We are so excited about reaching our half-way mark in the Kickstarter
campaign, we have decided to add 2 more rewards! Tell your friends who
might be interested:
1) We have added an "International reward"
that will allow shipping of the new album to ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD! We
already have two backers- one in Canada, and one in Japan.
2) We
just added the "WE SING FOR YOU!" PACKAGE: Courtney, Gina and Crystal
will sing you or your loved one a "Happy Birthday" song - You tell us
who the song is for, and we'll record it and send you a copy to deliver
on the important day. PLUS everything in the POSTER PACKAGE for a pledge
of $125 or more.
Thanks for being part of this adventure with us.
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Monday, June 16, 2014
Deep In The Kickstarter Trenches - Part 2
Lessons learned in the middle of a Kickstarter Campaign
By George Kahn
The Jazz & Blues
Revue is now 2 weeks into our 40 day Kickstarter campaign. Although I have
released 7 albums on my own, using my boutique record company and CD Baby for
distribution, this is the first time I have used crowd funding to finance a
project. Here are 4 tips that I
have learned this week that can help you have success with Kickstarter
1. It starts with a sprint, and turns into a
marathon
Last week I spoke about "first followers". It is important to have key people lined up to get your
project off to a fast start.
Getting traction, and being "in the race" is important to
attract others to join your vision and goal. We had a very successful launch,
and after 2 weeks we are 33% to our goal of $18,000 to fund our new album. Now the strategy shifts - we are in a
marathon, and perseverance and endurance will be more important than speed and
flash.
2. It takes a village
Hillary taught us that it takes a village to raise a
child. In the same way, it takes a
village to raise money on Kickstarter.
You need to get a "buy in" from the members of your group, so
that everyone is involved in promoting the project and asking people to get
involved. Each person will have
their own strengths they can bring to the project. One band member may be great with viral marketing, another
with writing copy, and another with having a rich uncle. Find each person's strength, and let
him or her bring it to the table.
Everyone in the group needs to own the project for it to succeed.
3. Use different platforms
When it comes to Internet marketing, the more the
merrier. Social media continues to
evolve, and the more places you show up the more likely it is that people will
notice you. Posting on Facebook is
the obvious place to start, but you can also post to your groups, and send
individual requests to your friends.
Over the last year I joined every LinkedIn group I could find related to
music, jazz or blues. I am now sending
these Kickstarter blog posts to these groups. I also manage four other blogs, and am using them to spread
the word. In a similar way,
Twitter has various levels of involvement. I don't do Pinterest or Tumblr, but the more you can be on
these various platforms, the better your chances for people to find your
project.
4. Time to ask
Now it is time to not just go wide, it is time to go deep.
This is the hard part for many people.
Picking up the phone and asking for help brings up feelings of fear and
rejection, and may even bring up concerns about self worth and your
relationship with money. Remember,
this is no time for "paralysis of the analysis". You have already sent the mass
emails. Now is the week to send
personal emails to the people you know most likely to support your vision. Then, if their pledge does not show up
in a couple of days, a follow-up text message or phone call is appropriate. Time to put on your Nike shirt and
shoes, and Just Do It.
--
Sunday, June 8, 2014
Deep In The Kickstarter Trenches - part 1
Perhaps you have thought about using Kickstarter to finance
your next (or first) album. I have
released 7 albums on CD Baby, and now my new group, The Jazz & Blues Revueis using Kickstarter as a platform to bring our album to physical reality. We are 7 days into our 40 day campaign,
and I wanted to share with you some of the lessons I have learned and am
learning as the process unfolds.
Here are 9 tips that will help you have success.
1.
Do your
research
I spent about 6 months looking at and pledging money to
various Kickstarter campaigns to see how they work. Which ones were successful? Which ones failed, and why? What was a typical financial goal
for a music album project? Kickstarter says that the average pledge amount per
person is about $75, so do you have enough fans to help you hit the goal you
set? What makes an attractive
video (attractive enough for me to get involved with a total stranger)?
I highly recommend pledging to one or two projects, not only
to see the process that your fans will go through, but also to see how the
people you back keep in touch with you during their campaign.
2.
Put
thought into every aspect of the Kickstarter page
Your Kickstarter page is going to be the main sales tool to
get people to back your project, so every aspect of the page must be designed
for maximum effect. You have
somewhere between 30 seconds and 2 minutes to hook a person into backing your
dream. The cover photo has to be
strong and attractive. I embedded
a music sample into the page, so people can hear what they are going to get
when they receive our completed album.
The "backer rewards" need to be fun, varied and
compelling. (Remember, people are
always more interested in what they GET, not what they GIVE. You have to stress the rewards they
will GET for their money. This is
not a charity, nor is it a traditional "return on investment".)
The first edit of our Kickstarter video was 7 minutes long. It was like "War and
Peace"! Tolstoy might have
loved it, but no one but the band members would be willing to sit through
it. After two more edits, we got
it down to a little over 5 minutes, and I made sure that all the really
IMPORTANT information happens in the first 2 minutes
3.
Start
promoting at least 30 days before the launch
I send out a monthly email newsletter to my database, and so
about 2 months before our launch, I started mentioning it in my
newsletter. If you think of your
Kickstarter campaign like a movie or CD release, you need to create interest
and awareness BEFORE you launch the project.
4.
Line
up your "First Followers" in advance
Derek Siver introduced me to the idea of first followers
(watch the "Dancing guy" video if you have never seen it: http://sivers.org/ff ).
People are attracted to success. To get your project noticed on Kickstarter it needs to look
successful from the very start.
After all, you only have 30-60 days to make this happen. So make sure you have some "first
followers" lined up for the day of your launch. It might be family, band
members or other "super fans".
5.
Throw
parties!
What better way to get people involved than to throw a
party? We scheduled a "Kickstarter Kick-off Party" the night of our
launch date. We had a house party,
served some food and drink, and had computers and iPads set up for people to
pledge. By the end of day one we
had raised almost $3,000! We have another house party and a club gig scheduled
during the campaign, to keep interest up and get people involved. Remember, people just want to have FUN!
6.
Once
you launch, watch out for salespeople
Like anything on the internet, once you raise your hand,
people will try to grab it. The
day after our campaign launched, I started getting emails from people and
websites that promised to boost my visibility on twitter, or to pledge $1 if I
gave them $5. I have avoided all
of these, except for one, Backercamp, which seems like a righteous group. They only take payment once my project
reaches its funding goal, and they have been sending me daily ideas on how to
keep the project growing.
7.
Create
weekly action plans
I am a keeper of lists - daily, weekly and monthly to do
lists. For the Kickstartercampaign, I started with three lists - Before the launch, During the launch and
After the launch. Now that I am in
the "during" unit, I have created WEEKLY action plans: starting with
what I plan to do this week, followed by activities scheduled each week the
campaign runs. The future weekly
action plans are pretty sparse right now, but as they get closer I know they
will get filled up.
8.
Watch
your language, and say "thank you"
In setting up the campaign and in all communication now I am
very careful about my use of language.
I don’t ask for help, I ask people to "get on board". I don't want people to
"donate", I want them to "pre-order" the CD or "get
involved" with the project.
And now that we have over 50 backers after the first week, I am sending
personal "thank you" emails to each person. Our campaign will only be
successful if we got "wide" as well as "deep". I want to
reach people that have never heard of us, and I want to turn each backer into a
"raving fan" that will spread the word and introduce me to other
people that love jazz and blues.
9.
Its
not over till its over
The start of this campaign has been like a sprint. Now, with
30 days left to go, we are in a marathon.
It takes training and perseverance, and a lot of time. But what a wonderful way to spend the
next 30 days - contacting people I know, sharing my passion, and bringing a
dream to reality. There's more to
come, I am sure of it. We are on our way!
Monday, June 2, 2014
Our debut Album Project Has Begun!
Here is a link to our Kickstarter Page, where you can pledge to make the Jazz & Blues Album a reality!
http://tinyurl.com/qjmff3e
http://tinyurl.com/qjmff3e
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Getting Ready For Our First Album
By popular demand, George Kahn Jazz & Blues Revue goes into the studio in 2014 to record our first album!
You can be part of this event by joining in our Kickstarter campaign.
http://tinyurl.com/qjmff3e
In the meanwhile, please enjoy Gina Saputo singing lead on God Bless The Child from our live show July of 2013 at LACMA.
You can be part of this event by joining in our Kickstarter campaign.
http://tinyurl.com/qjmff3e
Thursday, January 9, 2014
The Jazz & Blues Revue Celebrates Photos from WWII at The Fullerton Museum Jan 18th
The Jazz & Blues Revue, featuring George Kahn, Courtney Lemmon, Gina Saputo and Crystal Starr, kicks off the New Year right with a performance at the Grand Opening of the Fullerton Museum's new exhibit,
"Memories of World War II: Photographs from the Archives of the Associated Press".
Opening Reception is Saturday, January 18, 2014, from 6:00 - 9:00 PM, and it is open to the public.
This will be the first time the Jazz & Blues Revue has ventured into the OC - please join us!
Click here for more info on The Fullerton Museum
"Memories of World War II: Photographs from the Archives of the Associated Press".
Opening Reception is Saturday, January 18, 2014, from 6:00 - 9:00 PM, and it is open to the public.
This will be the first time the Jazz & Blues Revue has ventured into the OC - please join us!
Click here for more info on The Fullerton Museum
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
The Jazz & Blues Revue Triumphs at Catalina Jazz Club : our annual PATH Ventures Holiday Fundraiser
Gig update!…On
Wednesday, December 11th, PATH Ventures hosted their 8th Annual Holiday Jazz Revue, an unforgettable
evening of dinner, music, and fun at the classic Catalina Bar and Grill. The event took place from 6:30-10:00
PM and featured Jazz Pianist and Composer, George
Kahn, Courtney Lemmon, Gina Saputo and Crystal Starr with an all-star band of L.A. studio artists. Jazz vocalist Mark Winkler made a guest
appearance, and Jazz legend Bubba
Jackson from KJAZZ, returned once again as the MC.
Proceeds from the evening will help PATH Ventures raise critical funding to directly support affordable housing developments across Southern California.
Thanks to our generous sponsors and the sold-out crowd at Catalina's, we raised over $33,000 to help build housing for the homeless in Los Angeles. In addition, PATH Ventures connected with two major grant/sponsorships, bringing the grand total raised to $78,000!!! THANK YOU ALL!!!
Proceeds from the evening will help PATH Ventures raise critical funding to directly support affordable housing developments across Southern California.
Thanks to our generous sponsors and the sold-out crowd at Catalina's, we raised over $33,000 to help build housing for the homeless in Los Angeles. In addition, PATH Ventures connected with two major grant/sponsorships, bringing the grand total raised to $78,000!!! THANK YOU ALL!!!
There are over 51,000 people living on the streets of Los Angeles County on any given night. They are women with children, people struggling with serious health issues, war veterans, seniors, emancipated foster youth, and families who lost everything because of the recession. PATH Ventures’ housing models aim to prevent and end homelessness by integrating supportive services, community development and permanent housing for people in need.
PATH Ventures, in partnership with for-profit and non-profit sponsors, has developed seven housing developments consisting of 385 permanent housing units and 120 transitional units. Our expertise extends across all stages of development, including acquisition, predevelopment, design, construction, financing lease-up and asset management. In addition, PATH Ventures has a strong social services program that we bring to all of our developments
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