3.05.2009

SEO Basics for Musicians - Part 1 - Meta Data

I've been through literally thousands and thousands of band profiles and musician websites and I've noticed a lot of things that could make their presence better. However, most of them are not SE (search engine) friendly, making it harder for fans of the genre to discover the artist(s).

First, if you're not doing so already, consider targeting your music to directly to the people who are fans of the genre; your 'niche'. I know this sounds like a no-brainer, but for a lot of us it seems natural to present our music to as many people as possible. Don't let this fool you, though. Niche marketing/targeting is MUCH more effective. Instead of putting your music out on all the p2p networks hoping someone will discover you, try focusing on a much smaller group of hardcore fans of your genre. If anyone is going to care about your music, it will be the fans from this group. Obviously, you can't track down ever single fan, so it's best to optimize your site and profile pages for the search engines, so they can easily find you.

Now, there are many intricacies when optimizing a web page for the search engines, but here I'm going to give you the basics. Just following these simple suggestions will help your site/page rank higher in most search algorithms, as they change quite frequently. This is aimed at musicians, but really anyone can follow these tips.

Since these tips turned out to be WAY longer than I anticipated, I decided to break up these SEO tips into a couple posts.


Header Meta Data
If you have your own web site already, you or your webmaster should be able to control the header meta data. This is the most important part of SEO for any web page/site and probably the easiest, yet so many designers and developers leave this out or do it incorrectly.

Above, is a screen shot of the meta data area within your page's code. When a search engine spider crawls your site, this is more-or-less the first bit of information it will read. Based on this info, the SE spider will begin to categorize your site. Your title is considered most important, so it should be to the point and worded carefully. If your delta blues band was called, "Jimmy James & the Blue Flames"; you may word your title like, "Jimmy James & the Blue Flames - Down Home Delta Blues" It's pretty much a no-brainer, but definitely important.

Next in line is, the meta description (not keywords. they will be last). Again, it's fairly obvious what you should include here. However, you don't want to go crazy. Stick to one or two sentences describing your band and/or music. When writing your description, try to use as many of your keywords as possible while keeping it sensible. Also, be sure to include your act's name and genre. This will help the spiders compare to your title, so you want to keep the same topic.

Finally, your meta keywords. Why would keywords be last, you ask? It's of the least importance to SE spiders, but it's still needed. When a spider crawls the rest of your site, it will be able to understand the keywords just by the text, but we will cover that later. In your meta keywords, again you want to be sure to include your act's name and genres, as well as, anything else that's important to recognize your presence, but do NOT keyword 'stuff'. This means to repeat your keywords over and over, trying to gain advantage over other relevant web sites. The spiders WILL recognize this and penalize you, usually by dropping your rank, but sometimes a complete ban.

Unfortunately, on most profile pages you will not have control over this data. So you must make the best with what you do have control over. PLUGOLA has some built-in features that will automatically create some key meta data for you, upon profile creation.

Categories/Tags
One of the biggest mistakes I notice musicians making is not categorizing themselves by the correct genre. I know it's funny for a death metal band to classify themselves as "Chinese Pop", or vice-versa, but from a search/discovery standpoint, you're really doing yourself an injustice. When you're targeting a specialized fan base, you want to make it easy for them to find you. When the SE spider crawls your page, you want it to rank you in the search results for your genre, preferable on top. If you're in the wrong category, obviously genre fans will not be able to find you. I suggest you include your general genre (ie: rock, r&B, etc.) and your sub-genre (ie: crunk, nu-jazz, etc.). Be sure to include these same genres as keywords in your header meta info.

I'm sure you've been noticing more sites these days, using a 'tagging' feature for bookmarks, videos, photos, etc. I've always considered tags a sort of a cross between a 'category' and 'keyword'; an extra tool to note myself (and/or others) in a couple words what will be found upon clicking. Tagging your pages and content correctly is also essential in higher SE rankings.

Although these are only beginning steps to optimizing your profile page(s) and site, by following them you will already be ahead of most. They're also stepping stones to more SEO tips that will have you ranking higher no time, such as; revalency and link popularity. But I'll get to that in the next post.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Great info. Thank you.

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