Category: sethwCategory: sethw
Don’t assume the level of your fans’ love for what you do.
Don’t assume they lack interest in how you operate and work.
You don’t have to JUST announce the essentials (the facts) of what you do.
For example, if you have a new album coming out, you can send an email campaign with the album art, some facts, and a button for people to click to order it.
BUT… you could also include a few paragraphs about the inspiration behind the music.
A quote from the artist who designed the artwork.
A photo or two of you working in the studio, or even your bedroom recording set up!
Don’t assume that “nobody cares,” or think, “why would anyone be interested in that?”
Maybe casual fans won’t give a f*ck. Fine.
But the ones who LOVE what you do?
The ones that just want to support you and your art and your magic?
They’ll appreciate it.Nobody knows everything you’re doing.
Most of your followers don’t know about your next course, your next photo session, your next tour, your new shirt.
Here’s some wild things you can do:
➡️ Reply to someone who leaves a comment with a link
➡️ DM someone and let them know about your new project
➡️ Email someone directly
➡️ Make personalized videos with Loom and send to fans (like this):The days of getting 50,000 clicks from Facebook are long gong, but the vault is still open.
As I’ve said in “THE VAULT OF SOCIAL MEDIA IS OPEN SO TAKE WHAT YOU CAN GET” –
I have good news, and I have bad news.
The good news is the vault is open, and by vault, I mean social media.
You’re still able to link to your latest video, or a new song, or ask people to join your email list.
The bad news is that you can only swipe a few dollars at a time from the vault.
What would it hurt to try this a few times this week?
Approach your social media and email newsletters like a DJ.
A DJ doesn’t open the set with self-promotion; they give the audience a carefully chosen playlist of music, drawing from various sources, sounds, and eras.
Similarly, you can blend your influences and experiences into a cohesive online presence for your audience.
Plan ahead and schedule social media posts on specific days. Set a rhythm for your posts, and tastefully repeat announcing your new songs, tour dates, and upcoming events.
We do this because, “if your social media posts are seen by less than 3% of your followers, that means over 97% of your fans didn’t see it.”
Now, when a DJ is sourcing music for a mix, they draw from their own collection, along with new material. Random discoveries from other mixes.
In a way you’re probably already doing this.
You’re sending new music to your friends, and going to shows.
Dropping links to music videos in the group chat.
Talking about upcoming shows in Discord, on social media, in person.You’re more of a DJ then you realize.
Your “online presence” is your existence in the digital space, so keep it authentic.
Use your good taste and share that with your audience. Tell them the new album you discovered, the old album that moves you to tears, a book that inspired your creative journey.
This makes “marketing ” feel less gross because you’re just being yourself, reshaping the conversation into whatever online container you happen to inhabit.

Easiest platform to start building your email list? Substack.
Sign up, give it a name, upload a logo, add a tag line, and you’re done – now you’ve got a landing page.
It’s a start. It’s not forever. If you outgrow it, fine. Export your subscribers and go somewhere.
But compared to other offerings, I believe Substack to the be the easiest for anyone just starting out.
Ask some people to sign up now, and when you’re ready, you’ve got a few people on your list already.

You’re tired of social media, but wondering if there’s life after the newsfeed. That’s exactly what we figure out here – together. 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️
→ See our upcoming Zoom schedule
Say hello. Ask about working together. Tell me how you’re doing: seth@socialmediaescape.club
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