How Artists and Musicians Overcome Resistance

Posted by Gil Roeder

Mar 14, 2011, 2:52 PM

The War of Art by Steven Pressfield (author of The Legend of Bagger Vance) is a must-read book for any artist or musician. Of course, the title is a play on the title of the classic The Art of War by Sun-Tzu. Like its sortof namesake, the book is a series of advice nuggets designed to help the reader succeed in Art (or War).

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Every artist of musician grapples with the blank page syndrome: how do I get started? What is my next book/song/image going to be? How do I overcome this RESISTANCE to getting started?

After reading this book, you will immediately become acutely aware of how resistance tries to thwart your progress at every step. It will be obvious to you that those phone calls you are making to friends for “support” are really Resistance(and resistance is anthropomorphized into a person here) beckoning you away from doing anything useful to further your artistic endeavors.

So if you want to get started on your next artwork – whatever it is – have a read of this book. It can’t hurt and moreover  the likely result will be some incredible new art being created. I immediately got started on my next series of pieces after reading the book – they will be posted on my website as soon as they are finished(as long as I can keep Resistance from entering my domain – and I think I can).

Boomer Artists: You need help marketing your art

Posted by Gil Roeder

Dec 1, 2010, 9:56 AM

Marketing your art to Boomers

from www.boomerlife.org/baby_boomers_population.gif 

There are currently about seventy seven million boomers in the USA!

Many of these are looking for second careers or need to find different or additional work due to the shrinking economy. Some of these boomers are going to turn or have already turned to the art business for their new careers. 

If you are starting out in a new business as an artist you will need a website for a start. The website for artists will usually provide a place for potential clients to view your work - whatever kind of work you do. But just having a website is not enough.

You will need to market your art yourself and your site. For Boomers, your first thought is likely to be one of the old standbys in what is called Outbound Marketing -- run a print ad, send out some art-postcards (i.e. a direct mail campaign), call your friends and tell them you are having a show. 

But there has been a sea-change in the world of marketing that you are probably not aware of. The change involves the practice of Inbound Marketing. Inbound Marketing is the process of having businesses (and yes as an artist you are a business) get found online.

Remember that once you have your website it's not at all a given that your clients will find you on the web. You have to become a presence. This process of getting found and becoming a presence on the web is what Inbound Marketing is all about. And it is a process - it will involve a combination of learning how to Optimize your site so that the search engines can find you, becoming a authority in your area of expertising by Blogging and also by using social media to connect and interact with people who could become interested in what you have to say and show.

Once you are found online, by a "visitor" to your website, you want to make sure that that visitor has every opportunity to become a "lead" and ultimately to become a client of your art business. And of course you want to be able to Analyze your results and see how you are doing and if you are spending real dollars to market your art business, how effective that spending and your effort is.

One of the leading sources for free information and resources for people getting started in Inbound Marketing is Hubspot (www.hubspot.com).  I have recently converted my approach to marketing website of Coastal Art, Urban Art and Fine Art giclees and prints to an Inbound Marketing approach. Before this, I was spending a bunch of money on Pay Per Click advertising with very little to show for it. With the inbound marketing approach, I am generating leads and visits to my site that I have never thought possible. And anyone can do it. 

Artists, Musicians Accept credit cards on their mobile phones!

Posted by Gil Roeder

Nov 5, 2010, 9:42 AM

For any artist or musician who has participated in a street fair, one of the thorny problems is accepting credit cards. You can bring a standard swiping device, or process it on paper or not acceptr them at all. Moreover, if you are just getting going, you have to sign up and pay a startup fee to get going.

But a company called Square (www.squareup.com) has introduced a gizmo and a method for using your cellphone to accept payments. The process is: go to their site, sign up (free) and they will send you a gizmo to plug into your phone. Once you are setup you can begin accepting credit card payments right away. 

I tested mine today while riding the train. I was able to charge a credit card thru my phone while riding the commuter rail from Lincoln to Boston. They take a percentage of the deal 

Square's card processing fees are:

2.75% + 15¢ for swiped transactions

3.5% + 15¢ for keyed-in transactions

There are no activation, gateway, monthly, early termination, or hidden fees.

No limits on transaction size.

Check out this video which shows the gizmo in action...