautious.
Even if they say "XYZ Artist" is with us... because that artist is usually being given complimentary services so that their name can be used in securing more business.
I am not saying that Spread the Noise is a scam... but I would like them to actually prove themselves and show how they are accountable for the charges they put on artists (especially cos they are not open with the amount they charge in the first place!) What can they guarantee? If they are working on a flat rate instead of a percentage, they need to be accountable and be able to guarantee something...
No one worth their weight in salt charges a flat rate unless they can guarantee results.... which is why the best in the business work on a percentage, not a flat rate. Even if they know they have game, they also know they can't promise the moon... so they purely ask to be paid for the income they bring in. Sounds fair to me.
I find this interesting and am glad to get an articulate viewpoint from another angle.setspeed wrote: how do these PR agencies quantify the money they have brought in? How can they say that since they sent the track to Zane Lowe and he played it, it will equal X amount of extra sales, or that they pushed it to German MTV and that will equal 5000 more downloads off iTunes?
I'm genuinely interested because I've worked with a few PR agencies at the opposite end of the spectrum and it's more or less a flat rate; or a rate per work done (ie 2 quid per DJ/tastemaker sent to etc).
yeah, i guess we're all scrabbling around a bit at the moment, trying to find what works and what doesn't work. there are also an awful lot of blogs, with greater or lesser clout/reading figures/credibility and so on. However, it's clear at the moment that if you can get on one of the big boys, it can really boost you - personally I would probably choose a feature on Mad Decent above a play on Zane Lowe - and i'd certainly choose that over one of the late night R1 DJs or anyone on KissFM (for instance).mad ep wrote:I find this interesting and am glad to get an articulate viewpoint from another angle.setspeed wrote: how do these PR agencies quantify the money they have brought in? How can they say that since they sent the track to Zane Lowe and he played it, it will equal X amount of extra sales, or that they pushed it to German MTV and that will equal 5000 more downloads off iTunes?
I'm genuinely interested because I've worked with a few PR agencies at the opposite end of the spectrum and it's more or less a flat rate; or a rate per work done (ie 2 quid per DJ/tastemaker sent to etc).
Thing is- I would even be willing to quantify getting Zane Lowe to play a track as a value-added service. It is true it is impossible to come up with an exact formula for defining the value of some services... but I would rate Zane Lowe playing a track WAY above a blog posting a track. If for no other reason- Zane is only on air x amount of hours per week so there is a finite number of tracks he can play. In essence, by choosing to play your track, he is also choosing NOT to play someone else's instead.
However, blogs are essentially 24/7. There really isn't a limit to how many tracks they can post in a given day or week... and since most posted tracks aren't even hosted by the blogs themselves anyway, they aren't even limited by server space or bandwidth.
I'm not saying there isn't value in being picked up and promoted by the blogs- some artists have made a career out of being popular with the blogs... but I am saying I wouldn't put it above prime time Radio 1 or MTV.
Definitely- and I am not meaning to come across as anti-PR. I perhaps should have worded it better, because of course there are plenty of legit services that are difficult to quantify their specific value...TeReKeTe wrote:PR-- and any good PR agency will tell you this-- is NOT about increasing sales. it's a non-quantifiable entity, and there's exactly zero correlation between a successful PR campaign and sales. PR is all about keeping a buzz about you. why? because that's how it goes.
Blog placements, on the other hand, have a huge correlation to sales. Anyone who believes that the more popular blog sites are just scanning cd stores and the web for cool shit that they come across is thoroughly kidding themselves-- people blog about what they dig that gets sent to them. Smaller, niche-based blogs will definitely be in tune to the underground but still-- people review what they get sent. So if you're not sending blogs material, you're not getting reviewed, and your sales are stagnating.
PR is generally done on $ for time basis; a 6 week campaign, 2 week push, etc.
SoundcloudSoulstep wrote: My point is i just wanna hear more vibes
iamnoiseporn wrote:yep email info@spreadthenoise.com and i can get you a list
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