Marketing Music

Hootsuite Tips for Musicians

1 Comment 1 February 2013

Hootsuite Tips for Musicians

Seeing that many musicians and music marketing industry people use Twitter to discuss and promote music, Solveig Whittle thought it might be useful to provide an overview of one of the most commonly used tools for managing social media accounts with an eye to what features musicians might find most useful.

Hootsuite is one of several free social media dashboard applications, like Buffer or Tweetdeck, that can help you manage Twitter and other social media channels, all in one place. Hootsuite interfaces with most social media platforms, like Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, WordPress, Tumblr, Instagram and many more - although not Pinterest, as of this writing.

I find Hootsuite to be most helpful for me in managing Twitter, and less so for managing my Facebook or LinkedIn posts. For those bands with a public Facebook fan page to track and analyze, it would probably be much more useful. I also haven’t hooked my Instagram or website Google Analytics up to Hootsuite yet, but I’m planning to. It’ll be nice to see them all in one place.

1. Keeping track of all your different social media channels can be challenging. One of the most helpful things you can do with Hootsuite is to set up several “streams” of social media information that can be monitored simultaneously. I like to be able to see all my sent tweets, scheduled tweets, Twitter mentions of my own handle, plus all my Facebook page comments – all on one single screen.

2. Also, once you start following lots of other people, the “firehose” Twitter stream can become daunting. Hootsuite streams help you easily keep track of specific Twitter handle lists (which can also be set up within Twitter itself), for subgroups of people that you follow. You create these Twitter lists, which can be either public or private. You can even monitor other people’s public lists. I also love how Hoostuite lets me add someone to a list by simply dragging their avatar over to that list stream and dropping it on the top bar of the column.

3. You can use Hootsuite to schedule all your tweets at once for a day, a week, or even a month (although I wouldn’t recommend more than a day or two, as conditions on the ground can change rapidly in social media). You can also use it for broadcasting the same message to multiple social media channels at the same time, although there are some good reasons not to overdo this. This can be very helpful if you are launching a product and have announcements, special offers on your website, or links to a download that you want to send out all at the same time.

4. The basic version of Hootsuite is free, which is a big benefit for anyone on a budget. On the other hand, there are several nice features of the Pro version ($5.99 a month) such as custom analytics reports, which are awesome for figuring out the effectiveness of your Twitter efforts. For example, if you tweet out links (like to your blog posts or Soundcloud songs, like I do), if you shorten the links in Hootsuite to make them ow.ly links, they can be tracked by Hootsuite. You can then print out a report to see how many clicks you got and more (again, Pro version only).

Read More: http://www.shadesofsolveig.com/2013/01/31/7-hootsuite-tips-for-musicians/

Your Comments

One Comment

  1. Lorenzo says:

    Here is a tip on using Hootsuite or Buffer. Both services offer a bookmarklet that let you easily share content to the services. They also work on various iOS devices. This means that you can schedule tweets while on the go.


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