Tour Marketing Template-Part Two, A Promotional Time-Line
By Jeri Goldstein
© 2007 The New Music Times, Inc.
As the saying goes,"timing is everything." That is so true in the promotion business.
Miss a deadline, and you may forfeit an entire month's itinerary information getting to the booking
personnel across the country. This could hamper the ease of future bookings. Or, if you miss the
calendar-listing deadline, your photo and upcoming gig information may not appear in the local daily
paper, reducing your chances for a good audience turnout. So let's get a handle on the timing and work
with a time-line that will keep you on track.
Publicity Time-Line
Gather media contacts with contract returns -
Ask the venue to send you their local media contact list when they return your contracts.
Once you have the contracts and media contacts in hand, you are able to begin your city-by-city
publicity campaign. If you are sending itineraries or press releases to national media, you will
have to adhere to their individual deadlines as they come up. For general promotion tour-by-tour,
the following time-line will keep you ahead of the promotion game.
- Six to eight weeks prior to the first tour date - begin media contact
Make inquiries for interviews- With local media contacts in hand from the local
promoter, you can begin to contact the various media outlets, print, radio, possibly
television to get their specific deadlines, specialty editors and show hosts.
Send initial press packets with press release - Direct your first press release
and packet to the editor in charge of the individual print media section, such as the
Calendar Editor, the Features Editor, the Entertainment Editor, the Music Editor, etc.
Keep in mind that one department hardly ever shares the information with another department.
This may mean multiple copies of press information going to a single paper, depending upon
how many departments the paper has. When dealing with radio, each station may have multiple
music directors or show hosts depending on the format. College stations or community and public
radio stations often have specialty shows hosted by various individuals. It is important to know
the host of the show you are trying to reach and address material to that host or the show
specifically.
Contact venue publicity person to coordinate promotion efforts - Some venues have very
savvy and helpful publicity people promoting each date. Other venues have volunteers or one
overworked staff person running the whole show. When you negotiate your gig, find out what
kind of promotional help you can count on or not. Then you can work with the venue's publicity
person to coordinate each of your efforts, avoiding duplication, ensuring action. If you know
the venue will take care of certain aspects of the promotion, you can concentrate your efforts
elsewhere. By coordinating early in the game, there is time to be creative, take advantage of
publicity avenues not accessible in the short term if they exist in the market.
- Five weeks prior-
Prepare mailing to fans - If you have a growing mailing list of fans, it is time to
prepare your printed mailing. Depending on the size of your mailing list and your touring radius,
you might consider doing mailings tour by tour to those only in the touring area to reduce printing
and postage costs. If you use email to notify your fans exclusively, then this mailing can happen at
a date much closer to the first tour date.
Schedule promotional in-store teasers, signings, and events - It is never too early to notify local
stores that you have a date scheduled in their backyard. The sooner they know, the more likely it is that
they can schedule you for a promotional in-store, CD signing or other creative promotional event. This is
also true for local radio show interviews or live performances.
- Four weeks prior-
Send tour itinerary mailing to fans - It is always great to get upcoming tour date information to your
fans early enough for them to buy advance tickets and make plans to attend your event. Post card mailers make
great refrigerator reminders. By mailing four weeks out, you can be fairly sure that the card will get there
prior to the date. If you use a bulk-mailing permit with anything other than first class pre-sort, you are
taking chances that even with four weeks; the card may not arrive on time.
Send press releases- follow-up - Now it is time to follow-up on your initial contacts with the media.
Find out if they received the original mailings and if not, there is still plenty of time to re-send the
information.
Send date listings to calendars - Usually, calendar editors don't want listings too far in advance,
they may lose them under this week's pile of information.
- Three weeks prior-
Follow-up calls for interviews - You won't get an interview without consistent follow-up.
Interviews are reserved for the newsworthy and the notable. Find an angle to pitch to the
editor before calling for an interview.
E-mail tour itinerary to fans - This is a good time to email your fan base. It gives them
enough time to purchase advance tickets and schedule the date on their calendar. Since the medium
in nearly instantaneous, it is simply a courtesy to you fans to give them long enough advance
notification about your upcoming gig.
Check on flyer/poster placement - When you attempt to have flyers or posters placed around the
towns you are about to tour, you are not there to make sure the posters are up in the well trafficked
areas. Therefore you need to check with the promoter to see whether they used the posters you supplied
and that they have been dispersed. Some cities have strict postering regulations with specific places
assigned for all notifications. Other cities require posters be placed by they city or a designated
postering company. Check with the promoter for any regulations you may need to be aware of. You simply
may not need to send many posters since there are not many places to post them.
- Two weeks prior-
Media check-in for listing/photo inclusions - Once again, it is time to check back with your
media contacts to make sure all materials have arrived and whether the editors have decided to
place your photo or press release in the appropriate sections. Don't think of yourself as pestering
these editors, think of yourself as being thorough and persistent. Your timely follow-up simply gives
your act a better chance of inclusion, and even a better chance of more prominent placement, especially
if you have a great photo and something unique and interesting to promote.
Update check with venue publicity person - One last check with the venue publicity person will
assure you that they have taken care of their part of the deal. If they have fallen down on their job,
you still have some time to take care of their neglected end of the promotion.
- During the last two weeks prior to the tour-
Conduct phone interviews - Reserve times in your schedule prior to leaving on tour to conduct
phone interviews. Schedule a tight time frame where you set aside a few hours in a day for back to
back interviews. Depending on how many interviews you have been able to line up, you may need a few
days. Some of these may need to be conducted during the tour if it is a long tour. Most interviewers
like to conduct their interviews close to the time the story will actually run, which will most likely
be the week of the gig.
- Two days prior to day of show-
Conduct in-town live radio/television interviews - If you have the time to arrive a day early or
the night before the play date, you may be able to conduct some day-of-show or pre-day-of-show media
interviews. You would have scheduled these in the early stages of the promotion time-line.
Play promotional in-store teasers, events - Now the planning pays off. All your hard work during
the six weeks prior to the date is now realized. Any pre-show promotional gigs, in-store signings or
teasers will be played from two days prior to the show up to the day-of the show.
While in town, get copies of any promotional preview articles, interviews or calendar listings
to use in your future press packets. This will also serve as a record of what you have accomplished
during your campaign.
With practice, this template will place you ahead of the promotion game. You will begin
to notice a difference as you slowly get more media coverage, resulting in larger audiences and greater
quantities of merchandise being sold. Eventually you will notice that demand for your act begins to shift--shows
become easier to book, fees and percentages rise. This won't happen overnight, it is a slow, process requiring
persistence and diligence. When you follow this step-by step marketing template, the process of marketing your
act becomes more manageable and less overwhelming and the results will be significant. Good luck!
And, I invite you to learn more about this and other topics important to your career development and to
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Jeri Goldstein is the author of, How To Be Your Own Booking Agent The Musician's
& Performing Artist's Guide To Successful Touring 3rd Edition.
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