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

Thursday, April 29, 2010

B.o.B. Eyes No. 1 Debut on Billboard 200 Next Week

Next week on the Billboard 200 albums chart, it's looking like rapper B.o.B may enter at No. 1 on the chart with his debut effort, "The Adventures of Bobby Ray," perhaps selling around 80,000 to 85,000 by week's end on May 2, according to record label sources.

Listen to B.O.B.'s 'The Adventures of Bobby Ray' album

Watch B.o.B. Do 'Nothin' Live, Talk Mainstream Success

B.o.B. Weaves Way to Hot 100 No. 1

If B.o.B's set sells that much, it could be the lowest sales week for the country's top selling album since last May, when Chrisette Michele's "Epiphany" debuted in the penthouse with 83,000.

Figuring out Nos. 2-4 on next week's chart is a bit difficult, though we're suspecting a couple familiar faces will be in the mix. It's looking like either Lady Antebellum's "Need You Now" and Justin Bieber's "My World 2.0" could take the runner-up slot, depending on how their sales erode this week. This past week, "Need" sold 83,000 with a 27% increase to land at No. 2, while Bieber's set dropped from No. 1 to No. 3 with 81,000 (down 12%).

The chart's second-highest debut looks likely to come from rock band Bullet For My Valentine with its new "Fever" set. Industry prognosticators think it could sell around 60,000 to 65,000 copies.

Other albums in the hunt for high debuts on next week's chart include Melissa Etheridge's "Fearless Love," Miranda Cosgrove's "Sparks Fly" and Hole's "Nobody's Daughter." Etheridge and Cosgrove may each sell perhaps 40,000, while Hole's set looks safe for a start somewhere in the 15,000 to 25,000 range.

 

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Lupe Fiasco Surprises B.o.B

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Facebook Soars To 41% Of All Social Traffic

According to comScore March data, Facebook traffic now makes up  41% of social traffic. MySpace ranks second at 24%. Gmail (which I don't consider a part of the social landscape) grabbed 15% and Twitter is at 8%. That's quite a change from 2009 ahen MySpace was in the lead with 38% of site visits over Facebook at 33%.

image from cdn.mashable.com

If you're not on Facebook something is WRONG!!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Introducting the A&R Channel: The first TV network for musicians

Welcome to ARC: The A&R Channel. The First TV network dedicated to musicians, DJ’ s and Music Creators. Watch ARC in the music section of “On Demand” ( Channel 1 ) on Comcast Cable television. Make TV better by telling us what music needs to be on TV Submit your music, videos, and profiles to be featured on television in over 17 million homes around the country on Comcast, America’s largest TV provider.

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

B.o.B - The Adventures of Bobby Ray - Episode 2

Check out B.o.B's Spotlight in People Magazine

CHECK OUT B.o.B’s SPOTLIGHT IN PEOPLE MAGAZINE!


Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

Atlanta Rapper B.o.B To Top Billboard Hot 100 | 2nd Single "Airplanes" debuts at #12

Atlanta Rapper B.o.B To Top Hot 100

 

By Silvio Pietroluongo, N.Y.

Atlanta rapper B.o.B will bounce Rihanna from the top slot of the Hot 100 to be released on Thursday morning, as his “Nothin’ On You,” featuring Bruno Mars, will jump 2-1 while Rihanna’s “Rude Boy” drops to the runner-up slot.

“Nothin’ On You” also rises to the top of Digital Songs, moving 184,000 downloads according to Nielsen SoundScan. Last week’s top-seller, Train’s “Hey, Soul Sister,” dips to No. 2 with 159,000.

B.o.B also has the Hot 100’s top debut as “Airplanes,” featuring Hayley Williams of Paramore, will land at No. 12 upon the chart’s official release. The track sells 138,000 in its initial week of availability and arrives at No. 5 on Digital Songs. His debut album “B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray” hits retail this coming Tuesday (April 27).

 

 

 

Finally #1 y'all!!!! Bout time!!!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B - Nothin' On You (Feat. Bruno Mars) LIVE on Ellen

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Check out B.o.B's feature in Entertainment Weekly!

CHECK OUT B.o.B FEATURED IN THIS WEEK’S ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY


Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B Press Links - The Star-Ledger & The Detroit News

CHECK OUT B.o.B IN THE STAR-LEDGER!
*advancing the Atlantic City show tonight and the upcoming NYC shows*

Full Story:

Rapper B.o.B connects with the mainstream-pop audience

Rapper B.o.B's single, "Nothin' On You," is a Top Ten hit

To most pop listeners, he’s a fresh breeze on the Billboard charts: a sharp-witted Southerner with a playful delivery and an ear for an irresistible hook.

But don’t call B.o.B an overnight sensation. And don’t let the friendly insouciance of the rapper’s singles fool you. He’s unusually serious about making music. Consider him part of a notable trend in contemporary hip-hop: he’s just as comfortable flexing his instrumental talents as he is showcasing his lyrical skills.

“I started playing trumpet as a kid,” explains the 21-year-old rapper, whose real name is Bobby Ray Simmons. “I studied guitar, piano, music theory. I’m even picking up the cello now. I’m always trying to make myself a better musician.”

Attendance at a B.o.B concert means an encounter with a genuine Southern hip-hop band. And this weekend, that band will be bringing the act north. B.o.B (the initials don’t stand for anything, he says, “it’s just short for Bobby”) opens for Lupe Fiasco at Atlantic City’s House of Blues on Friday and at the Fillmore at Irving Plaza in New York on Saturday and Sunday, and will stay in New York to headline at S.O.B.’s on Monday.

According to the young emcee, Lupe Fiasco’s famously discerning audience has been receptive to the project.

“Lupe’s crowd is a lot like mine,” he says. “They come for the music.”

Even before he stormed the Top Ten with the butter-smooth “Nothin’ On You” — the second-biggest song in the country — B.o.B had established himself as one of the most engaging voices in Atlanta. His ‘07 single “Haterz Everywhere” won him a national audience.

Followup “I’ll Be In The Sky” earned him comparisons to fellow Atlantan (and fellow pop iconoclast) André Benjamin. As part of “Hip-Hop’s Class of ‘09”, he shared the cover of XXL magazine with Wale, Asher Roth, Kid Cudi and Charles Hamilton.

B.o.B shares plenty of positive qualities with the rest of that freshman class: deft lyricism, irrepressible energy, youthful optimism, good humor. But those other emcees haven’t connected with the mainstream pop audience like he has. “Nothin’ On You” has become a genre-busting crossover hit — a track that plays equally well with alt-rap aficionados and casual radio listeners.

The popularity of the single even caught the rapper’s label, Atlantic, flatfooted. But it has recovered and is bumping up the release date of B.o.B’s debut album, “The Adventures Of Bobby Ray,” to April 27 — an unusual move in a genre infamous for delays.

B.o.B attributes the song’s resonance to its sentiment — it’s addressed to a girlfriend who needs reassurance that her man won’t stray — and the immediacy of its production.

“It fits into a radio format, but the vibe is organic.”

Indeed, for a contemporary hip-hop single, “Nothin’ On You” sounds arrestingly live. The splashy drums, busy, fluid bass, and twinkly electric piano were all performed by B.o.B’s band. The compositional architecture of the track resembles that of a conventional rock song — chord changes on the verses, and an anthemic chorus sung by co-producer Bruno Mars.

B.o.B promises further acts of sonic fusion on “The Adventures Of Bobby Ray.” Rappers Eminem, T.I. and Lupe Fiasco will guest, but so will cosmic soul singer Janelle Monáe, Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo, and Hayley Williams of the mainstream rock favorites Paramore.

“I do see myself as part of a bigger movement, linking techno and rock, R&B and soul, pop and hip-hop. Even though the music I make is digitally recorded and contemporary-sounding, I’m influenced by all these styles.”

B.o.B

Where and when: April 12 at 9 p.m. at S.O.B.’s, 204 Varick St., New York. Opening for Lupe Fiasco April 9 at 8 p.m. at the House of Blues, 801 Boardwalk, Atlantic City, and April 10-11 at 9 p.m. at the Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza, 17 Irving Place, New York.

How much: $30-$35 for House Of Blues; call (609) 236-2583 or visit HouseOfBlues.com. $43.50 for Fillmore; call (212) 777-6800 or visit LiveNation.com. $15 in advance, $17 day of show for S.O.B’s; call (212) 243-4940 or visit SOBS.com.

***

CHECK OUT B.o.B IN THE DETROIT NEWS!
*advancing the Detroit show on 4/14*

Full Story:
For rapper B.o.B, change is only constant

Adam Graham / Detroit News Pop Music Writer

The adventures of Bobby Ray are just beginning.

The Atlanta rapper -- who goes by the artist name B.o.B -- releases his debut album, "B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray," this month. The album was pushed up a month from its May 25 street date thanks to the surprise success of the first single "Nothin' on You," a crossover hit that's an early favorite to be one of the summer's hottest songs.

"Nothin' on You," a cool, contemporary love song that sits at No. 2 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart, deftly straddles the lines between pop, R&B and hip-hop, much like B.o.B himself. The 21-year-old, born Bobby Ray Simmons, began rapping during middle school but also plays piano, guitar and trumpet.

Having such a wide range of musical influences can be a double-edged sword, Simmons says.

"On one hand, it's hard for people to follow you, but on the other hand you never really get bored because you're always changing," says Simmons, who opens for Lupe Fiasco on Wednesday at Royal Oak Music Theatre. With "Nothin' on You" acting as his introduction to the masses, "now I can start to tell my story and go deeper into my own personality through my music," he says.

Simmons says he began writing rhymes in seventh grade as a way to vent about the usual teenage frustrations. As he sharpened his rap skills, he picked up piano, trumpet and, eventually, singing and guitar.

At school he was a self-described "in-betweener," floating between jocks and kids playing with Pokemón cards with ease. "I was kind of like an all-around guy," he says on the phone last month from Atlanta, just hours after turning in the final copy of his album to his record label. "I wasn't necessarily a popular guy. I was a chameleon."

By high school he was completely concentrated on music, and after graduation signed to T.I.'s Grand Hustle label in 2008. That year he appeared on his boss' "Paper Trail" album, and in 2009 was one of 10 emerging artists named to XXL magazine's Freshman Class of '09.

Now he's poised to be one of the year's breakout artists, but he sounds wary of getting tied up in music industry politics. "Even though I'm a musical artist, not a lot of my time is spent making or performing music," he says cautiously. "Moreso, the music is my tool to meet people and experience different things, go to different parts of the world."

Still, he says it's his love of music that drew him to become an artist and drives his career. And as he begins to shine, he says he knows he was meant for what's coming to him.

Posted via email from TJ Chapman's Blog

B.o.B "Letters from Vietnam" from the album Adventures of Bobby Ray

This was LIVE at Power 99 in Philly!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Will Your CD Be a "Priority" At a Record Label (Assuming They Sign You?)

Are You Obsessed?
Since so many of you are still obsessed with the idea that signing a recording contract with a Major Label is the be-all and end-all, I am going to let you in on some facts about what can make a record a priority at a Label or NOT.

Ready, set, go....

Major labels often find that they over-extend themselves by signing too many acts within a short period of time, and scheduling too many releases to come out at the same time.

So, when the label honchos discuss which scheduled records have the best chance of success in the marketplace, they may simply push a release back six months to a year.


There's No Guarantee
Unfortunately, depending on an act’s actual contract, there may be no guarantees that a label has to ever release a record they recorded by one of their acts.

Another situation is this. If a label signs an act because they play a genre of music that is currently hot on the charts, but the negotiations for signing the deal or the recording process took too much time, they may have missed their opportunity to cash in on a current popular music trend. Realizing that, they may decide not to make the record a priority release but to sit on it and wait to see if another time of year would be more opportune for releasing the record.

To complicate matters even more, a label executive may sign an act only to stop a competing record label executive from signing them. When the record is released, any interest in promoting it takes second place to the executive’s personal satisfaction of having one-upped a competitor—and the act is left out in the cold.

But the ego issue can also work positively for a recording artist. An artist may have a manager who also manages another act that is currently hot. The label executive may sign the lesser known artist with hopes of getting the manager to sign the other band to their label some day.

So, when the record of the lesser-known artist comes out, the label executive may pull out all the stops, to show the manager what a great job the label can do. If the label shows it can do a good job with a newer artist on that manager’s roster, perhaps the manager will send one of his established stars over to the label when the existing recording contract with the established artist runs out.
 

And Then There Were Four (Check That, Three?)
Here’s another reason why a record might become a priority at a label. We’re constantly hearing about labels reducing their staff with every new merger or corporate buyout. Many major labels are merging with other large labels and increasing the workload for the remaining staff.

A decade ago there were six major labels, and today we’re down to four. Recently it looks like EMI is in big financial trouble (again) and that may mean that sometime in 2010 we will be down to only 3 Major Labels.

Another issue is this: it can be important for a label executive to demonstrate to the shareholders of their corporation and the staff at the label that the downsizing issue isn’t a concern. A particular act’s new release is given a stronger push to impress all concerned parties. There’s a flip side, however. When downsizing occurs, an artist’s record may be shifted to a different priority level.

Key personnel who were excited about and instrumental in "breaking” a new label act may be fired or asked to take early retirement. When it comes time to release the new record, a different person may be assigned to work the act; someone who may not care much about or even like the music of the artist they supposedly should be working hard for. Will that record remain a priority? There are no guarantees that the new employee will be excited about the act’s music. They may have their own pet projects to put ahead of any previous arrangements.


"Bidding Wars?"
“Bidding wars” also affect priority status. Bidding wars occur when a new band is the hot topic of the industry grapevine. One label makes an offer to sign the artist or band, another label hears about it and ups the bid, a third label offers even more money. The winner of this bidding war will probably be forced to make that act’s initial release a priority. The label will need a sizable return in sales-dollars from the new band’s recording to recoup their large investment.

Interestingly, as of this writing, no band or act signed from any bidding war has ever gone on to major stardom.


Music Trends
Music trends come and go. In the early and mid ’90s grunge came and went. What followed in the late ’90s were young boy vocal-groups, and blond ingenue solo-artists. Today R&B, hip-hop, and rap acts have become more mainstream than ever, as have some high-end solo acts.

When a hot new music style comes on the scene, any act that’s signed to take advantage of a new popular music trend will usually become a priority at the record label that signed them.

By the way, new releases by superstar acts are usually automatic priority records because of their star status, and the simple fact that they potentially sell a lot of product consistently. But this issue has changed considerably in the last decade, where we see FAR FEWER major hit records than anytime within my memory.

So, take heed.

Many people think signing a recording contract with a record label means automatic stardom. That’s not the case.

You’d do well to research a label’s track record and reputation for making their releases priorities before signing a recording contract with any label.

These issues I have gone through have come up often enough to contribute to a change in the attitude many musicians have toward working with record labels.

This is why you hear me harping over and over that in the last three decades more and more musicians have taken charge of their own business careers. The list of artists and bands releasing their own records and marketing them themselves grows longer every day.

PREACH.....

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Monday, April 5, 2010

LMAO...Terry Crews Old Spice Commercial

B.o.B "Don’t Let Me Fall" | Written, Produced, Sung & Rapped by B.o.B aka Bobby Ray


Lead off joint from B.o.B’s upcoming album, The Aventures of Bobby Ray, dropping April 27). And incase you’d like to show support (like myself), you can purchase this joint on iTunes now. Then if you haven’t already… pre-order the album as well.

Shouts to 2Dopeboyz!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Hayley Williams on B.o.B / Eminem Collabo: "Incredible" | Spin Magazine Online

Paramore's Hayley Williams and Eminem


Paramore's Hayley Williams and Eminem


To call this collaboration "unlikely" would be one hell of an understatement.

Hayley Williams, the 21-year-old girly-girl singer for Tennessee's Paramore, will appear on the same song with oft-sadistic Detroit rapper Eminem. The person responsible for uniting the odd couple: buzzworthy Atlanta rapper B.o.B, who recruited 'em both for "Airplanes (Part II)," a track off his upcoming debut album The Adventures of Bobby Ray (out April 27).

"I was given the track a while ago while we were on tour," Williams told MTV News of the collaboration. "The guys and I all loved it. They told me I was crazy if I passed it up. I liked the part too much anyways, so of course I was down."

While she and Eminem never actually set foot in the studio together, Williams gushed about the chance to share billing with Slim Shady. "I only found out about Eminem getting on the track like a month ago. As if the song couldn't get any better. He just slays me, he's such a genius," she said.

In fact, Hayley loves her hip-hop. "Whether our fans know or not, I'm not sure, but [Paramore bassist] Jeremy [Davis] and I have always been really into hip-hop," she said. "I'm a big B.o.B fan. Got everything of his that I've been able to get my hands on... It means a lot that I got to collaborate with a hip-hop artist who is from Atlanta. We Southern gals love us some Southern gentlemen."

Williams appears on two tracks on the album: "Airplanes," and an album-closing reprise featuring Em, called "Airplanes (Part II)." "Both versions of the track are incredible, that's all I'll say," she added. "I'm so proud to be a part of this!"

The Em/Hayley Williams union isn't the only peculiar collabo on the album. In addition to rappers like T.I. and Lupe Fiasco, Weezer's Rivers Cuomo also makes an appearance.

Can't wait for the new B.o.B release? Get a taste with album track "Nothin' On You" over at MySpace.

I can't wait for y'all to hear this one!!! Can u say SMASH????

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

IdOMusic® Spotlight Interview: B.o.B aka Bobby Ray

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Young Entrepreneur Advice: 100 Things You Must Know!

young entrepreneur advice

We wanted to create an article addressing some of the problems start-up companies and young entrepreneurs have. So we asked!

“What do you wish you knew before you started a business?”

1. I wish I would have known how unpredictable things can be at ALL times. I read a lot before starting my business and realized unexpected things happen, but never did I realize the frequency in which they do. You really need to learn how to adapt everyday to things you may not have forseen waking up that morning. – Scott Fineout, http://www.607magazine.com

2. Before going into business I wish I knew the importance of having an established “Advisory Board”.  Having a mentor is one thing but having a counsel of people who are not only experts in various business
related functions but are also cheerleaders and coaches for your success is another. – Kellie L. Posey www.keleventsllc.com

3. I wish I knew about the value of keeping it simple. Starting out young with plenty of energy and great ideas led me down many paths of distraction. Instead, by focusing first on what sells, why and at what price and then staying true to that over time, I would have saved a lot of headaches, time and supported profitability a lot sooner. The saying KISS is popular for a reason and particularly applicable when you’re an entrepreneur. - Deborah Osgood www.bdki.com

4. The one thing that I wish I knew before starting a business was how much time you spend learning – it is constant – from self development, to business basics, to social media, – talk about wearing many hats! Oh my and thought motherhood was challenging. I love to learn new things but had no idea it was going to be like this. You have to learn how to act, how to present, how to close, how to keep in contact, how to prospect, and how to keep customers! – Michelle Morton http://www.sochomebusiness.com/

5. Focus on yourself as much as your product/service. The recipe is only as good as the Chef preparing the dish. – Mujteba H. Naqvi http://www.bonvoy.com

6. That whatever my start-up budget is… I should have multiplied it by three - Aliya Jiwa http://spunkystork.com

7. The most important, and costly, lesson I had to learn is that in order to grow in a good economy, and in order to survive in a bad one, it’s necessary to understand that one person can’t do it all. It requires the efforts of a team (sales, accounting, production-service delivery, management, etc.) to be effective. Too many young entrepreneurs, myself included, feel they can do it all. That’s a huge mistake. – Tom Coalson http://www.tomcoalsonconsulting.com/

8. Financially, I learned that you should get incorporated and need to have a great accountant that specializes in small business taxes.I also discovered that success is easier to achieve if you learn from people that know more than you instead of going it alone. – Eddy Salomon www.WorkAtHomeNoScams.com

9. I wish I would have known that the hardest part of owning and operating my own business would NOT have been how to create revenue on a monthly basis. I wish I would have hired a full time IT guy and a shrink to manage with my sales force! – Bradley W. Smith http://www.debtfreeassociates.com/

10. I really wished I developed more social skills early on to spend more time developing relationships. Networking has been key to bringing in more business and I had practice this social ability more, then business may have come sooner rather than later. – Ali Allage www.boostlabs.com

11. The best thing i did is to outsource all my administrative tasks. Now i have enough time to focus on other important tasks. – Gagan http://www.fortepromo.com

12. Never pay full price for anything online (office supplies, stock photography, services, etc.)–always Google for coupons. – Bill Even www.TheComingWave.com

13. Location, location, location. It really is true! – Tanya Peila www.tanyapeila.com

14. Finding the right Accounting / Financial Manager right up front was our biggest learning and biggest mistake. Completely changed our financial performance and caused us to hit a wall we should have avoided. – Mike Cleary http://www.abcom-inc.com

15. I wish I knew how much general information I would need to know and how long the process would take. Almost three years later Im still in the “set-up” phase to my business and teaching myself all about websites, graphic design, business law, bookkeeping, customer service, etc. - Leslie Boudreau http://www.inn-photo.com

16. It’s important to get customer validation early on. You can have the greatest technology, or website, or service, or whatever, but it’s ultimately meaningless if you haven’t verified that there are actually customers willing to spend money on or around what you do. - Adam Rodnitzky www.reteltechnologies.com

17. Business partnerships are like marriages and should be entered with the same care.  Like marriages, there are a lot of assumptions about what the partnership is/is not and communication about those will lead to better success. - J. Kim Wright www.CuttingEdgeLaw.com

18. I wish I had known how few true entrepreneurs there are out there. Every time I thought I had a kindred spirit with whom to share experiences, lean on for support and provide support to them, it turned out that they were looking for a paycheck. Find a partner and a kindred spirit BEFORE you launch.  – Tom Reid www.certifiedKsolutions.com

19. Small business owners should carefully reflect on how they can tastefully build referral sources through all contacts, and how to utilize social networks, including the vast resources of the internet, to build a referral base and, in turn, a client base. - Jay Weinberg http://www.jayweinberg.com

20. I wish I knew how important it is to never rely on anyone else. I  wasted a number of years “networking” in hopes of people referring  business. It never worked. My career took off when I assumed  responsibility for every aspect, including marketing and sales. – Rob Frankel http://www.RobFrankel.com

21. I did not realize the level of sacrifice that would be required to become not only an entrepreneur, but a successful entrepreneur. Don’t get me wrong, it is worth every single second, but I had no idea that friends and family would not be able to relate. – Amber Schaub http://www.rufflebutts.com/

22. I wish I had understood how little time I would have to do the things that I need to do in order to “produce” and to make money. Make sure that you spend your time and your energy on the revenue generating matters. Spend the money necessary to get help. Pay someone else to take care of all of the admin stuff. – Francoise Gilbert http://www.ITLawGroup.com/

23. I wish I knew how hard it was to manage employees and have good, competent help. I also wish I knew how to market, advertise, and work these social media tools. - Jamie Puntumkhul http://jlpeducationservices.vpweb.com

24. Have a serious exit strategy & plan prior to opening doors. As an entrepreneur I was ready and willing to take the plunge to open my own company, but didn’t realize I had to structure my company around the exit strategy (i.e. make it sellable and transferable, and self sustaining without my everyday presence). - Christopher N. Okada www.okadaco.com

25. With my first companies I wished I had lined up a client and received a commitment to buy before I jumped in the water. – Patrick  J. Sweeny II http://www.odintechnologies.com/

26. I wish that I would have known that my MBA wasn’t necessary to be an entrepreneur. I started business before and thought the MBA+ would give me a better insight to prevent me from making mistakes but I believe you either have it or you don’t. – Janice Robinson-Celeste www.CelesteStudios.com

27. I wish I would have known how expensive running a business is – mainly payroll taxes, medical insurance, etc. We researched all of our fixed costs, however, the more we billed out, the less we keep. – Marian H. Gordon www.yippeeprinting.com

28. Find the very best, most knowledgeable people you can afford and hire them with not just salary, but incentives. The better the people, the better the job done and advice given. – Ric Morgan American Business Arts Corporation

29. Several years after starting my business I learned that the best source of advice and peer support are fellow entrepreneurs, especially those who have attained the level of business success to which I aspire. – Charles E. McCabe http://www.vaceos.org

30. I wish I had understood the value of investing in high-level talent. As a start-up, it’s scary to think about hiring someone whose experience demands a higher-level salary. So you tend to hire less experienced individuals, but they typically don’t bring the intellectual capital or business savvy that can help you grow faster. – Susan Wilson Solovic www.SusanSolovicOnline.com

31. Starting a business is like getting married, you think you know what youre getting into and that youll be better then the median, but when it comes down to it you have no idea. – Summer Bellessa http://elizamagazine.com

32. The biggest thing I’ve learned and wish I would have known before I had started our company is the difference between sales and marketing. Everyone says sales and marketing together like they’re the same
thing. They’re not. - Scott D. Mashuda http://www.RiversEdgeAlliance.com

33. I wish I would have known how important a real business plan was, a marketing strategy, and exit strategy were. You should really plan your first two years and have a hit list of sales/marketing opportunities that are interested before you take the leap. – Ben Wallace www.innovative-memories.com

34. Probably the most important thing I wish I had realized earlier was how little I knew about how consumers bought things on the Internet. I have been a web developer for years and knew all about technology, but little about marketing and getting inside the mind of the consumer. – Sara Morgan http://www.custsolutions.net/

35. You can’t put your life on hold while waiting for your venture to hit.   I have tremendous regret  around all of the family events, vacations, and time with friends that I missed because I was working on getting my film/company off the ground. - Pamela Peacock http://www.shadowlightpictures.com

36. Admittedly, we went into GiveForward knowing we’d have to be flexible and patient. All of the good books tell you this, but no one really tells you how emotionally draining that wait can be. – Desiree Vargas www.GiveForward.org

37. Hands down without a doubt no questions asked – effective marketing. It truly does not matter how great your product or service is unless someone knows about it you are still behind the start line. – Leanne Hoagland-Smith http://www.processspecialist.com

38. I thought if I had a great product and an attractive, functioning website customers would come.  Boy, was I wrong!  In the online world its all about SEO! – Semiha Manthei http://www.firststeporganic.com/

39. I wish I’d have known that the only thing important in business is building a product that someone will buy. That’s it. It’s real easy for first time founders to get caught up in visions of grandeur – but in reality, the only things that matter are having a great product, and having customers that will pay actual money for it. - Brett Owens http://www.chrometa.com/

40. Business books and all the education in the world can give you the foundation for starting a business, But they cannot show you the cold hard truth about how difficult it can be to start a business. – Michael Grosheim http://www.thesocialtweep.com

41. One thing I wish I knew right off the bat is the benefit of networking.  I spent a lot of time trying to tackle everything on my own, but its really important to reach out to fellow entrepreneurs, complimentary businesses, family and friends for advice and support.Cailen Ascher Poles http://www.cailenascher.bravehost.com/

42. I wish I had known how important it is to outsource to other  professionals instead of trying to do everything myself, and  ultimately not always doing everything correctly. – Jennifer Hill www.jhilldesign.com

43. I wish I knew exactly how important it is to prioritize tasks and goals. One of the most important lessons I’ve learned in the last few months is to prioritize what is important, in order of its proportionate worth. It is easy to do the little things that make you feel like you are accomplishing something, but it is the big important things that need your full attention – even if it is uncomfortable. – Evan Urbania www.chatterBLAST.com

44. I was naive enough to think that if I had a great product that helped  people and at the same time had the lowest prices available for the  products we did sell that word would spread and people would be  excited to use our product. – Chris Sorrells www.ErgonomicsSimplified.com

45. I wish I had known that you dont need to be right with your first iteration of your business plan.  Young businesses naturally deviate from their roadmap as the founders ideas about what will work get tested by reality.  Smart entrepreneurs listen to the feedback they get and adapt. – Matt Lally http://imaneed.com

46. I wish I’d understood the incalculable value of having just the right executive assistant, someone who can leverage your time and actually be an extension of yourself. - Barry Maher www.barrymaher.com

47. I wish I had more marketing skills to take my business to the next level.  At this point I have to hire someone as I am super limited in this area. – Deb Bailey http://www.powerwomenmagazine.com

48. I’ve learned that I can’t micromanage everything, no matter how much I want to. Sometimes you have to delegate certain responsibilties to others. Not only did this help keep me sane, but it was good for team building amongst employees. – Lev Ekster www.cupcakestop.com

49. I wish someone would have explained the difference between sales verses marketing. – Tom Pryor WWW.SBDCEXCELLENCE.ORG

50. I wish I knew depth of the thought process needed in starting a business, especially on a personal level. I wish I understood how my thoughts would affect my business. – Jennifer Ann Bowers http://rosebridgecreations.com

51. I wish I understand “cash flow”. I figured that as long as I brought in lots of business, the business would be great. Cash is king and always keep MORE of it than you forecast or expect to need. – Ryan Kohnen www.ryankohnen.com

52. I wish I had taken a class, or gotten practical experience in, using business accounting software. The investment would’ve been minimal, and it would’ve saved me (and my accountant) hours of frustration. Additionally, I wish I had spent a few bucks on an accountant to set up my books properly. – Shane Fischer www.fischer-law.com

53. What I didn’t know then was the value of networking. You never know where business will come from. And having friends and acquaintances from political, business and social circles may prove to be your best new business referral! – Melissa Stevens www.fkmagency.com

54. I wish I completely understood what “cash flow” meant and how important it is to live within a budget and how important it is to hire the correct people, rather than just able bodies. – Kelly Delaney www.cakes4occasions.com

55. The one thing that I wish I would have known before going into business more, was my own strengths and how I use them on a daily basis. – Jason C. Raymer http://www.bluegrassautoglass.com

56. Trademark/ Copyright info – 3 months after we had started one of the businesses we had to completely scrap all the branding and build a totally new site, social media, EVERYTHING due to a legal issue regarding trademark. – Sarah Cook http://www.RaisingCEOKids.com

57. I wish I knew how to proficiently do marketing via the web, newsletters and blogs. The other key thing is to get the right coach. I eventually used www.onecoach.com, headed by John Assaraf of “The Secret”, who finally helped me pull my business together. – Nancey C. Savinelli www.naturalhealthctr.net

58. I really had to understand the “basics” of business and how to capitalize on the small opportunities to given to me and turn them into “larger than life” success stories. – Darren Magarro www.thedsmgroup.com

59. I wish that early on I had sought out more business leaders in my field. It wasn’t until I was a bit older that I realized the value of the knowledge to be learned from veteran industry players and how it could help me grow my business. – Jim Janosik Aladanmediagroup.com

60. I wish I had seriously thought about branding and the longevity of the brand. Looking back, I should have thought about what was going to define my company, what would be a look that would last for years and not go out with the trends, and what image I wanted my customers to see when they first started researching my company. – Katie Webb http://www.becomeintertwined.com

61. If you have taken the time to think through things (price, service, contracts, delivery) don’t be so quick to change it up just because a Client wants you to. – Joni Daniels http://www.jonidaniels.com/

62. I wish I knew not to expect things to happen for us. Often times, we were waiting to get lucky and not making our own luck. We learned that nothing is going to get handed to us on a silver platter and if we want it, we have to go out and get it. – Ben Lerer http://www.thrillist.com/

63. At the time of founding it I was so focused on survival I didn’t think about the exit strategy. – Laurence J. Stybel stybelpeabody.com

64. I wish I’d know how much easier it is to build a business around an established market that’s already looking for a solution to its problems rather than trying to build the market around the business I wanted to start. – John Crickett http://www.businessopportunitiesandideas.co.uk/

65. How challenging it is to get people who request our services to pay. Since we are a nonprofit/community organization, everyone thinks our services are free because of grants or corporate giving. – Candi Meridith www.GoodForYourself.com

66. You have to have to have some sort of passion in order to be successful. But no matter how much you want to believe it, doing what you love because you love it and doing what you love as a business are different. Don’t expect every day to be bliss. – Andy Hayes www.travelonlinepartners.com

67. I wish I knew it didn’t take tons of money to get started, so I would have started it sooner. I think that holds a lot of people back. – Candy Keane http://www.ThreeMusesClothing.com

68. When I was opening my first business, I made the near lethal error of leasing a business location without a plan. Once I got in the location I had to do three times the amount of marketing necessary just to contend with the competition. I spent more on marketing than I would have spent on the extra rent of a better spot on the street I was on. – S. Zargari www.assuranceadvertising.com

69. I would have spent more time selecting the most qualified technical resource by interviewing more people more strenously to ensure we got the most talented resource for our money…both short term and long term – Jennifer Myers Robb http://www.hergameface.com

70. Get a coach – someone who can walk you through the jungle to get you to the gold. Why bother flying blind, when others have blazed the trail before you? Starting a business without a coach is like getting in the car and driving. Sure you can move–and fast–but using a map is so much smarter than not. – Richard J. Atkins HTTP://WWW.IMPROVINGCOMMUNICATIONS.COM/

71. I wish I’d known it would not be enough to know my stuff cold. (I’m a subject matter expert, but the same would apply to someone with a product.) You have to really know (or be willing to learn FAST) how
to market yourself and have a plan to do it. – Judy Hoffman www.judyhoffman.com

72. I just wish I knew how much free goods I would have to give out in order to promote my products. – Jacqui Rosshandler www.eat-whatever.com

73. I wish I knew that there was a fine line between self-employment and un-employment. Second, I wish that I knew more about the competitiveness of my type of business and had spent some time interviewing people who were successfully doing what I wanted to do. – Cyndi A. Laurin www.guidetogreatness.com

74. I wish I had known that starting a business would give me so much happiness, and worry. I knew that it would be hard, but I had no ideas of the hills and valleys that would come with being a business owner. – Shay Olivarria www.BiggerThanYourBlock.com

75. I knew that starting a business was going to be a lot of work, but I didnt know much work and that it was going to go slower than I had expected.  I wish I had known that there was going to be a lot that I didnt know, but that its ok because Ive figured it out (and am still figuring it out!) along with way. – Grace Bateman http://www.perupaper.com

76. Everyone will not be happy or supportive of you starting a business or succeeding in it, and that’s okay, as you do not need their nod, their vote of confidence or their praise… you have your own.Anahid Derbabian www.integritycommunicationsco.com

77. Don’t work with your spouse. If you want to wreck a marriage, be together 24/7 with one person exerting power over the other. – Susan Schell http://www.citadeladvisory.com

78. Relationship Marketing – I wish I had understood the importance of staying connected with past clients and nurturing relationships with current clients. Your personal life, your spiritual life and your professional life is all about the relationship. – Sandie Glass http://www.sandstormideas.com/

79. I wish I would have realized earlier the importance of having a core group of target customers. Find a handful of people and build a trust with them. Test various products and services on them and eventually use their passion and your business to fuel evangelism to grow as you refine your business model. -
Dayne Shuda http://huntingbusinessmarketing.com

80. If you’re young, and especially if you’re a woman, you may be tempted to undersell your product or service – or worse, give them away – in order to get into the game. Don’t. Set up a pricing structure that’s in line with your business plan and allows you to grow your business. – Ruth Danielson http://www.msmarketintel.com

81. I wished I had learned about the need for business systems and process documentation and why they are important. I have found they are a life saver to developing a work environment that thrives since everyone in the company knows what they are supposed to be doing and can easily reference the steps. – Adam Sayler http://arthurwinn.com

82. What I wish I knew before I started a business was a really great business advisor! Most of us go into a business with a big heart for the product and lots of excitement. Few of us really know how to run a business. – Kelley Small www.smolakfarms.com

83. I wish I knew how long it would take to build a steady stream of clients and establish strong relationships with customers and vendors. - Alexis Avila www.preppedandpolished.com

84. I didn’t take into account what being a home business owner would mean I mean I’m in my house a
lot! I have to eat 3 times a day and there are very few delivery places where I live – so making a mess in the kitchen 3 times a day, and cleaning the office myself. – Maria Marsala http://www.ElevatingYourBusiness.com

85. I wish I had known how demanding entrepreneurship is on the entire family. It took me months to realize that they were giving as much or more than me by picking up the slack around home and giving me space to pursue a dream. – Carrie Rocha http://www.pocketyourdollars.com/

86. To be patient. When I first started, I expected results instantly. I’d get frustrated when things didn’t work the way I planned. Luckily, I didn’t have any hang-ups about failing, so I kept trying new things
and slowly built upon those things that worked. – Naveed Usman http://www.theusmangroup.com

87. How much money would I make in the first couple years of operation.  Obviously, this answer would of told me to find a steady job and do this on the side until I really got it going 3-4 years later. – Marc Anderson TalktoCanada.com

88. I wish I knew that cash flow wasn’t the same as profits, that employees are not paid friends and that you should always trust but never let anyone open your bank statements. – Anne-Marie www.brambleberry.com

89. The one thing I wish I had done differently is not spent money on advertising offers that don’t pay off. This is business people don’t often do things out of the goodness of their heart. I’ve learned to be a lot more skeptical of “opportunities” I get offered. – Adrien TheNakedHippie

90. One piece advice I would give to people just starting up that I wish knew is that success is less about the idea and more execution. Don’t wait until you have the great idea or have refined all the plans, just get something up and start iterating. – Ben Hatten www.legalriver.com

91. How important it is to network, instead of attempting to fly solo. Fortunately, my belated learning didn’t negatively impact my company for too long but the soaring would definitely have occurred
sooner had I considered the value of self-promotion. – Marlene Caroselli www.caroselli.biz

92. I wish I knew how much my time was really worth and the best way to set my rates. I made an early mistake by charging too little and booking myself so tightly that I didn’t have enough time to work on some projects the way I wanted to and I couldn’t hire anyone to help me because I didn’t allow for the added cost. – Susan Bender Phelps www.OdysseyMentoring.com

93. I wish I knew the importance of networking when I first started my web design company. It took me a few months to realize that referrals and networking are the best types of leads. People want to do business
with people they like! – Becky McKinnell www.iBecCreative.com

94. First, that being successful causes growing pains that are a major headache. A good headache to have, but difficult challenges nevertheless. Second, it would have been nice to know it can take a year or so for things to take off. Starting a business can be frustrating in the beginning and you really have to be determined to succeed. – Nick Veneris Xomba.com

95. Dont listen too closely your friends who might be good business people but who have never started a business.  They mean well, but their assumptions are way different as an employee of a company than they could ever be as a principal shareholder in a business. – Elizabeth Pitt CaregiverNeeded.com

96. I wish that someone had told me that managing a business isn’t about numbers, but rather all about people skills. During my first management foray I fell face first in the dirt. People called me a micro-manager because I got too much into the nitty gritty of how to do the job rather than allowing them to find their own way. – Steve Richard www.vorsight.com

97. I wish I had known that starting a business requires you to ride an emotional roller coaster.  You can go from the highest highs to the lowest lows in a matter of hours because a startup company always seems be on the verge of either collapsing or taking off like a rocket.  Now making my business grow is all the more exhilarating because I survived demoralizing low points to get it off the ground. – Alex Andon http://www.jellyfishart.com

98. That it is OK to trust your instincts — even when they are not necessarily backed up by years of finance/accounting or business school credentials – Jenn Benz www.benzcommunications.com

99. Less time spent on paid marketing/advertising efforts and more time screening and building strong partnerships with influential journalists, writers, editors and television producers. – Philip Farina http://www.farina-associates.com

100. I now know that businesses are extremely organic & have a way of taking on a life of their own – now I know that though things don’t always work out as planned, there is always another opportunity around the corner…understanding this from the beginning would’ve saved me a lot of stress! – Rina Jakubowicz http://www.rinayoga.com

Now that’s a lot to take in before you start! There are a lot of hardships, problems and things to consider but to sum it up I think Kat Gordon of www.maternalinstinct.net says it best “In short, I manage my own destiny. And I’d have it no other way.”

 

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Saturday, April 3, 2010

The Dirty Little Secrets Behind Bottled Water (via @zaibatsu)

THE STUDIO SERIES presents LO-BOY 'BOUNCE

B.o.B freestyles on Tim Westwood Show in London

Obama Administration Gives a Boost to Musicians, Record Labels

The Obama administration Thursday expressed “strong support” for legislation that would require radio stations to pay additional royalty fees to singers, marking the administration’s first public position on the highly contentious fight between broadcasters and musicians.

In a letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the Commerce Department’s general counsel called for passage of the Performance Rights Act to change a provision in the copyright law that currently exempts broadcasters from paying royalties to performers. Other broadcaters — including satellite and web radio services — already pay royalties to singers…..

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Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

Building your “Team”

Building your “Team”

As far as I can see, the power in the music industry shifted along with the advent of digital music and (digital) distribution became possible for everyone.

Great, right?team_player_keychain-p146143611757739440qjfk_400

Absolutely.  What it does mean is that it has created a generation of musos who are doing everything for themselves and are more skilled, knowledgable and educated on how to self-manage, distribute, book and hold the power and rights for their band, where traditionally a label and management have done everything for the band and kept them at arm’s length of the business side of the industry. There’s a good and bad point to the old arrangement.  Good that the artists get time to be artists (i.e.creative) and bad, that they don’t see what’s going on and very quickly lose control and knowledge about what is going on in their own band (and often money that is rightfully theirs.) Remembering that knowledge is power, that’s a bad position for bands to be in.

Somewhere along the way, an imbalance happened and musicians became expected to do and know it all themselves ALL the time.  It seems to me that there is a middle “working class” of bands, who lose out both ways. They are expected to create amazing music as well as do all of the management tasks, book the band’s tours, manage all the promotion and publicity, be the graphic designer, get the album/EP distributed, document all sales, co-ordinate studio time and much more.

Solution? Well, that’s where the music industry shift has been great too.  As it turns out, the shift in power in the music industry has given rise to an entrepreneurial spirit and industry workers are now drilling down on specific elements in the music industry and working as consultants or contractors to combat the loss in numbers of 9-5 jobs in the music industry. This means that there are a lot of opportunities for bands to work on a non-exclusive, one-off/periodical basis with industry workers, with possibilities for creating long-lasting relationships.

It seems to me that the best way for an artist to multi-task, once they hit a certain level (most likely when the band has too much on their plate business-wise and hopefully enough money to pay) is to start building a team around them who can be delegated tasks.  A trusted group of skilled individuals/businesses who can be called upon and hopefully paid when tasks need to be achieved. It’s exactly why non-exclusive, fee-for-service, no lock-in contract, artists/labels hold all the rights, it’s self-directed and you can claim all your payments all the time.

The band or the manager can now be the label, negotiating distribution deals, while hiring publicists and a plugger for radio, as well as working in conjunction with someone to gain sync opportunities.

The biggest question to ask is: What does the band need to do themselves and what can be delegated and paid for?

Who do you want on your team?

Don't forget...It's All About Your Team!!!

Posted via web from TJ Chapman's Blog

10 Strategies for Success in the Music Business

Dave Kusek is the Founder and CEO of Music Power Network and Vice President at Berklee College of Music.  He is also the co-author of the best selling music business book, The Future of Music: Manifesto for the Digital Music Revolution.

Here are 10 recommendations for strategies that can lead to success in music, and in life. Take them with a grain of salt. With this new decade comes the promise of digital music, the power of the entrepreneur and the tools to connect with an audience and deliver the goods. Here are 10 Strategies for Success in Music from Music Power Network.

1. Living a life in music is a privilege. Earn it.

There is very little more satisfying then spending time making music. If you make this your life's work, then you can be truly joyful. However, the chances of being successful are extremely low and the only people who are going to get there are going to have to work hard and earn the right to be a musician. Respect the privilege of being free enough to have this choice (if you do) and honor the opportunity.

2. No one is in charge of your muse but you. Be happy and positive.

People can be their own worst enemy. Countless times I have heard artists tell me the reasons why their career is not working out. Most of the time they are putting blocks in their way and pointing fingers at people and things that are holding them back. Stop whining and blaming other people and make the conscious decision that you are going to be successful and that things are going to work out in your favor. You are creating your own reality every day, so make it a good one and excel.

3. Practice, practice, practice - then go for it. Over prepare.

You can never be ready enough for opportunity. Your live shows can always be better, your songs can be more amazing, and your playing can only improve. As the CEO of your own musician business, you can learn how to run the company more effectively, reach out to more fans and be an more effective social media marketer. Don't hold yourself back by not being ready. Be a professional.

4. If you suck, you will never make it. Find a way to be great.

Lets face it, it is really hard to be amazing. Some people have the natural talent and you can see it in the first 5 seconds of meeting them. They are truly blessed. The rest of us have to find our niche, our passion, our calling and then reach for it. Ask people around you for feedback. Find what you are good at and focus on that. Get other people to help you. If you don't stand out and rise above the pack, you will struggle forever. Be amazing.

5. Learn how to breathe and keep your focus. Stay calm.

There is nothing more pleasant than working with someone who knows who they are and what their goal is. Remember the old adages of thinking before you speak, and taking a deep breath before you lay into someone. Most of us have a lot going on in our lives and we can all benefit from staying focused on our goals and remaining calm in most situations. Learn yoga, exercise, run, meditate, sit still, breathe, learn who you are.

6. Don't take yourself too seriously, no one else does. Have fun.

I am amazed at how many people spend so much time looking backwards and trying to understand what people think of them. This is worrying about the past and not embracing the future. Reviews are important, but don't run to them or let them ruin your day. Not everyone is going to like you, but more people will if you are having a good time.

7. No matter how difficult things get, move forward. Don’t give up.

The only thing that will help your career take off is forward momentum. That is how you are going to reach your goals. A lot of people are stuck in their own mud. Take action, make a move and then see what happens. Don't spend time procrastinating or worrying about how hard it is, just do something positive to advance your cause. You will feel much better by acting instead of waiting or worrying.

8. Find a way to make money. Start small and grow. Avoid being in debt.

This is probably the most important strategy of them all and why so many artists have gotten into trouble in the past by taking label advances. All that is, is a big loan. Get some kind of cash flow happening right away, no matter how small. Sell merch, play for the door, license your songs, play sessions, teach, write, start your musician business. The biggest mistake you can make is to borrow a lot of money and then spend it on things that don't matter.

9. Be unique and true to your vision. Say something.

The people that we remember are the ones that are unique, exciting, special, provocative, fascinating, original, inventive, interesting. Music is a basic form of communication. The really successful artists have something to say and work on delivering their message. Your chances of success go up exponentially if you have a unique position and message and create a following of fans who really listen to you because you have something important to say.

10. Work and play with people you like every day. Collaborate Often.

Music is a tribal experience. You cannot make great music alone. Surround yourself with talented people, write together, play together, try new things. Bounce inspiration off of each other and learn. Listen to each other and let the music weave it's way around you. Find a producer, songwriting partner, other musicians and dive in together. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

Wonderful things are waiting to happen to you.

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