Musicians take Social Networking into their own Hands
Posted on Sat, 29 Mar 2008 00:29:04 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Jennifer Netherby
NEW YORK (Billboard) - 50 Cent has more than 1 million friends on MySpace, but
if the rapper ever decides to leave the social network, he'll be leaving behind
those friends, too. So like a growing number of artists, he's started his own
social networking site.
On Thisis50.com, fans can create profiles and friend lists just like on MySpace,
but 50 Cent has direct access to the site's users and their e-mail addresses.
More and more acts, from Kylie Minogue to Ludacris to the Pussycat Dolls, are
launching their own social networks, which are becoming a sort of
next-generation version of artist Web sites.
The social networking component gives fans a reason to hang out on a site and
visit more often than they would a standard Web site. And artists can sell
advertisements on their sites and offer downloads and merchandise for sale --
options they don't have on MySpace or Facebook. Plus, they own the content and
data on how fans use their site, which they don't get on other social networks.
"The thing that separates Thisis50 from MySpace is we control the e-mail
database," says Chris "Broadway" Romero, director for new media at G-Unit
Records, which handles Thisis50. "We can e-mail members if we want to."
Thisis50 isn't meant to be a fan club, but rather a platform for 50 Cent to
showcase his music and music he likes, and comment on news and user profile
pages. Ludacris' WeMix.com, on the other hand, is more of a hub for aspiring
artists to upload their music.
The artist networks aren't meant to replace MySpace or Facebook, which tend to
attract a broader audience and more users.
"(Artists) think about MySpace and Facebook as funnels for their own social
networks," says Gina Bianchini, CEO of Ning, a company that provides social
networking tools for Thisis50, Sara Bareilles and others. "They take and use
services where they don't know the users, don't have access and don't have full
control, and funnel those fans to something they do control."
TWO-WAY COMMUNICATION
The key to getting users coming back to the sites is artist involvement, either
through blogs or comments on user pages or exclusive footage and other content.
"The biggest thing we push to artists is, 'Embrace the site,"' says Evan Rifkin,
CEO of Flux.com, a social networking platform partly owned by MTV.
It's relatively inexpensive to create a social network if artists use one of the
growing number of companies that provide the tools and hosting. For instance,
Ning charges $34 per month for a site and hosting. And Flux works with artists
and labels on a revenue-sharing basis. Artists can set up their main site for
free and pay a percentage of revenue from advertisements and sales on additional
pages.
Artists also tend to pay for labor to run the sites. But if fans get involved
and add things to the site to share with others, it can reduce the need for
staff to constantly provide new content, Romero says.
In addition, many artists are simply turning their main Web site into a social
network. Suretone Records director of new media Ashley Jex says the label is
working with Flux to incorporate social networks into all its artists' sites to
cater to the hardcore fans and keep them clicking around.
With Flux, which also has deals with Universal Music Group and Virgin, users
create one profile and with one click they can join the network of any artist
using it, rather than having to create new profiles for each.
Ice Cube and DJ Pooh added a twist earlier in March, launching UVNTV, a
broadband TV and social networking site where artists and brands can create
their own channel and subscribers can create profiles and chat with one another.
Artists get detailed information on their users and can sell advertisements,
merchandise, downloads or even subscriptions to their channel. They also own and
control the content.
"You know the demographic of anybody watching your content," DJ Pooh says. "You
know what they watched and clicked on." The service is in beta and free to
artists and is expected to formally launch in January 2009. So far, Snoop Dogg
has a channel there, as does Ice Cube and such brands as RockStar Games and
Source.
Even more important: Fans seem to be buying directly from the sites. On
Minogue's KylieKonnect, launched in fall 2007 through U.K.-based New Visions
Mobile, nearly 25 percent of users have made a ringtone, download or merchandise
purchase, company director Julia McNally says.
Reuters/Billboard
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Photo:
50 Cent performs during the 2008 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah January 19, 2008. 50 Cent has more than 1 million friends on MySpace, but if the rapper ever decides to leave the social network, he'll be leaving behind those friends, too. So like a growing number of artists, he's started his own social networking site. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
Posted on Sat, 29 Mar 2008 00:29:04 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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