Hey guys, I'm just going to be documenting my new ad campaign for my band's new album here (as much for my benefit as anyone else's) and tracking all the metrics so I have a place where I can come back to it and check on progress every day or every couple of days. So, if anyone has any questions, critiques, or comments, please let me know.
Day 1 - March 29th-30th, 2018
Their new single, “The Only Faith” is a rocker inspired by Ed and Lorraine Warren of The Conjuring fame.
The Madison, Wisconsin band is a multiple award winner, including a 4-time winner for Best Rock Album from the Madison Area Music Awards and Wisconsin Area Music Industry’s Artist of the Year, an honor shared with Garbage, Violent Femmes, and Bon Iver. Recent music placements include the DVD releases of The Fate of the Furious and Dead Again in Tombstone starring Danny Trejo. In the last year alone they have opened for Third Eye Blind and shared the stage with AWOL Nation and Tantric.
Analysis 2
Next up, let's eliminate some non-performing ads if I'm going to be spending up to $30 a day for a bit.
So, I'm taking out Image 1 and 2 for Blink-182 and Foo Fighters, leaving only the live performance image in there, while leaving all of them all up for the Lookalike audience because they seemed to be averaging out around .50 a click.
Alright, let's try these changes for the next $30 and see if I can get some signups!
Day 2 - March 30th - 31st
Lookalike Audience
Listen to what others are saying about Sunspot!
“BIGGER AND CATCHIER… THE BAND MEMBERS ARE MAKING SOME OF THE BEST MUSIC OF THEIR CAREER.”
– ISTHMUS WEEKLY
“A PERFECT PIECE OF POP ROCK.”
– GET READY TO ROCK UK
“A DAMN RIGHTEOUS HOOT!”
– BLOGCRITICS.ORG
With their uncanny lyrics, massive harmonies, and six-string fireworks, Sunspot has been touring the rock underground for over two decades and performs driving electro-rock anthems that capture the fantastic and bring it back down to Earth.
Their new single, “The Only Faith” is a rocker inspired by Ed and Lorraine Warren of The Conjuring fame.
Also I'm changing the download button to "Just enter your email here and you'll get the new Sunspot track absolutely free" instead
Day 2 - March 30th - 31st
Lookalike Audience
Listen to what others are saying about Sunspot!
“BIGGER AND CATCHIER… THE BAND MEMBERS ARE MAKING SOME OF THE BEST MUSIC OF THEIR CAREER.”
– ISTHMUS WEEKLY
“A PERFECT PIECE OF POP ROCK.”
– GET READY TO ROCK UK
“A DAMN RIGHTEOUS HOOT!”
– BLOGCRITICS.ORG
With their uncanny lyrics, massive harmonies, and six-string fireworks, Sunspot has been touring the rock underground for over two decades and performs driving electro-rock anthems that capture the fantastic and bring it back down to Earth.
Their new single, “The Only Faith” is a rocker inspired by Ed and Lorraine Warren of The Conjuring fame.
Also I'm changing the download button to "Just enter your email here and you'll get the new Sunspot track absolutely free" instead
Day 3
March 31 - April 1
April 1 - April 2
Hey Mike,
Thanks for posting this. Hopefully we can turn this around for you. It's a little overwhelming with so much info to go through. I'll give you a broad opinion/analysis and if you have any specific questions we can break it down element by element.
To start, I'm unclear if you are targeting all of those options in one ad set or if you have three ad sets running simultaneously. It needs to be the latter. But there are also some issues with the squeeze page.
My feeling is that you have a message to market mismatch. Those relevancy scores are very low and a good indication that the targeting is at least half of the issue.
When I read your headline it sounds like it should be geared towards Coast to Coast AM fans more than Foo Fighters fans. I would start by trying an ad that targets only people that like both. But you need to decide if you are trying to sell the musical experience or the sci-fi experience. Pick one and make a bold claim about how your music will offer exactly what that audience wants. Right now my guess is that you are getting clicks because of the paranormal aspect of your copy, and then losing people when they get to your page and see that it's more of a rock band thing.
But there are also issues on the squeeze page itself. The image is far away and I get no sense of who you guys are. Smiling faces up close are where you should start. That said, you still want to match the image/vibe that you are selling. There are also some formatting issues with the quotes, and your main body copy is too short and missing some of the key elements I suggest in MMM.
Typically it's four paragraphs. the first paragraph tells them who you are (your biggest and most impressive accomplishments). The second paragraph tells them what the music sounds like. The third paragraph tells them what they will get if they take action. The fourth paragraph tells them what they need to do next.
Here's what I would do next...
1. Decide what your unique selling proposition is. In one sentence, how would your biggest fans describe your band to their friends? "Sunspot is great, they are...." How would a fan finish that sentence?
2. Work on your squeeze page. Make your best effort, post it here, I/we will offer feedback. Get that a bit more solid before running anymore ads.
3. Then post at least 3 options for your images, ad copy, ad headline, and link description text. Get feedback and refine.
4. Once you feel good about everything based on feedback, run a new ad using the split testing technique laid out in the February lesson here in the IC.
Bottom line, I think more work needs to be done before you should spend money on ads.
Sound good?
Having trouble with your marketing? Wish you could have an experienced direct-to-fan marketing expert look over your actual campaigns, music, or content and offer feedback? Or perhaps you’re just looking for a little one-on-one assistance so you can ask questions that pertain to your specific goals and get a second, more experienced, perspective? Click here to book a session with me now.
Thanks for the feedback John. I was excited because the clicks seemed to be pretty good, but then I was getting murdered on the squeeze page.
I'll have some new press quotes next week as well from the first album reviews and we'll get back to that squeeze page after our release party.
Thanks for the tips!
Mike
Sounds good Mike. Talk soon.
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Alright, finally getting back to working on the ads for the new album. We changed up the image, worked on the squeeze page a bit using the four paragraph principles and would love some feedback...
Thanks!
Hi Mike,
Looks pretty good. A few things could maybe be better...
1. The headline reads well, but doesn't completely give me a sense of what kind if band this really is, or what the experience is that I'm signing up for. It definitly drives home the Sci-fi thing (which is cool), but I'm not totally clear how that connects to the music. Are they sci-fi themes, sci-fi sounds, etc?
The horizontal image is not ideal because it pushes the quotes over and they look a bit squashed on a desk top. I would either try and find vertical image or expand the horizontal image to be full width and add the quotes below it. Though I personally like the former approach better.
The quotes also appear to be justified right. I would justify left.
And when you run your ads be sure to split test images. If one performs better than teh one on your squeeze page switch it out and go with the one that performs best in the ads.
Having trouble with your marketing? Wish you could have an experienced direct-to-fan marketing expert look over your actual campaigns, music, or content and offer feedback? Or perhaps you’re just looking for a little one-on-one assistance so you can ask questions that pertain to your specific goals and get a second, more experienced, perspective? Click here to book a session with me now.
John Oszajca said
1. The headline reads well, but doesn't completely give me a sense of what kind if band this really is, or what the experience is that I'm signing up for. It definitly drives home the Sci-fi thing (which is cool), but I'm not totally clear how that connects to the music. Are they sci-fi themes, sci-fi sounds, etc?
Thanks for the feedback John! I'm taking out the sci-fi stuff in the headline. We're going to sell the musical experience because this is about the album.
John Oszajca said
The horizontal image is not ideal because it pushes the quotes over and they look a bit squashed on a desk top. I would either try and find vertical image or expand the horizontal image to be full width and add the quotes below it. Though I personally like the former approach better.
The quotes also appear to be justified right. I would justify left.
I made the horizontal image bigger until we can get a vertical image. I'm definitely going to split test a couple of different ones in the ad from a goofy one to a live shot to a couple more funny ones that we have. I was getting decent clicks with the last round of ads but very few conversions on the squeeze page.
So, I'm going to give it another try once I get some feedback from the band. Let me know if you guys have any more thoughts of http://www.sunspotuniverse.com
I think the new formatting looks better. However, I think the headline is actually a bit weaker in the sense that the sci-fi thing was the most substantive aspect of the headline, it just needed a clearer explanation of what sci-fi meant in relation to your music. Or you needed to create a new headline that took a different angle. Currently your headline still has the "beam me up" line which eludes to sci-fi, but hangs a bit awkwardly without the sci-fi line you had and makes the headline even more ambiguous.
What is your USP?
And what did the ad you ran that performed well say, and what was the image that performed best?
Having trouble with your marketing? Wish you could have an experienced direct-to-fan marketing expert look over your actual campaigns, music, or content and offer feedback? Or perhaps you’re just looking for a little one-on-one assistance so you can ask questions that pertain to your specific goals and get a second, more experienced, perspective? Click here to book a session with me now.
Image that performed best was this one and the headline was "Do you like rock music?" and the image that performed the best was this one:
And that's why I'm kind of uncertain about using the paranormal angle on these particular ads. I think the USP of high-energy rock from a band of ghost hunters certainly works for some audiences. But the music is still fairly mainstream rock, with just the subject matter dealing with paranormal themes. So, how do I integrate those themes into the ad rot emphasize the USP is what I'm struggling with.
Hey Mike,
I wouldn't stray from your USP at all, assuming you really do think that you have the right USP and "high-energy rock from a band of ghost hunters " is what your fans would say is great and special about your band as compared to others.
But for something like that, I would want to hear that you are ghost hunters and not just have it be something you say, unless, your communication about ghost hunting (such as a podcast) was an even bigger part of what you do as a band.
To my mind, if you were going to be successful with a "do you like rock music" ad, your landing page would really want to just knock that theme out of the park. "Rock" is an adjective of sorts, and I think that may be why people are clicking. Your image lines up with that. But the squeeze page does not drip "the rock". Instead it talks about sci-fi, so there is a disconnect.
Ultimately you need to decide who the band is on a fundamental level, with a USP that you plan to back up with your images, and then really back it up with images, headline, site design, and even the tone you use in your emails.
That make sense?
Having trouble with your marketing? Wish you could have an experienced direct-to-fan marketing expert look over your actual campaigns, music, or content and offer feedback? Or perhaps you’re just looking for a little one-on-one assistance so you can ask questions that pertain to your specific goals and get a second, more experienced, perspective? Click here to book a session with me now.
Yeah, that's probably what I'm struggling with here. We definitely get the high-energy rock thing as why people come out and see us and it's also why we get regular show and club offers. So there's those people who would be interested in the album if we sang love songs or whatever just because they like pop-rock music. Those kind of "one-off" people who might be interested in grabbing the CD because they like the music are who I want to appeal to with this squeeze page.
I think I want to redefine the USP based around that. The high-energy rock part doesn't feel very unique, that's why I was looking at the paranormal angle. But that seems like it's something else. So, I think I've got two very different products to work with here and it's the mixture of them that's kind of diluting the message.
The podcast where we write original music every week is going to have to get its own squeeze page and sales funnel (as part of a Patreon subscription that we already have underway) and that we should focus on the album here, because that's what we want to sell to develop that audience.
Maybe I'll go back and focus on the musical comparisons in another draft of the page. That might be stronger for trying to sell the album and also to develop the live fan base where we tour. The lead single is a pop-punky kind of song so maybe I'll work on that angle.
One more try here using a new image and focusing on the rocking aspect of the music.
The Madison, Wisconsin band is a multiple award winner, including a 4-time winner for Best Rock Album from the Madison Area Music Awards and Wisconsin Area Music Industry’s Artist of the Year, an honor shared with Garbage, Violent Femmes, and Bon Iver. Recent music placements include the releases of The Fate of the Furious and Dead Again in Tombstone starring Danny Trejo. In the last year alone they have shared the stage with Saving Abel, Black Stone Cherry, Third Eye Blind, AWOL Nation and Tantric.
With their uncanny lyrics, massive harmonies, and six-string fireworks, Sunspot has been touring the rock underground for over two decades and performs driving rock that captures the fantastic and brings it back down to Earth. Uptempo, in-your-face, hyperdramatic rock music, Sunspot is face-melting guitar solos, huge choruses, and pounding drums. This is music specifically designed to make you stand up and throw your rock fist in the air. Their style has been compared to bands like Foo Fighters, Cheap Trick, and Andrew W.K.
Their new single, “The Only Faith” is a catchy hard rock song inspired by Ed and Lorraine Warren of The Conjuring fame. It’s the lead track off their new album, The Wonders of the Invisible World.
Enter your email address and name to immediately get a MP3 download of Sunspot’s latest single “The Only Faith" absolutely free.
Hey Mike,
It really comes down to just an honest USP. What would your biggest fans actually say was great about you guys if they were trying to convince a friend that tour band was special and they should stop what they are doing and go listen. It doesn't have to be earth shattering, but it does need to be more then just "Their great and full of energy". But it's important because the USP informs every other choice you make from photos, to headlines, to targeting.
What is the copy you posted above? Squeeze page copy? It reads fine, but everything starts with the USP. You want to define that before you write copy.
I also worry about shots like those. I know you have done well with one so far, but they typically don't do as well because there is no human connection in them. You don't get a sense of the people. But every now and then that all goes right out the window.
Having trouble with your marketing? Wish you could have an experienced direct-to-fan marketing expert look over your actual campaigns, music, or content and offer feedback? Or perhaps you’re just looking for a little one-on-one assistance so you can ask questions that pertain to your specific goals and get a second, more experienced, perspective? Click here to book a session with me now.
Well, the USP in the past that we used before the podcast is that we're high energy rock that's catchy and smart. So, the songs are literate and funny while also maintaining a hard edge.
That's kind of what I want to focus on with this particular ad. When we play clubs and outdoor festivals, most people don't give a shit what the songs are about, they care about the vibe and the fun. When we've been doing paranormal conferences, they care about the content. I'm working on a way of meshing them better for the live show, but in the meantime I'd like to start getting more email signups online in general. I'm finding a completely different crowd interested in the music than the "ghost hunter" aspect, even though that's made it easier for press. So I'll target them differently.
I'm restarting again at $5 a day to keep whittling down on things, July is a month where I can work on it every day.
I also signed up for the musician copywriting course because that's something I can always get better at and can help with our podcast, band, and my other businesses.
I'll keep you updated on how the new pages are working and we'll keep tweaking, thanks!
Sounds good Mike. I'll have some suggestions for you in the workshop, but what you might do is follow the steps in the creative dynamic test and run a bunch of different headlines and images, with different angles. Maybe create two different ad sets (one targeting paranormal fans (maybe coasttocoast am listeners) and another targeting a similar artist, and just run the ads for traffic to your best attempt at a squeeze page. But don't worry about the squeeze page performance right now. Just look at which headlines and images do best and try and hone in on what your potential audiences are responding to and how much clicks are costing. If you can get cheap clicks with ANY angle, then that will tell you which approach you should take with the squeeze page.
Make sense?
Having trouble with your marketing? Wish you could have an experienced direct-to-fan marketing expert look over your actual campaigns, music, or content and offer feedback? Or perhaps you’re just looking for a little one-on-one assistance so you can ask questions that pertain to your specific goals and get a second, more experienced, perspective? Click here to book a session with me now.