Aspen Live Music Conference

Aspen Live Music Conference

I appreciate the love. I really do. Though I’m not entirely sure why it’s coming iggli’s way. Yesterday, I headed up to Aspen, Colorado with Nanette to attend the Aspen Live music conference. On the way, we stopped to pick up Alex White, CEO of The Next Big Sound, and we managed, with the help of Google maps, to take the scenic route from the last leg of the trip between Glenwood Springs to Aspen. But the weather was sunny and the sky and terrain were beautiful.

I knew things were going to be a bit strange when I walked into the conference room, and I was the first person there. This never happens. Never. I seriously wondered whether I had come to the right place. But within ten minutes or so, folks started to trickle in. [Noticeably absent for this session: Bob Lefsetz. We missed you!]

Jim Lewi, the conference organizer and chief rabble rouser, had another personal story to tell. I won’t tell it here. Suffice to say, Jim ALWAYS has something interesting happening. Always. (Jim, I do hope your package arrived.)

As things got underway, Jim laid out the theme for the afternoon’s discussion: Compression of Purchase Decision Time & How it Affects Our Marketing. A couple key ideas drove the conversation:

  • consumers are waiting till the last minute to make purchasing decisions
  • we’ve somehow managed to train the fan to wait till the last minute to purchase a concert ticket
  • the live music experience can be wildly uneven, and some artists just don’t seem to have the capacity to move the entire crowd in the way that others do
  • the ticketing fee add-0ns aren’t doing us any favors when it comes to encouraging fans to buy tickets early; they wait till the last minute to save money and keep their options open
  • there are some things that “work” for marketing live music, maybe we ought to pay attention to these things and try to figure out what we can do to adopt these practices
  • where’s the data?
  • why is it that Amazon can speak so personally to its customers, but in the music industry we seem ignorant about so many things, including: who we’re talking to, what they did with us last time, what they want now, how to talk with them, etc.
  • “I get so many things from so many promoters, it’s ridiculous and overwhelming.”
  • how can we “prime the pump” and provide a good way to get a solid contingent of fans into early decision mode so they can talk about the event, and we can point to them talking about the event?
  • is anyone really everaging the sharing that fans do via social media – Facebook, Twitter, Digg, etc. – by providing them with the content about the show/artist that they can share with their friends?
  • fan driven “word-of-mouth” is the best marketing

During the course of these discussions, Jim kept hinting that maybe Tom Higley and iggli had some solutions that could be helpful to the industry. And Jamie Loeb of Nederlander Concerts was kind enough to talk about some of the benefits that iggli provides.

But the truth is, iggli is being oversold. Again, I really appreciate the love. But we still don’t provide the powerful, compelling solution that I envision: a service that every artist, promoter, venue, sports team, agent and ticket seller wants to use to help promote the event and sell more tickets – via fan-based word-of-mouth. We still have a long, long way to go. But in just a few weeks you’ll be able to see real progress. iggli has created the beginnings of a real-time, event based engine for social interaction. And that engine comes with its own API.

Personally, I think it is this social interaction – real-time fan-to-fan event-based conversations – that will provide the industry with the biggest bang for its marketing buck. What do you think? Let me know!

Social media & the web are changing the face of the ticketing industry. People may still wait in line or on the phone to get tickets, but online purchases are fast becoming the norm.

The New York Times piece by Ben Sisario on November 13, 2009 includes a quote by iggli CEO, Tom Higley, on the social nature of events. In fact, it is this very social nature that makes invite so compelling in the ticketing space. Until invite, there did not exist a universally accepted tool in the web space for inviting friends to events. Invitations could always be sent separately by going to email, Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter. Now, however, friends can send one invitation to friends across all of their social networks and never have to leave the website they’re on…be it an artist webpage, venue webpage, or ticketing site. Since people are more likely to buy tickets to an event if they are invited to attend by a friend, invite is an ideal tool for using the social nature of events to increase ticket sales.

In addition to managing invitation replies, invite also allows for group purchasing of tickets, broadcasting to social networks, and conversation streaming about artists & events across the web through the noyz feature.

To read the New York Times article mentioning iggli, please click here.