It is what it is!!! The blog of TJ Chapman & TJs DJs... Hip Hop music, the music biz and dj stuff at its best.

Friday, January 29, 2010

How to Reach Out to Bloggers

by Chris Brogan

Are you hoping to connect with bloggers and get the word out about your product or service? Are you hoping that you can find someone who’s interested in what your company is offering, and then share the pertinent details so that hopefully the blogger will write a decent story about you, maybe even include a few links? Have you felt frustrated by the varied and less-than-successful experiences you’ve had with your efforts?

Let’s talk about it.

Do Your Homework

All bloggers aren’t the same. Big numbers don’t mean big response. Just because someone writes about X doesn’t mean that your product is actually X to them. Bloggers can be fickle and often work to the beat of their own drum.

I get dozens of pitches a day. I delete almost all of them unread, unless I know the person, and then half the time, I delete those, too. The reason is that people aren’t considering what I write about before pitching to me. I rarely ever cover software here, so if you’re showing me a software story, it damned well better have a human angle.

The same is true for any of the bloggers you need to reach. Not sure where to find the bloggers you need? Use these resources:

Once you have a sense of who you might want to reach for your stories, it’s all about building relationships.

Be There Before the Sale

This is something Julien and I wrote about in Trust Agents, and it’s the first part of making your blogging outreach more successful. If you want people to write about you, they should probably know about you first. Quick ways to get that started:

  • Follow them on Twitter.
  • Comment on their blog posts.
  • Set up Google Alerts and comment on related articles.

Is this more work than just blanketing someone with email and hoping a few write about it? Yes. Is it worth it? Yes.

The trick is not to talk about your stuff. You should have started this outreach weeks and weeks before ever needing anything, and it should be genuine. Be interested in the people you hope will take an interest in you.

Make It Easy

People that I like in the outreach department work to find the people who she thinks make the most sense for the story. They deliver tons of information and preparation. They do lots of checking and double-checking (because bloggers can be fickle or forgetful). They make everything as seamless as possible. Some ideas:

  • Make everything dead simple.
  • (Tyler in the comments suggested) Be clear what you want the outcome of the outreach to be.
  • Provide URLs to everything, so that bloggers can refer.
  • Provide photos to go with the piece, or a video, or whatever other content.
  • Keep your outreach emails brief, and keep the details highlighted and bolded appropriately.
  • Make sure your FIRST email does nothing but get the buy-in to pitch the story.

Let’s pause on that last point. Some people disagree. They want the whole pitch in the first email, because two becomes a clutter. I’ve honestly seen it done both ways. I know that when Cathy sends me an email asking to pitch me, I’m going to ask for the pitch. I’ve seen others send me the pitch in the first email and it’s been okay, but more often than not, I prefer the two-email system. You can dispute this. Really.

To me, making the effort simple is a good thing.

Ask the Right Questions

I’m often given business books to review. I’m a voracious reader, and I like sharing the good ones with people. However, I also tell people who send me books that I don’t guarantee a review. Sometimes, the book is okay, but not my favorite. Other times, I really don’t like the book. If the people who send me the book ever push for a review, I usually explain that it might not be as positive as they’d like. As an author, myself, I don’t like giving bad reviews.

To that end, think about some questions that might let you have some guidance on how the blogger acts.

  • Can you tell me how long it takes to post from when you receive the product?
  • May I check back in a few weeks from now?
  • What do you do with negative reviews?
  • If you have disagreements or problems with the product, could you email me first to make sure you have all the information?

Questions like this and others can be really helpful to you setting your own expectations.

Above All Else, Don’t Push

If not this story, the next one. Believe me, relationships in this space run long and weird.

Christina Pacelli from Red reached out to me to cover the Eye Fi (a USB-to-wifi cool gadget) over a year ago. She sent me one. I couldn’t really get over my own techno-idiocy to make it work. A year later, Christina and team got smart and mailed me a new Eye-Fi (still have the old one, by the way) and a Novatel Mifi device (which acts like a wandering hotspot). Combined with BOTH, I’ll be able to use this product on the show floor at my next event and report back what I think of its benefits to various groups.

A year. Christina has been politely persistent for a year. And it will pay off. (Who knows? Maybe the links already make it pay off.)

Don’t push bloggers, and just accept that sometimes the story doesn’t hit. I’ve had a series of situations where things seemed right, and upon checking them out, I just didn’t feel good about blogging it, or wasn’t moved to blog it, etc. As the person pushing that particular product, I’m sure it doesn’t feel well when your push goes nowhere. I’m so sorry when I’m the cause. I imagine bloggers also have their own reasons and feel bad, too.

In most cases, it comes around to the better at some point. This is a long game for lots of us. Be patient. Learn who doesn’t work out. Move onward.

An Imprecise Science

There’s more to it than all this, but this is a good start. If you’ve questions, I can definitely add more. What do you think? What have you tried that’s worked? What else have I missed?

 

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

B.o.B.: Artist To Watch 2010 | Billboard Magazine

On Tour

Next Date

September 14, 2009
Beacon Theater
New York, New York
More Dates
END on tour -->

Artists in this Article

Asher Roth
B.o.B.
Wale
Kid Cudi

Albums in this Article

Two months ago, rapper/singer B.o.B.-who also goes by his real name Bobby Ray (Simmons), Bobby or just plain Bob-made a viral video with Atlantic Records president Julie Greenwald in an effort to quiet rumors of tension between the artist and his label.

 

Listen to B.o.B.'s "Nothin' On You [feat. Bruno Mars]"

 

The YouTube clip relieved fans who were wondering whether B.o.B. would ever release "B.o.B. Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray," his debut album now due in April on Atlantic, through T.I.'s Grand Hustle and producer Jim Jonsin's Rebel Rock labels. In early 2009, B.o.B. was touted by magazines Vibe and XXL as an emerging MC alongside Kid Cudi, Asher Roth and Wale. The Atlanta-based artist drew attention for his versatility-he recalls both OutKast's Big Boi and crooner Raheem DeVaughn, and he may be the first rapper to play the guitar well-and the skills displayed on his early mixtapes.

While Cudi, Roth and Wale all released major-label debuts in 2009-with varying degrees of success and frustration-B.o.B.'s project stalled. He doesn't deny the rumor that Atlantic wanted him to sign a 360-degree deal first, but says both parties eventually reached a compromise.

"We just had to make it work. Now I feel a huge sense of support," B.o.B. says. "In this business, you have to lose your ego sometimes. I'm still learning how to do that."

In the interim, he released another lauded mixtape, guested on new albums by Cobra Starship and Pitbull, and recorded with Big Boi. In August, an unofficial mixtape called "Should Have Been the First Album" surfaced, another sign that demand for a proper full-length is strong. B.o.B. says he may release a "mini-mixtape" before April to maintain the buzz.

Meanwhile, B.o.B.'s official debut single "Nothin' on You," which recalls Lupe Fiasco's 2007 hit "Superstar," was released digitally Dec. 15. "Adventures" will also feature collaborations with Jonsin, Fiasco, producer Dr. Luke and Weezer's Rivers Cuomo. "It won't sound forced," B.o.B. says. "The trend in hip-hop now is to be weird or different. I just want to be natural and allow my music to speak to people."

2010 is the Year of B.o.B aka Bobby Ray! Watch closely...

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Five tips for being a little more effective and respectful on Facebook.

Five tips for being a little more effective and respectful on Facebook.

So it seems everyone is on Facebook now and most bands are making the move to using it as one of their priority networking sites. Myspace while still a strong site is taking a backseat to the Facebook revolution in the past year and some. Just as it is important to get the word out and do your marketing, promotion and advertising on Facebook, it is also important to be effective and respectful to get the kind of attention you want. Here are five quick tips to consider applying to your Facebook use in order to be as effective and respectful as possible.

1. If I don’t want to be your fan, stop asking!

It is fine to ask some one to join your fan page, but if they decide not to for whatever the reason, then leave them be. Maybe they prefer to be on your personal page, maybe they don’t sign up for fan pages, maybe they just aren’t a fan. Whatever the reason, the constant asking to be a fan has pissed many people off and will even get them to drop you as a friend or block you.

If they don’t want to be a fan, leave it be. Most musicians put a bulk of their updates on their personal pages as well. You can also easily add a link to your fan page so they can go there themselves if they want. Another tip is to leave the fan page public so people can check it out if they want with out joining. Don’t spam for fans.

2. If some one doesn’t add you as a friend, do not continue to try to get them to.

Not everyone is going to like you and even those that may like you, might not want to have you as a friend on their Facebook page for whatever reason. Again like above, don’t grill people to be your friend. It is annoying and if you are adding some one, drop a short note as to why you are adding them. Make it personal and draw people in, it will come off a lot less like you are mass adding or spamming. If some one chooses not to add you, let it be and don’t chase it. They may eventually turn around and add you at another point.

3. Don’t chase a dropped friend.

I have heard this from numerous people who have chosen to drop a friend off Facebook and then later get an email or even a call asking why.

Don’t do it! They have their reasons and the last thing they want is a call asking why. Maybe you spam too much, maybe you over post, over update, over whatever. Maybe they are trying to limit friends or keep information a little more personal. Who knows, but let it be. On the other hand if you feel some one is going to be to oversensitive and annoying and you want to drop them, then hide them so you don’t have to see their posts. Just don’t be that person to chase after someone who dropped you as a friend on Facebook, cause when you think about it, that is pretty damn sad.

4. Don’t send flowers, gifts, dogs, farm animals and all those other app crap items to people.

If you are trying to use Facebook to grab the attention of people or trying to connect with fans, new or old, use the information that is yours, the updates that are yours and don’t send gifts, animals, flowers and all that other crap. There are a great number of people that find it incredibly annoying and at the same time as your updates show you sending a flower or scoring on mafia wars or whatever, it really isn’t doing much for marketing your music or your shows. It also will make some people want to hide your updates and miss out on the real information and real updates you want them to have.

5. Stop with the boring updates and news that is pointless.

Still kind of tying in to the last one. Skip on the “I just ate a sandwich” or “jeeze, I wish I-90 wasn’t so backed up” or some quote that only you and a handful of people might get. This also includes not posting ten times a day. Be that person or that band that posts up stuff you want to read, watch, view or whatever. I am not saying don’t make it all business but limit yourself and you will have people that will be watching out for your posts instead of being tired and skipping over them or worse, hiding them.

Conclusion

In the end, some times it is better to have a few pages, one where it is just for you and your friends and one for the world you are trying to reach as a whole. I know a number of people that preface their personal pages with a statement that says “this is my personal page for friends and family, if you want more on my music or my band, join this page as a fan or add me on that page”. Make sure you are grabbing the attention of those that you want to get attention from. Social Networks have become a large part of reaching out to new fans and new people but it is crucial to make sure you are reaching out with the strongest voice possible. It is also important to make sure you message, your music, your marketing is not getting lost in the mix of silly applications, excessive postings and even being hidden or dropped as a friend.

Be interesting. Make sure your posts are something that will draw people in to your page and make them look around. Update photos and videos weekly. Make sure the information on shows are detailed with the who, what, why, when, where and how. Give them what they need!

Clean up your page often, so that when some one new comes to it, they can see all sorts of interesting things about you and your music. It can only take minutes a week to make the impact to gain new friends and new connections that will draw people to shows, buying merchandise and music as well as building a fan base that wants to stay connected.

© 2010 Loren Weisman

There's no reason you shouldn't have a profile or at least a page on Facebook!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B, Playboy Tre, B Rich & TJ are the Rappin Gutter Crew! New Music Review TV

B.o.B "May 25th" Mixtape Cover feat DJ Drama & DJ Sense

Monday, January 25, 2010

David Banner & 9th Wonder - Slow Down

I got some new music from the Homie David Banner off his upcoming album with 9th Wonder called "Slow Down".  Check it out & let me know what you think!

Make sure you follow him on Twitter @theRealBanner

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DOWNLOAD: David Banner & 9th Wonder "Slow Down" (ALL VERSIONS)

Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

This DJ Part 1 thru 3: Trials & Tribulations of Being a DJ! Shouts to @DJBmello

This is as real as it gets! If u ever wondered what a dj goes thru WATCH THIS!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B aka Bobby Ray Press Links | Sprite Step Off

Check out recent B.o.B AKA BOBBY RAY press links!
*From this weekend's UMASS and Sprite Step Off shows*
***

The Daily Collegian (UMass Amherst's student paper)

"The unexpected musical styles kept coming, as Bobby’s tunes ranged in influence from Gnarls Barkley to Björk to Coldplay.
This, along with a goofy and mobile sense of showmanship, helped keep his set fresh and entertaining."

***
Sound-Savvy.com

"With his eclectic style, he fuses sounds from the alternative, reggae, soul and funk genres with his own hip-hop flavor to make music that’s balanced and unique.
 Sure he’s been compared to the likes of Andre 3000 and Cee-Lo, but he’s much more than what they’ve done in the past: Bobby Ray is the future of hip-hop."

***

Additional Online Coverage from Sprite Step Off:

RapRadar.com

2DopeBoyz.com

NahRight.com

OzoneMag.com

JenniferBrix.com

AKidNamedB.com

KeepItTrill.com

ShowHype.com

B-T-Dubs.com

HoodHollywood.com

RudeLuv.com

KarolinaSouth.com

CharlotteObserver.com

Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B - Bet I Bust feat. Playboy Tre LIVE (off of his new mixtape coming in Feb)

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Ridin in the Van feat @BoBATL @TJsDJs @PlayboyTre @Brich404

Download now or watch on posterous
movie.mov (3422 KB)

Please excuse us...we were bored...LOL!


TJ Chapman | TJ's DJ's

TJChapman.com
TJsDJs.com
Twitter.com/TJsDJs
Facebook.com/TJ.Chapman
Myspace.com/TJsDJs

Check out my artists:

B.o.B (Bobby Ray) | BoBATLcom
Double D | IamDoubleD.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Richardson
Date: Sun, 24 Jan 2010 16:46:24 To: TJ Chapman
Subject: Sun, 24 Jan #2

Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B performing at the Sprite Step-Off in Charlotte, NC

TJ's DJ's

TJsDJs.com
TJChapman.com
Twitter.com/TJsDJs
Facebook.com/TJChapman
Myspace.com/TJsDJs

Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

Friday, January 22, 2010

How To Add A Custom Landing Tab To Your Facebook Fan Page

How To Add A Custom Landing Tab To Your Facebook Fan Page

Posted on January 21st, 2010.

Let’s assume you have your Facebook Fan Page up and running now. (If not, see FANtastic Fan Pages

for ideas and help). Some of the basics include adding a custom graphic, installing apps – particularly Static FBML, adding custom content including a landing tab, and ensuring you’re adding relevant, quality content on a regular basis. I’ll be covering all of these subjects and more on this blog and also on SocialMediaExaminer.com

.

If you have visitors to your Fan page and they are not yet fans, I call them non-fans, you ideally want those visitors to be directed to your custom Welcome Tab rather than your Wall. 

The idea behind this is you want to have a clear and inviting page that provides these visitors with an immediate sense of who you are, what you do, why they should become a fan, AND you want to provide a call to action with a nice visual to your Become a Fan button. 

image

 

If the visitor is already a Fan they’ll automatically be directed to your Wall as the landing page so they can read your updates, see what your community has to say and share their thoughts. 

Before you can set up your fan page to make the distinction between fans and “non-fans” you’ll need to create a Welcome tab:

Add the Static FBML App 

FBML stands for Facebook Markup Language.  It’s Facebook’s own version of HTML.  You want to install this application because it allows you to configure your Fan Page with custom tabs.  If you are good at traditional HTML you will pick up FBML very quickly. 

If you don’t have any experience with HTML you are not alone and I highly suggest you work with a web developer who can quickly and easily add all of the custom apps you want without the headache and frustration of learning this new language at a time when you are trying to grow your business and fan base.  But, if you love that type of challenge, more power to you!

Here’s how you add the Static FBML application so you or your web designer can start configuring your landing page:

  • In the master Search box at the top right corner, type in FBML. 
  • Click on the square Facebook FBML icon to go to that page.  Under the icon on the left side of that new page, Click on Add to My Page (as shown in the screenshot below).
  • You will then see a pop up window with thumbnails of any fan pages you’re an Admin for.  Click on the button that says Add Static FBML next to the fan page you want.  

image

Creating the Custom Content

After you install the Static FBML app, go back to your Fan page and click Edit Page under your image.  You will now see new applications to choose from – click on the edit link for the FBML app. 

There are essentially two simple, blank fields to this app and that’s it. It’s so simple, it seems complex! The first small field is where you enter the title of the tab you want.  Then the larger field is where you paste in the raw HTML code.  [NOTE: Something really cool to know about the Static FBML app is you can add additional iterations of the app for as many custom boxes/tabs as you wish!]

If you are fairly savvy about adding similar HTML text to a WordPress site then this will be a snap, but again, don’t be afraid to enlist the help of a web developer.

For do-it-yourself folks, try Windows Livewriter

(for PCs only) – it’s a free WYSIWYG desktop blog writing software (I use it for all my blog posts) where you can create the content you want, then view the raw HTML source code and copy/paste. Or, if you’re more advanced, software like Dreamweaver

will be a good choice.

Once you have created and added the content you want, you can add this new tab to the list of tabs on your fan page by clicking on the double arrows that appear on your tab bar on the far right. 

image

To “lock” the positioning of your first several tabs in place, click on the tab itself and you can actually pick it up and drag and reorder. Once you’re finished reordering, this new order will remain “set.”

Adjust the Settings

Now that your Welcome tab is set up, it’s time to adjust your settings for the appropriate landing page for your fans and your non-fans.  There are a couple places to do so; here’s the simplest:

  • On your Wall tab, look just below the Share button of your Publisher and you’ll see a tiny link for Options. Click on that, then click Settings.
  • Use the drop-down menu next to Default Landing Tab for Everyone Else, and select Welcome so that all non-fans are directed to your Welcome page first. 

image

Custom welcome tab – your Welcome tab is for non-fans and the key objective is to provide the call to action so that people become a fan.  The really fun trend with Welcome tabs is to make them multi-media – a short (1 minute or less) welcome video, an audio post, etc.  This is such a great personal way to connect with your new visitors. Of course, you can name this landing tab whatever you wish; it doesn’t have to be “Welcome.”

Add an Opt-In box

An Opt-In box on FB is much the same as one on your website.  It is a way to offer free products or services to your visitors in exchange for their email address for future marketing purposes. 

image

You may choose to use the same give-away product as your website or offer a different one.  If you want to track where your contact list originates or you believe the demographics of your fans may be different than your website visitors, you might want to offer different giveaways for each opt-in box. 

Otherwise, I would recommend sticking with the same offerings for both your website and fan page.  Again, if you are good with HTML, it will be a breeze for you to use the Static FBML application to add your opt-in box, otherwise put this on your to-do list for your web-designer.  (Note – this opt in box will be programmed just like the one on your website – using the same auto-responder program such as aWeber, 1ShoppingCart

, Constant Contact, etc.)

If you go visit my friend, John Assaraf’s, Facebook fan page (screenshot above) – you’ll find he actually has three different opt-in boxes on three separate tab: Welcome, Ask John (genius!), and RAK.

Every artist, dj, record company & everyone in business should have a Facebook Fan Page!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Trillogy wins Song of the Day 2nd Week in a row. Check out "Hello Home" | New Music Review TV

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Got a HIT RECORD? Get it REVIEWED on #NewMusicReviewTV TONIGHT at 7pm by @TJsDJs

Watch New Music Review TV Tonight at 7pm

WATCH HERE

The New Music Review TV is a platform for artists, producers &record companies (Rap, R&B, Reggae, Pop) to get their music heard and reviewed LIVE by TJ Chapman of TJ's DJ's and various special guests from the Music Industry. You also get INSTANT FEEDBACK from the hundreds of other DJs & People watching the show. Guests include DJs, A&Rs, Artist, Producers and other influential people in the music business. Past guests: Tony Neal (CEO Core DJs) & B Rich (Mgr for B.o.B). Feel free to let me know if you'd like to be a Co-Host on the show or even suggest someone you'd like to see.

1. How Do I Submit Songs for the New Music Review TV? 
ALL MUSIC has to be uploaded to http://Bln.kr(make sure u fill out the description w/ Artist Name, Song Name, yourTwitter Name & then in LABEL type NewMusicReview). Lastly, the link w/ artist name & song name must be posted to @TJsDJs or @NMRtv on Twitter when the Show starts!

2. What kind of music can I submit for REVIEW? 
You can submit REAL songs (R&B, Rap/Hip Hop, Reggae, Pop & more)! No MIXTAPE SONGS over other people's beats!

3. I'm a Producer, can I submit my BEATS for REVIEW? 
Producers this is for you too! YES you can submit your beats for review. You might even get lucky & get a placement. Remember there's hundreds of artists watching every show.

4. How much does it cost? 
It's FREE to get your music REVIEWED unless you don't want to WAIT & wanna be a VIP!

5. How do I GUARANTEE my stuff gets reviewed & I don't have to WAIT! 
Just pay the $25 for the VIP SERVICE! U get a GUARANTEED REVIEW & NO WAITING in the long line of songs that might or might not get reviewed. Go HERE & follow the directions for VIP REVIEW

6. What is SONG of the DAY? 
Everytime we do a New Music Review we pick a Song of the Day that we highlight the video footage of that song's review, Tweet it out to everyone, post on our Facebook page & on TJChapman.com. That's FREE PROMOTION for you!

7. Anything else I need to do? 
Make sure you follow @NMRtv & become a FAN of the New Music Review TV Facebook Page HERE.

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Got a HIT RECORD? Get it REVIEWED on #NewMusicReviewTV TONIGHT at 7pm by @TJsDJs

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

B.o.B - Freestyle

HOT video -> Yelawolf - Pop The Trunk

I've been telling folks for a long time that Yelawolf is a star. U should check out one of his shows! I'm just a fan...

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Jay-Z, Wale, B.o.B Tapped For Coachella Festival

Jay-Z, Wale, B.O.B. Tapped For Coachella Festival

NEWS

» by Danielle Canada January 19, 2010, 16:52pm

California's annual concert bringing together nearly 300 acts from across the country is announcing its latest lineup for the spring with two Roc Nation affiliates at the forefront.

Both Jay-Z and Wale will take the stage at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in April.

Roc Nations' founder will headline the event on Friday April 16 before performers like Proxy, Aeroplane and Grizzly Bear take the stage.
Also performing that night will be the Roc-Nation managed Wale in addition to Them Crooked Vultures, Muse and Jets Overhead.

Hip-Hop jumps back on the Coachella scene when B.O.B. a.k.a. Bobby Ray hits the stage Sunday April 17 along with Gorillaz, spoken word artist Gil Scott Heron and De La Soul.

Tickets for the three day festival are $269 and sales begin Friday.

More information can be found at Coachella.com.

Keep trying to you...2010 is the YEAR of B.o.B aka Bobby Ray!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

The Ever-Changing Rap Music Business by Wendy Day @RapCoalition

The Ever-Changing Rap Music Business
By, Industry Veteran Wendy Day (www.WendyDay.com)

2009 marked the end of a decade and there were many changes that occurred in the music business.

When Don Diva called and asked me to write about the changes I’ve seen over the last 10 years, I started writing this before I even got off the phone. It’s easy to write about something you live and are passionate about. In fact, it almost wrote itself. I’ve been in the music industry for almost 20 years now (March 2010 marks the beginning of my 19th year) and there are very few people left who started back when I did or who’ve been in it as long as I have. I chalk that up to the continual changes and to insanity—ya gotta be a little nuts to stay in this industry any length of time. Especially the folks like me who do this for the love, and not solely for the money!

Since The Dawn Of Hip Hop

Before I talk about the changes over the past decade, there are two changes that have occurred over the past two decades that I need to mention first: the music and the industry people. The music went from being an art form in the 80s and 90s, to being a business. When Hip Hop began in the late 70s and early 80s in the Bronx, it was art. Artists made music to express themselves, tell stories, and entertain fans. And although artists today also do the same thing, the motivation has changed drastically. Artists rarely make music today solely to entertain fans, express themselves, or tell stories. Almost all well-known artists try to make music that is marketable, fits a radio format, and will sell to the masses thereby bringing revenue and income to the artist. It went from being an artform to big business. Many years ago Chuck D said “Rap is the CNN of the Ghetto.” Today, it’s the new dope game—everyone is trying to hit a lick and make a quick buck in the music industry, it seems.

This change in the music (from art to commerce) also brought about a change in the people working in the music industry. The industry originally went from people outside of the artists’ community pimping them to people inside their community pimping them. At one time, the folks coming into the music industry to work were people who loved the musical art form, lived it, and wanted to be surrounded by it. Qualified workers were attracted into the fray. This changed in the 90s, bringing in people who saw the music industry as a “come up.” It became an industry with a low barrier to entry (meaning you didn’t need any special training or knowledge to work in the music industry) and where anyone could believably proclaim themselves a specialist or authority within any area of the industry (marketing, promotions, etc). Access replaced aptitude. It went from being fun to being the cut throat, over crowded, greed driven business that it is today.

Spreading The Wealth

In the 90s, I watched (and helped) the music industry shift from being centered in NY to giving access to many other areas of the country (L.A., the Bay Area, Chicago, Houston, New Orleans, Detroit, Atlanta, etc). The music went from being lyrically motivated (artists used to HAVE to have, and prove, their skills) to being motivated by sales (measurement of success was whether an artist could sell Platinum as opposed to lyrical skill). It became a multi-billion dollar business by its height in the early 2000s.

That geographic change also changed the discovery of artists and distribution of music from national through the Major Labels, to regional through independent labels. This is when Rap-A-Lot, Cash Money Records, No Limit Records, Swisha House, etc, sprung up and began to make money and gain fame. Even in NY and L.A., the major labels began to sign production companies like Bad Boy and Death Row to focus on urban music. As long as they brought in more money than they spent, and let the Majors continue to own all the masters, it was all good. Even when wars broke out.

Change Gon’ Come

And then things began to change in the past decade, and the change happened pretty quickly. The internet came along, increased in popularity, and by the height of rap music sales, the labels were complaining about all of the free downloading and swapping of the music through outside web based companies like Limewire, Kaaza, and Napster. This also affected software companies and the film industry, but not like it impacted the music industry since what was being “stolen” was only 3 or 4 minutes in length per song...by the millions. As bandwidth got wider in the internet world, the problem increased due to the ease of downloading. Instead of labels embracing downloading and figuring out how to monetize it, they fought it. Unsuccessfully. Fans were happy to take songs for free because it was common knowledge that their favorite artists weren’t being properly compensated for it anyway.

The internet also leveled the playing field. At one time, the only way to “get on” in the music industry was through a major label based in NY or Los Angeles. They were the gate keepers who allowed access to the industry because they controlled the distribution and the radio promotion, so either an artist had to make a connection with a label employee to get a deal or they had to sell a large amount of their own CDs regionally and attract a record deal from a Major label (or a successful middleman label or production company that already had access like Bad Boy, Death Row, DTP, Grand Hustle, etc).

The Playing Field Is Leveled

The internet allowed any artist the opportunity to upload their music to a website or social networking site and reach their fanbase and consumers directly without going through a Major Label’s distribution system. This was especially attractive to many artists without any funding opportunities. With an influx of artists coming into the marketplace, there was an even larger absence of how the industry worked or how to market and promote music successfully. It seemed easy and was treated as such. In reaction, up cropped unsavory people ready to prey on that ignorance, and lack of proper funds—the “get a deal” websites, the marketing and promotion websites, the Ning social networking websites for “members only,” the A&R evaluation websites, the producer websites that help you sell your beats, the consultants, etc.

This past decade has allowed many artists to flex their entrepreneurial skills and become their own independent record label, uploading mixed CDs, EPs, and singles to the web and building a buzz. Hundreds of thousands of websites, MySpace pages, and eblast companies sprang up to give these new artists access to the fans. Ancillary companies sprang up everywhere to help market, promote, distribute, and educate artists about the new frontier—the internet. People with no experience and no track record were jumping into the fray because they had computer knowledge or ability to reach artists through the internet. Internet sites were hiring people on the fringes of the music business because they needed authorities on urban music but couldn’t tell who was who.

People who believe they have talent or who think it’s easy to succeed have come into the marketplace in droves. The mindset that music is free began to prevail—not only free to own through downloading, but free to market and promote. Poorly financed “record labels” began to spring up and sign artists to “deals” because they felt they could make money digitally without spending any money (or spend limited money). The focus became to look for one hit that could make them millionaires overnight. Artists signed to those companies in droves hearing affiliations with major labels like Universal and Asylum, for example. Some folks took songs to radio to land deals (for a fat fee whether the deal came or not). There was a rebirth of “one hit wonders,” especially coming out of Texas. The legitimate labels began avoiding Texas artists for fear that they’d only get one hit wonders, thereby hurting all artists in that region.

The Splintering Effect

The internet also leveled the playing field with the industry. No longer were the key players behind the scenes people with a track record of success, people with trained skills, or people that the industry chose to “let in.” Through the internet, anyone with a healthy email list or some blogging skills could post their ideas and opinions online and attract followers to their opinions. The music industry went from a gatekeeper basis (an inner circle of a few choosing who to let into their circle) to a popularity basis (whomever had the largest following on the internet became accepted in the industry). An entire blogging culture sprung up, and gossips like Sandra Rose, Nicole Bitchie, and Media Takeout, and urban news sites like AllHipHop, HipHopDX, and SOHH took the places of importance of XXL, Vibe, and Source magazines because they could spread information quickly. Sensationalism also found a place in Hip Hop with sites like World Starr Hip Hop and Vlad TV, and artists soon learned that if they do scandalous stuff on video, they will get millions of views within days. Fame began to rule the music industry as artists vyed for reality shows thinking it was the next get rich scheme, only sharing too much information with fans and pushing them away in disgust.

Until the blogging sites and websites popped up, fans had to wait til the next month to get news, new music, reviews, and gossip--and only in printed form. In today’s instant internet culture, we can almost find out that Keiysha Cole is pregnant the day she conceives the child, or we can hear the latest Young Buck/G-Unit dis the second Buck finishes recording. Also, the magazines were based in NY for the most part, as were the staffs, so the bulk of coverage seemed to center around NY artists and lifestyle. The internet opened the coverage up to the world, so now the artists and topics covered are more international and chosen by whomever controls the websites—so information is no longer based solely in NY. The sales now reflect that shift.

The downside of this easy access is that the bloggers are not trained in journalistic skills or ethics/integrity, nor are they backed by large corporations with legal departments that reel in the inaccurate content. These folks can pretty much say whatever comes to mind no matter who it affects. They also don’t have access to the bigger, more famous artists, so they write mostly about the newer and local artists, thereby splintering (and scattering) the coverage even further. They feed off of each other regurgitating the same information overloading viewers—the rush to be first outweighs the need to be accurate. The popularity of Blogs and Websites also changed the overall point of view in general from News to Opinion. So an industry that once had less than a hundred artists in circulation, now has thousands with everyone giving their own opinion about them. This is far too many for fans to absorb so they tend to tune out most of the superfluous information.

This same scattered approach also affected promotions and marketing. Gone were the days of people accessing music through one or two local radio stations, a handful of TV stations or video shows, and a few magazines. Now to advertise and promote, artists and labels have to reach potential consumers wherever they’re getting their news, information, and relaxation—and these fans could be playing video games, surfing any one of millions of sites on the internet, listening to terrestrial radio, satellite radio, or internet radio, etc. The ways to reach potential fans has become too fragmented, and therefore too expensive, to use for marketing and promotions purposes. Magazines began to shut down because they couldn’t afford the lost advertising dollars. TV shows switched to reality TV format because they were cheaper to film and had a “trainwreck” quality of viewership, as their viewer base (and therefore advertising income) reduced. The most scandalous and extreme seems to attract the most attention (see “Balloon Boy” for proof of this). The downside of this need for extreme measures to attract attention is that it often makes the urban music industry feel like the WWE.

Cash Rules

As recording equipment became cheaper and more widely available to the masses, the amount of rappers, singers, and producers increased. This over saturated the marketplace with music. Anyone could now make music inexpensively and upload it onto the internet. The quality of the music began to decline. The industry went from thousands of potential artists to hundreds of thousands of potential artists (as evidenced by the number of rap MySpace pages). As the necessity to be lyrically skilled disappeared, anyone could call themselves a rapper. The ability to develop a buzz switched from skill to funding. Anyone with an investor could promote themselves alongside successful artists. Where lyrical skill once made an artist stand out, now image and adlibs were the stand out features for many rappers.

Cash became king in the past decade—people began to buy their way into the industry both on the artist side and the label side. It became a joke amongst industry people how those without money had talent, and those with money had no talent. More and more unsavory people were coming into the music business with the intention of getting a share of that money, and the old adage “a fool and his money are soon parted” became the norm in this industry. With this new influx of people, it was hard to tell who was real and who wasn’t, so the instances of people getting jerked out of money soared and continue to soar today.

Anyone spending money at a club or spending money on wrapped vehicles and flyers became a target for folks trying to get a check from them. I watched D Boys give industry folks $125,000 in a duffle bag to guarantee record deals that never materialized. I watched a shady Atlanta radio promoter take $45,000 in cash and not secure one radio spin for an indie label. An indie label had a bunch of DJs on “payroll” for years to play records that never came out. A consultant set up a label and helped them spend over a million dollars to sell less than 1,000 CDs with no distributor in sight. A small distributor allegedly put mixed CDs by well known DJs into Best Buy and forgot to pay them til they got sued by the DJs and the Major Labels—and it appears Best Buy still sells those CDs despite the cease and desist letters while the indie retail stores selling legitimate mixed CDs got shut down by the Feds. Gotta love this past decade!!

Today, anyone can walk into any industry event and pass out business cards saying they are a manager, or a promoter, or even that they own a record label, and they will be treated almost the same as Chris Lighty (a real manager), Alex Gidewon (a real promoter), or Jason Geter (a real label owner)—three people with extremely long, proven track records of success. Anyone with good game can bullshit and get over easily in this industry, and most do. And rather than starting a business based on seeing a need and filling it, most people band wagon jump. When they see someone doing something, they take that same idea and run with it. Anyone with internet access can be a Blogger or own an Urban Website. Anyone with a $200 iFlip can run a website or DVD Magazine. Anyone with an email list can have an eBlast service, and anyone with access to a free Bridge line can offer conference calls. Anyone with access to a handful of DJs can start a DJ Crew. Anyone with access to a venue can set up an industry seminar or conference. Truth is, anyone who can see someone else doing anything can jack their idea and replicate it, and there seems to be no downside or consequence for this action. On a positive note, anyone with access to any of these things, who is willing to put in the time and hard work and build something real, can easily stand out in this industry. Whether or not they can make money from it is the question…

Greed Took Over

With major labels desperate for revenue, and desperate to have things go back to the way they were (an impossible dream), they cut expenses by firing key staff members or squeezing out staff with track records of success and experience, replacing them with new people who were willing to work for less money. As money became harder to find, and as the labels were downsizing (meaning salaries decreased while workload increased), many enterprising label employees began to make money on the side by signing artists willing to give them a kickback or a percentage of their careers. This changed the artists getting signed from a talent basis to a financial incentive basis. This meant that the artists coming into the labels’ pipelines were there only if they were willing to take less money, do a shady side deal, or sign a 360 Deal with the label. Talent no longer mattered. The attitude amongst labels was that artists are a dime a dozen and if one artist won’t agree to this, some other artist certainly will. And they did.

This greed spread into every area. Producers became a dime a dozen and were asked to give up a share of their ownership in the publishing in exchange for placements. Some management companies, like Roc Nation, made it a prerequisite to be placed on one of their artist’s albums that the producer has to give up a percentage of their publishing for the placement—even producers with Platinum hits under their belts. The albums have become about who benefits financially instead of making the best music possible.

Many of the labels only use producers that they have on staff to produce albums because they want a bigger ownership financially. For example, Young Jeezy albums (my favorite artist) have a plethora of CTE owned producers on each album so that CTE can collect the lion’s share of the publishing and income. The radio singles seem to be well known established independent producers, but the album filler seems to be mostly CTE staff producers. This is the new music business model and neither CTE nor Roc Nation are the only companies taking a bigger share of the pie as the price for doing business with them—they are actually the norm. Could this possibly be why sales are so low in the rap music industry? Is the music suffering from this need for ownership instead of using the best music possible? After all, it’s a business today, not an artform. The industry is run on a need for ownership and money (greed) instead of displaying the best talent. Capitalism at its finest….

In the middle of this decade, the Major labels changed the recording contracts that it offered artists. The standard deals went from artists getting a 12% to 15% share of the pie after they paid everything back out of their small share, to “360 Deals.” These oppressive deals take a percentage of everything that the artist earns while signed to the label. In 2005, I stopped doing deals with labels because the deals became so oppressive for artists. I’ve even seen Atlantic Records refuse to work an already signed artist until he agreed to convert his contract to a 360 Deal—a worse deal for him, even though his leverage and popularity had increased in the marketplace. His lawyer advised him to do so, as well.

Once used to a healthy profit margin that afforded grand lifestyles for those at the top of the food chain, the major labels became disgruntled as sales dropped while they missed the boat on less profitable digital sales. Taking on the role of dinosaurs fighting for survival, they tried everything from stopping the new digital revolution, to fighting it, to suing it, to band wagon jumping too late. Nothing worked for them. And they still haven’t learned from their mistakes—they still continue to fight the ways the consumers want to receive their music, even though they are willing to pay for it.

So to justify their continuing existence, the labels decided to take an even larger share of the pie from the ONLY aspect of the equation that they controlled—the artist (or the “content” provided for digital download). Back in the day, labels took roughly 88% of the pie while giving the artists 12% of the money AFTER the artist paid back everything spent on them from that 12% share. In exchange for giving up the lion’s share of the sales, the labels always told the artists that they’d make 100% of the touring. Any show money, was the artist’s to keep! Not today!!!

When the shit hit the fan financially for the labels, they decided to tap into the show money, and all other streams of income for the artists, as well. After all, if your profit margin is made smaller, you need to eat more of everyone’s income to keep the fat cats at the top, and the stock holders, happy. Most 360 Deals share in endorsement income (15% to 30% depending on the artist), performance income (10% to 30% depending on the artist), merchandising income (20% to 50%) and Film/TV money (15% to 40%), and as has always been the norm: 50% of the publishing income (ownership in the actual music and lyrics).

How do labels justify taking an even BIGGER share of the pie from artists? They complain that they are doing all of the developing, investing, marketing, and promoting. Their argument is that they believe in the artist when the artist has nothing, and they feel that assuming the lion’s share of the risk should result in sharing in a lion’s share of the profit. If the label is developing and building the artist to a level of super stardom, they feel they have the right to share in a percentage of everything that super stardom affords the artist. So if they drive the artist platinum, they feel they should get a piece of the tour that came from the fame the label helped the artist build, and a piece of the endorsement deal or film income that came from the fame that the label helped build. I guess I could see this argument better, if I actually agreed that the labels did their jobs well of building artists. No 360 Deal to date, has resulted in an artist becoming a SuperStar.

40 Is NOT The New 30

A major shift this past decade has been in demographics. The age of the fans has changed. They’ve grown up into other types of music than rap. Urban music is no longer the mainstream center that it once was. It got old and uncool. Hell, the bulk of our rap stars are older than 30 years old!! Jay Z and Puffy turned 40 this year. And even though their lyrics say that 40 is the new 30 (LOL), that’s the age of the average rap fan’s Dad! Who wants to follow a star that looks like somebody’s Dad!? We don’t have new younger Rap Stars replacing the older Rappers yet other than Soulja Boy. While sales have proven there still is a market for Jay Z, it’s not what it once was. We need a new crop of rap stars that are able to deliver what the mass audience wants….whatever that is. The folks controlling the music industry are all as old as the rappers. When I came into this industry at 30 years old, I was often the oldest person in sight. Today, the industry is made up of folks 30+. How can someone so far away from teenagers in age know what a teenager wants to buy? They are still the bulk of the music buying public. And the folks running most of the labels are my age or older! No wonder the music industry is so out of sync with the youth.

So, while sales have declined in urban music, the artists have been treated worse than ever. They’ve been asked to give up a larger share of their already limited income, and the labels rationalize this by the fact that there are more artists than ever to choose from. Talent doesn’t enter into the business decisions as it once did, or as it should. The music has suffered because it has been created to fit established radio formats (which are bought and paid for through payola) rather than made to be creative and artistic. Artists are controlled through money and financial incentives, and are quickly replaced when they don’t conform. Greed has taken over the industry and artists’ mindsets (most, not all), and drives the current urban music industry. The barrier for entry has been lowered and allows anyone with access and a business card a way in to make his or her share of the pie—usually without delivering what was promised. This industry is very shady and the majority of people can not, or do not, deliver what they promise. And it’s aging quickly.

Yet all in all, it is a fame based industry where glamour seems to reign supreme. People continue to want in and are willing to do anything to get in. It’s an industry that is built on smoke and mirrors and hype and sells dreams for profit. And the truth is, I can’t imagine doing anything else in the world than being right here in the middle of it all, trying to do what’s right and make sense of it.

In the past decade, overall, I’ve seen things grow exponentially worse even though the access has opened and the playing field has been leveled with the internet. I believe the key to on-going success in this music business economy is two-fold: 1) We need to get rid of the old guard—fire everyone who has played a part in getting us to this point, and start over. Everyone! We need to set the standard of doing good and fair business with a consequence for those who get excessively greedy or who jerk people. Those of us in positions of power for years are too set in our ways and remember the days of huge income too readily and we need to be replaced by folks with no expectations and who are willing to embrace the future no matter what it brings. And 2) we need to bring it back to the music and deliver what the fans want, how they want to access it, and what they are willing to pay for. With the internet it’s even easier to tap into research and development of the music and deliver what is needed and wanted. If it’s a customer based business, we need to treat it as such. The artists need to be talented and compensated fairly for what they bring to the table. Lil Wayne, Taylor Swift, and Susan Boyle have proven in 2009 that people will buy what they want to buy—by the millions. In the next decade, let’s give them what they want, shall we? Before the music completely dies.

Wendy Day is a wealth of knowledge! If you're in the music biz and aren't familiar with her you're trippin!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

30 Tips: The Social Media Productivity Guide

The Productivity Guide of Social Media

The Productivity Guide of Social Media

I wanted to write a productivity blog post a long time ago, simply because there are, inevitably, a slew of people who participate in all the chatters and conversations in social media without getting anything accomplished.  Social media is probably one of the biggest time wasters in the modern 2.0 world.  Given all the Twitter, Facebook, and blogging tools, it’s easy to be overwhelmed and get lost in social media.  So what can we do to use social media more productively? This is a post that introduces you to 30 ultimate tips, the productivity guide of social media.


A. Gmail

1. If you have multiple email accounts, redirect all your emails to your Gmail inbox.  Simplicity is everything.

2. Use Gmail filter to keep your inbox relatively clean.  Reading more spam only means wasting more time.

3. Learn to batch process all your emails at once at specific times of the day.

4. Use the “Star” feature and mark the emails that you want to come back to read again.

5. Select different labels to categorize your emails, which makes finding them much easier at a later time.

B. Twitter

6. Decrease the quantity of your tweets while increasing the quality of your tweets.

7. Learn to scan through other people’s tweets in an instant and identify the links and messages that are specifically important to you.

8. Try to avoid reading DMs, because you can get a sizeable amount of spam when following too many people.

9. Design your own Twitter lists to help you get organized with the people you follow.

10. Add the URL shortner tools that allow you to shorten the URL of the articles you’re reading without leaving the page (Recommended: Shareaholic for Google Chrome – Download)

C. Facebook

11. Connect Facebook with your Twitter account so you can post directly on Facebook when you tweet.

12. Avoid setting up too many Facebook pages or groups, because it takes forever to manage them.

13. Don’t get into any Facebook games such as Farmville, which is highly addictive.

14. Try to not join too many Facebook groups or pages, because they tend to send out way too many messages that can easily take over your Facebook inbox.

15. Switch all your Facebook settings to private so you become less of a target for marketers and spammers.

D. Blogs

16. Batch process and manage your blog comments at once, including replying to them.

17. For full time bloggers, set up certain times daily to write blog posts. Stick to the schedule. The more often you do it, the more efficient you will be.

18. Write down the daily ideas you have about good blogging topics. This will save you lots of time in the future.

19. Try to skim through blog posts you are reading, and identify the important pointers that are meaningful to you.

20. Use social bookmarking sites to help you save important blog posts so you can revisit them at a later date.

E. Google

21. Install Chrome browser, which has an obviously faster speed compared to all other browsers.

22. Use Google Calendar to help you manage your daily tasks.

23. Begin to use Google Reader to bookmark your favorite blogs.

24. Install Google Voice to avoid picking up unwanted calls.

25. Read Google News to stay up-to-date with what’s happening.

F. Other Social Media Networks

26. Use Posterous to help you compose and post blog posts on multiple social networks via an email.

27. Get familiar with different Twitter apps that can dramatically increase your productivity.

28. Don’t try to dominate every single social network, because you can’t. Find out what works for you and stick to it.

29. Compose a daily to-do-list that gets you more organized with a variety of activities you want to engage with different social networks.

30. Hit the “Pause” button every now and then. And think of ways that can make your even more productive in using social media.

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Why Wack Artists Get Deals!

Every month I find myself in a barbershop, record store, or club parking lot listening to artists claiming that record labels will sign just about anybody these days. I hear them complain about radio stations not playing their songs. I hear them talk about the lack of opportunities for artists with real talent to get heard. I’ve listened to many different versions of these same complaints for over five years as an artist, a manager, a studio owner, and a consultant. These complaints were the exact reason that I put together “The Beat Game: $5000 Rap Contest.” My whole purpose was to provide a level playing field where artists could showcase their talent and get some much needed exposure regardless of where they came from. The funny thing is, when I mention the contest to those same artists, half of them turn their nose up because they feel they are too good to be participating in such a contest while the other half will ask for more information. I’ll talk to them and explain the details but once I tell them there is a $35 entry fee all but a few will loose complete interest. I’ve had artists tell me everything from “I don’t pay to rap…” to “You should be paying us to participate…” I laugh it off because these are the same artists that sit around complaining about their situation, which brings me to the title of this article, “Why wack artist get deals!”

This is actually a very simple question to answer. I’m not insinuating that you can’t be talented and make it in the industry but the truth of the matter is less talented artists work harder while artists that are more talent tend to think they can get away with doing less. An artist that is less talented has something to prove and will go the extra mile to prove it. Less talented artists may find it harder to get others to believe in their dreams so they will often be forced to take on more responsibility, often being their on manager, promoting their own shows, selling their own cd’s, and pretty much being a one man movement. On the other side of the fence is an artists that is much more talented but he is surrounded by people that see him as a meal ticket. They constantly inflate his ego with praise fooling him into a false sense of security as if he has already made it. At this point the artist tends to think that his talent alone justifies his position and that he should not have to perform the menial tasks of passing out flyers, selling CD’s, working with other artists, etc. So these artists get so consumed in this false image that they have created in their head that they miss out on all the opportunities that the less talented artists jump at.

Go to any open mic and you will see exactly what I’m talking about. You will watch a room full of nobodies pretending to be some bodies. Let me just point out that I am not knocking independent artists; this is meant as a wake up call. Too often I watch artists sit around open mics and showcases just waiting for their turn to perform. They tend to post up in the back like their shit doesn’t stink not networking, not clapping for other artists, and not even paying attention. But the reality of the situation is you’re at a damn open mic! You just paid to perform like the rest of these artists. You got to the club and signed a sheet of paper to get on stage. Didn’t nobody call you down to the club to perform. There were no radio commercials for you and there is not a dressing room in back with your name on it. You are just another artist trying to make it. But the irony is, at that same open mics I will see less talented artist clap for everyone that performs even if only in hopes of having the favor returned. I watch as they float around the club passing out their CD’s and talking to anyone who will listen. They are hungry and are willing to do whatever it takes to make it. It reminds me of the old Hertz  Rental Car campaign “When you’re number 2 you try harder.” This is not to say that these artists aren’t good but they understand that they are not where they want to be so they will do whatever it takes to get there unlike their counterparts that feel they are god’s gift to the industry and expect everything to be handed to them.

To be perfectly clear, I am not saying that you have to suck to make it in the industry. I am simply stating that success doesn’t come overnight. It has to be worked for. This article is about staying humble. A lot of great artists never realize their potential for success due to their lack of work ethic. Too often artists get so wrapped up in their own hype that they start believing that they’re too good to shovel the shit. They think that passing out flyers, selling their own CD’s, participating in contests and performing at open mics is beneath them; but when you don’t have a promotional budget to employ people to do these things or people booking you for shows…. Guess what… It isn’t! There are artists with deals that still hit open mics trying to build a buzz on records so that the label will give them a release date. There are producers with platinum plaques still worried about getting placements and here you are sitting in the back of the Peacock acting Hollywood while you waiting for your name to be called off a list to perform. “Nigga quit bitchin’ and get on yo job!”

This is just a public service announcement for all those bitter ass rappers, singers, DJs, producers, managers, and models that always complain about someone “less talented” getting the opportunities they feel they deserve. Quit waiting for opportunities and start creating them.

Who was the last WACK artist u that got a deal?

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

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