sell tickets instagram

How to Easily Sell More Tickets on Instagram

You’ve done the hard part — the calling, the booking, the negotiating, and even the promoting. There are wheels in motion and your whole goal now is to get butts in seats.

The BEST thing you can do at this point? Make it as easy as possible for your fans to make impulse purchases.

Most marketing research says it takes people seeing a promotion 7x before they act. Well, regardless of what view it is, you want your fans to be very clear on what they should do and make it extremely easy for them to do it.

But what does that mean? A few things…

1. Make sure your show information is easily found, searchable, and clear.

2. Provide a way for fans to purchase in as few amount of clicks as possible.

3. Have a system in place to make sure their purchase is confirmed and tickets (or instructions) are delivered directly to them.

TURN IMPULSE INTO INCOME

It’s been almost two years now, but in May 2018 the Instagram + Evenbrite partnership was announced as a way to “turn browsing into ticket sales” on Instagram.

This option is an awesome way to implement an additional link besides the one clickable option in the profile. With this clear button and a streamlined purchase process, event-goers on Instagram can buy tickets to your shows in a couple easy steps. 

SET UP GET TICKETS ON YOUR PROFILE

To add a “Get Tickets” button, follow these steps…

  1. Tap “Edit Profile”
  2. Select “Contact Options >” 
  3. Click on “Add an action button” 
  4. Choose Eventbrite as the action
  5. Enter your Eventbrite URL. 

Once you’re complete, head back to your profile to confirm and test the Get Tickets button.

NOTE: This option is only available on business accounts (currently not an option for creator or personal profiles).

KEEP IT SIMPLE

While this is a fairly simple process to activate, the benefits can really help fans (and new fans) find your shows. And yes, a simple process is always better.

A couple of benefits to integrating your tickets with social – a simplified checkout and info on your customers.

  • Simplified Checkout: Once your fans click the “Get Tickets” button, their name and email will already be auto-filled in the checkout from their Instagram account. This means they won’t have to re-enter their name or email and cut out yet another step! 
  • Tracking Sales: Also through this integration, you can track your Instagram ticket sales from on your Eventbrite Dashboard. This will help make it clear how well your posts are performing that are specifically coming from Instagram. Then you can use your Instagram insights to track time of day, day of the week, etc.

Make it easy for fans to find you. Make it extremely easy for people to give you money, because “a confused mind never buys.” 

sell tickets instagram

(I’ve also heard that quote saying “a confused mind always says no.”)

You have a huge advantage when it comes to content if you have live shows because they are inherently visual (i.e. “Instagram-worthy”). 

THREE TYPES OF TICKETS

Eventbrite allows you to create three different types of tickets — free, paid, and donation.

If your event is free and you’re not charging for tickets, there is no fee to use Eventbrite. This is an awesome way to keep track of your potential attendees and it allows them to make a micro-commitment. Even if there’s no charge, event-goers will enter their email address, and select the number of tickets.

For the paid ticket option, you’ll have the ability to absorb the service fee or pass it along to your ticket buyers. And donations provide a way for people to contribute to the event without actually attending and to provide their own amount.

💡IDEA: How could you use the Donation Ticket option for your diehard fans that aren’t within driving distance of your show?

More info on Eventbrite and ticket options here: 7 Online Sites to Promote Your Shows That Aren’t Social Media.

Also, get more info on creating and editing Eventbrite ticket types here.

You can also easily integrate your tickets with you Facebook Events.

Lastly, you can even embed a checkout for tickets on your website. Follow those instructions here.

——————————————

Leonard Patterson is an avid fan of all things New Edition, an indie-focused booking agent, a frequent hi-fiver, and a certified digital marketer. Since stepping off stage as a band manager/front man of a 6-figure party band, he launched Indie Band Coach with a mission to help indie bands reach more fans and book more gigs. When he’s not working, he’s most likely at a live music event, analyzing Marvel movies, or soaking up vitamin D at the beach with his wife and son. 

Want more social media, booking, and event tips for your band? Subscribe to the Indie Band Coach YouTube Channel and keep your eye out for “The Weekly Social” series starting in March.

3 Tactics We Used At Every Gig to Grow Our Fanbase

Grow fanbase

This is an updated version of a post that originally appeared on Indie Band Coach’s Indie Band Blog

While I’m a huge fan of “all you can eat” buffets, sometimes less is absolutely more. And that’s the concept I want to focus on right now in terms of marketing your live shows. 

There are hundreds of tactics, strategies, tools, and ideas on how to grow your fanbase, but the best plans are simple and easy to execute. 

So in the spirit of today being March 3rd, this blog is going to cover the 3 Tactics We Used At Every Gig to Grow Our Fanbase.

These strategies are ones I’ve used personally and have seen work really well with other bands. They can be crazy successful when used together on a consistent basis and that’s what I want to help you get set up: a plan for ongoing success.

But first a little context…

The band I fronted with my wife, managed, and booked was an 8-piece party band that performed 125 shows a year. Very few weekends off. In the slow months, we’d have 8 gigs (Fridays & Saturdays every weekend) and in the busy Summer months we’d clock in at 15–20 shows.

Now, you don’t have to have 8 people in your band (I might even discourage it), nor do you have to have shows every single weekend. But if you have a few shows a month on average and are trying to build a more consistent following, these steps will lead you down that path. 

So the easy equation again? Postcards, emails, and pics. Another way to look at it is connecting with people in more than one place. We didn’t plan this when we started doing it, but realized later that it was effective because we were connecting with people in three different places – offline, online, and in their inbox.

Let’s break each one down.

GETTING YOUR NAME IN THEIR HANDS (OFFLINE)

Our Postcards (or “Gig Cards”) as we called them, were a staple at every one of our shows. They’re basically an 8.5×11 piece of paper cut into 1/4ths (i.e. 4up cards) that listed our upcoming gigs, the main social channels, and our logo.

Here’s an example of one we used for our band…

get-more-fans-gig-card

Don’t put too much time or effort into designing these or making them so fancy that they can’t be read. These will be cards people get from you at your show and unfortunately, some will end up in the trash. But that’s ok, it’s a numbers game.

We didn’t do anything special, didn’t have a huge budget, and spent very little time producing them. 

One of the huge benefits of gig cards is using them as conversation starters before and after the show. It gave us a chance to give a simple call to action without promoting a club other than where we were:

For example: “Hey, if you’re on the dancefloor, be sure to pick up one of our gig cards so you can see where we’re playing next.”

Our goal was to side step some of the 5000 ads people see online each day and spread our info, our dates, our logo, etc. physically into their hands after the show.

Fans and family told us countless times how they were great refrigerator swag and office desk reminders and would plan their weekends based on the dates on our card. 

++ Gigmor: Live Music Near You Feature

GETTING YOUR NAME IN THEIR EMAIL (INBOX)

Conveniently, when people would come up to snag a gig card, right next to them was our email list sign up.

Now, I’ll be the first to admit, we didn’t have an awesome introductory email sequence planned out when we first started. We only had 1 automated response that introduced the band and had a link to the website. But that almost didn’t matter.

What we were REALLY doing was developing a more one-on-one relationship with people when we emailed them. We used it more as a broadcast tool at the time — here’s some news about our upcoming shows, here’s some behind the scenes videos of us making our cd, etc.

But. It. Worked.

Eventually, we got smart and started looking for more electronic ways to get people on our list. MailChimp is great for being able to have people input their email with the use of an iPad. It even works without having to be on WiFi and you can get started for free.

get-more-fans-mailchimp-signup

You can also use a paid service like Join By Text (or many others) which is an integration that allows fans to join via text message directly from their smartphone.

We grew our list to over 2500 people and took the time to segment. We didn’t travel a ton, but when we did, we made sure that all emails were tagged with the venue and city. Then, if we didn’t want to send out a mass email for a specific gig, we could literally target it to fans who had caught us at that venue before.

Recipients are 75% more likely to click on emails from segmented campaigns than non-segmented campaigns. (MailChimp, 2017) (Source)

EMAIL PROVIDER OPTIONS

I’ve used several email providers at different times for different reasons. It seems I always end up back at MailChimp.

But don’t take my word for it. Other providers you can check out include:

  • Constant Contact
  • AWeber
  • MailerLite
  • ConvertKit
  • Infusionsoft

In fact, here’s a comparison list from WPBeginner.com you can browse to see which email marketing platform might suit you best.

Regardless of who you choose to go with, one of the best things you can include in your emails is the third step of the plan — pictures of fans.

GETTING FANS TO SHARE ON SOCIAL (ONLINE)

get-more-fans-crowd

We’re musicians. And who doesn’t like — even a little bit — to see themselves in an awesome rockstar post with lights blasting their silhouette onto the crowd as the haze creates a crazy rockstar presence on stage.

Yeh…. but once you’ve seen one, you’ve seen ’em all.

And so have your fans.

What we found that really gets shared by our fans the next day on social media is the pictures of THEM. They want to be the rockstars that night.

They want to show how fun their weekend was and chances are you’re going to have the best vantage point to help make that happen.

++ Focus (Your Lens) On Your Fans

PHOTOS DO’S AND DONT’S

  • Do make sure to have a camera (or phone) available on stage. One of the best “behind the scenes” type shots is letting your fans see the gig from your perspective.
  • Do take pictures when the energy is “up” if at all possible. If you’re a dance band, there’s probably a song or two that have a built-in hand raising call to action. If not, find them and incorporate them and yes, by all means, be ready to capture those moments.

There’s NOTHING that translates better to fun than people who are so carefree that they’re just out in public in a bar or at a wedding with their hands in the air! 

One of the bands I had the pleasure of working with for many years still uses this strategy today. Go visit the My Yellow Rickshaw facebook page and pretend you were a club owner or potential bride. 

There timeline and photo albums are filled with clubs, festivals, weddings, and private events with one thing in common: everyone is having a blast.

grow fanbase


facebook.com/myyellowrickshaw

Think of it like this: every picture on your socials and your website is an ad. What are you advertising to potential new fans?

Now, those are a couple of “do’s” and here are a few “dont’s” to keep in mind.

  • Don’t take too many. You don’t want this to be time-consuming for you or for your fans to scroll through them. Create an album of 10-20 pics.

  • Don’t take pics of an empty dancefloor. Nobody knows it was the first song of the night. They see what they see and you want every pic in some way to make people think — “I wish I was there.”

  • Don’t be creepy. Make it obvious you’re taking pics and let people know to check your Facebook page (or wherever you’ll post them). The last thing you want is to zoom in on a random couple making out who aren’t even engaged in your show.

Obviously, all gigs are different. 

These strategies might not work for some of your gigs or it may not seem like you have enough shows to make this work. But let me encourage you to never think about a gig as just one gig.

The best marketing tool you have for your show is your live show itself. It’s the one point in time people can hear, see, and FEEL your vibe, so be ready to connect with people in attendance and turn that experience into another loyal fan.

———————-

Leonard Patterson is an avid fan of all things New Edition, an indie-focused booking agent, a frequent hi-fiver, and a certified digital marketer. Since stepping off stage as a band manager/front man of a 6-figure party band, he launched Indie Band Coach with a mission to help indie bands reach more fans and book more gigs. When he’s not working, he’s most likely at a live music event, analyzing Marvel movies, or soaking up vitamin D at the beach with his wife and son. 

Want more social media tips for bands? Subscribe to the Indie Band Coach YouTube Channel and keep your eye out for “The Weekly Social” series starting in March.

Gigmor Rising Artists: March 2020

Rolling into March excited to share our most talented rising artists.

Sam Hastings

SAM HASTINGS
Portland, Maine 
Folk, Rock, Singer/Songwriter
Latasha Lee
LATASHA LEE
Austin, Texas
Blues, Pop, R&B/Soul
Sammie Bank
SAMMIE BANK
Nashville, Tennessee 
Christian/Gospel, Pop, Singer/Songwriter
Rising Artists
FOXWILDE
San Francisco, California 
Pop, Rock 
Rising Artists
DENNIS POL
Bedford-Stuyvesant, New York 
Jazz

To stay on top of new gigging opportunities and artists on the site, make sure to login into Gigmor regularly! We get killer new gigs and artists EVERY DAY!  

And don’t forget to update your profile! We can’t feature you in Rising Artists or get you booked if you don’t have a bio and most recent music on your page.  

Rock On! 

Team Gigmor 

How to get more fans