110 is an outstanding lakefront apartment, with panoramic views of Lake Taupo and the volcanic plateau beyond.

This modern, luxurious apartment comprises a super-king (share-twin) suite with walk-in wardrobe and full en suite; separate queen and twin bedrooms; a second bathroom; gourmet kitchen and alfresco dining.

The décor features contemporary New Zealand art and connections for high speed internet, fax and phone. A haven for all seasons, other features include front and back sun decks, central and under floor heating, a laundry, 3 car parks and shared swimming pool and gym facilities.

Short or long-term guests are always welcome.

A home for the Taupo holiday experience or a special event – perhaps Taupo apartment accommodation, maybe a luxury apartment in Taupo? There are many choices for Accommodation when you choose to holiday in Taupo, but if you’re looking for something special, there’s a great little luxury apartment for you to check out at 110 lake terrace, Taupo. 110 Lake Terrace offers luxury self contained apartment accommodation with views looking out over Lake Taupo, New Zealand (NZ), and the volcanic plateau beyond.

This luxury apartments’ array of design features create a modern ‘global’ combination of comfort, style and apartment accommodation luxury. With timeless elegance, the interior style demonstrates an exceptional panache and flair, you’ll feel at home in the lap of luxury at the 110 Lake Terrace apartment.

110 Lake Terrace offers luxury self-contained apartment accommodation on the water’s edge at a level of sophistication that is virtually unmatched in Taupo.

While in Taupo there are many Holiday attractions to experience as well as Taupo’s free attractions for holidaying visitors. Find out more facts about Taupo.

Contact:

Penny Stevenson,
Chestnut Glade, Hannon Rd,
RD 1, Cambridge,
New Zealand.
Phone +64 7 827 3574,
Mobile +64 21 521 860
Email Penny Stevenson

Cambridge luxury accommodation

shop online ship usa to nz

Youtube Promotion
Cheap Graphic Design and Web design

http://www.kurb.co.nz
http://www.cd-dvd-duplication.co.nz
http://www.aucklandposters.info
http://www.kurbartistmanagement.info

Kurb is an online promotion services company specializing in digital music marketing and artist management.

Follow our blog at Music. Marketing. Management. for cutting edge web promotion and check out www.newmusicmarketing.com – our artist community putting artists, musicians and managers in control of their online promotion and revenue management.

Chill Out Music Denmark
Chill Out Music New Zealand
Childrens Entertainment
Melbourne Alternative Indie
Melbourne Alternative Rock
Dubai Rock Music

Not much. I need something to write about here. A concept.

I think I prefer Such Heavy Wings for my public personal blog platform.

But compassion fatigue sounds good I might develop it as something edgy. Weird.

Music and Client links

April 14, 2008

Kinda boring, I know, but hey. Even if im posting blogs about CD and DVD duplication, printing or reproduction projects, or Kids Pirate birthday childrens entertainment parties or just pushing my clients

Kanarek – Psychedelic Fusion; Hollywood/Toronto

Golpe Con Classe – Hip Hop/Latin; Spain

Cut The Bull PR – Publicity and Artist Representation, Hollywood

Al Walser – Pop/R&B; California/LiechtenstienPhoenix Block – New Wave/Electropop; Florida

Ganga – Chill Out/Downbeat; DenmarkNow . . . You Die! Metal / Crust Punk; Melbourne, Australia

Koshowko- Electro Pop; Melbourne, Australia

Auckland Painting – Residential and Commercial painters; Auckland, New Zealand

The Embassadors – Jazz; International collective

DJ TKD – Hip Hop; New Zealand

Element – Hip Hop; New Zealand

Azumuth – Rock; Melbourne, Australia

Roger Greenaway – A/C; Wellington, New Zealand

Murrays Chosen Few – Classic Rock; Australia

Romantech – Drum’n Bass/Downbeat; Auckland, New Zealand (me)

. . . you’ll be able to observe how I use links and keyword anchor text to create content that attracts traffic.

DIGITAL COACHING FOR ARTISTS/MUSICIANS

Kurb is a New Zealand based media promotions company providing a regular blog on digital promotion, marketing digital content and creating revenue from new media online.

Kurb also provides online promotion and revenue management services for musicians and artists internationally.CD / DVD duplication and poster services. Our physical media services come with free graphic set up and support, free delivery, and free promotions advice and support for musicians.

And the best value fast turnover physical media services in New Zealand including

http://www.kurb.co.nz
http://www.myspace.com/kurbpromo
http://www.youtube.com/user/kurbpromo -
http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.com
http://kurbpromotion.blogspot.com
http://www.squidoo.com/kurb

We provide expert and affordable promotion support in all web 2.0 areas: Cutting edge Social Network promotion (Myspace, Facebook, Bebo etc.), Social Media, Blogging, Spam management, Content creation, Content management, Content Distribution, OMD, RSS, Aggregators, podcasts, Search ranking, Search marketing and PPC campaigns on Google and Facebook, Website design, Website monetization, Video production + promotion,

We also have an extensive self promotion area for independent musician and talent featuring dozens of articles, how to features and blog links.

http://www.kurb.co.nz
http://www.myspace.com/kurbpromo
http://www.youtube.com/user/kurbpromo
http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.com
http://kurbpromotion.blogspot.com
http://www.squidoo.com/kurb
http://databass.giantrobot.co.nz/new_clients_free_consultation.htm
http://databass.giantrobot.co.nz/kurb_cds.htm
http://databass.giantrobot.co.nz/kurb_promotions.htm
http://databass.giantrobot.co.nz/kurb_artists.htm
http://databass.giantrobot.co.nz/kurb_posters.htm

 

http://www.romantech.co.nz
http://www.myspace.com/romantech
http://www.youtube.com/user/djromantech
http://www.last.fm/music/Romantech
http://www.ilike.com/artist/Romantech
http://www.squidoo.com/romantech
http://romantech.wordpress.com
http://romantech.blogspot.com
http://www.amplifier.co.nz/artist/7718/
http://cdbaby.com/cd/djromantech
http://www.reverbnation.com/romantech

http://www.realitycompound.com
http://www.myspace.com/realitycompound
http://www.youtube.com/user/realitycompound
http://www.last.fm/music/Reality+Compound
http://www.squidoo.com/realitycompound
http://realitycompound.wordpress.com
http://realitycompound.blogspot.com
www.amplifier.co.nz/artist/13634/reality_compound.html

http://www.ganga.dk

http://www.alwalser.com

 

 

I don’t know what I’m going to do with this blog but I’m not going to be posting any more promotions articles you can check that out at:

http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.com
http://kurbpromotion.blogspot.com
http://www.kurb.co.nz

I’m sure I’ll come up with something for compassion fatigue. Reinvent it as some kind of platform for something.

Let’s wait and see.

I’m just running around all my blogs just having a look at whats going on, tidying up anything and revising what I’m doing.

People get caught up in blogs as a business tool, a networking and social tool, and a search optimizer but they forget the timeless value of just simply using a journal to get your thoughts down and reflect on where you’re at.

Compassion fatigue was my original “other general stuff” blog, First on Blogger back in the day, then I added a blog on wordpress as well, then I started just piling on all the promo articles I was doing and it all got fairly pointless pretty swiftly as these posts are all well covered by my promotions blogs:

Well yeah lets just have that blogroll again shall we?

Promo
http://kurbpromotion.wordpress.comhttp://kurbpromotion.blogspot.com
http://www.kurb.co.nz

covering music promotion and digital marketing stuff. These are my professional blogs I update most regularly
My Music

http://romantech.blogspot.com
http://romantech.wordpress.com
http://www.myspace.com/romantech
http://www.romantech.co.nz

This is where you can follow stuff to do with tunes, drum’n bass, beats, gigs in Auckland other stuff.

http://realitycompound.com
http://realitycompound.wordpress.com
http://realitycompound.blogspot.com
http://www.myspace.com/realitycompound

This is my crazy multi media project. I don’t really know whats going on with it right now but hey.
Other music

http://theinformedchoice.blogspot.com
http://informedchoice.wordpress.com

General mp3 blog. No posts yet.

http://starff.blogspot.com
http://starf.wordpress.com

Starf is for general copy I produce, especially “advertorial” type content for clients. No posts yet

Other stuff.

http://shutupandkissme.wordpress.com
http://squeakybone.blogspot.com

I also blog about girls because its of interest to me. It’s an interesting topic.

http://piratematty.wordpress.com
http://piratematty.blogspot.com

For my pirate stuff. I’m planning on getting back into childrens entertainment.

http://modernjourneys.wordpress.com
http://modernjorneys.blogspot.com

for my fiction and general creative writing. No posts yet.

See this is one frustrating part of my job is trying to understand technology that only geeks currently use so that 6,12,18 months down the track when it becomes popular enough to offer real promotion opportunities to musicians and creatives I’ve already got a thorough understanding – as it was one of the great fortunes of my life that such a thing happened with myspace and social networking to put me where I am today. I will be blogging soon about deciding how to avoid wasting your time resources on sites that won’t help promote your music because there’s no one there to promote your music to.

But see as I’ve said before, promoting on the net is all about having the distribution systems in place for the ongoing genration of content, and having this set up in the most favourable way for search.

Although theories are starting to fester in the unlikeliest corners of Nigeria that Social – with the potential to infinitely and effortlessly connect, network, aggregate and deliver is gonna eventually be bigger than search, the sons of myspace will destroy the sons of google.

But you’ll see that rather than going nutty on the quantity and quality of my content creation (and here I am writing a boring as geeky blog post to blow off steam) which comes further down the line, I’m strengthening my distribution network.

Because the latest technology I am trying to come to grips with in this area is social bookmarking and feeds and the like and though it may seem otherwise to you who are co ordinated enough to play an instrument – I am not naturally adapted to such geek environments.

And don’t try and argue that Stumbleupon, Digg and Del.icio.us isn’t geek shit. Myspace is mainstream. Social bookmarking is still geek shit.

So whats it about? Well I have managed to wrap my head around the significance of distribution and ease of access to quality information.

Although as you know I write my own material when I can, and I’m trying to get more into useful and unique analyses, you probably notice I repost a lot of articles I find for you people to read and the happy result is more business and more kudos for my business by providing access to significant items of interest in my chosen field of expertise.

So whereas in times past this would have been considered akin to plagiarism, these days, with the flaws of the internet manifested by google in screeds of pointless unvaluable information or “noise”, being able to provide direct access to high quality information, creating trust and worthiness – as I’ve pointed out several times – is now quite a powerful marketing strategy.

Hopefully you can reflect on how all this relates to YOUR online promotion strategy.

What kind of access and redistribution of information can you provide to your fanbase to add value to your brand?

More less geek oriented stuff coming through soon.

Stupid bloody bookmarking sites. This better bump my google ranking and get me lots of hits.

Lets see how this goes:


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Awesome article dropping down on the state of music videos as a promotional tool and source of revenue to the music industry.

- Don’t forget now! Kurb is australasia’s leader in dedicated techniques to market and distribute your videos online through Youtube and potential revenue generators such as megavideo, revver and over 15 other video sharing sites.

The economic model that MTV was built on has been shredded – big budget one off videos are out – the digital revolution is upon us! You have the power to cut an album and make a video in your own bedroom and distribute it worldwide!

So don’t make one song, one video, keep making songs, keep uploading videos, film gigs, film band practices, make vblogs, make funny shorts, talk about your music, blog about your music, build your following, interact, be an entertainer, create meaning, connect with them and connect them to your music!

visit Business weeks gallery of 10 stars who revolutionised the industry and reflect how innovation, community and interaction could change your musical career.

This new article drops after Bob Lefsetz and other cutting edge media critics denounce the MTV awards and Top 40 becoming just a circus sideshow to what’s really happening in the music industry today – as witnessed by the brutal cannibalising of one of it’s own, Ms. Britney Spears.

This from indystar:

Consumers Bop to Rhythm of Online Music Videos

[who came up with that clanger of a headline for such a decent article? Don't they know that blogging is 50% headline and 50% content???]

Viewership of music videos moved from TV to the Web at such a fast pace that few saw it coming.

Yahoo, the Web’s top music destination, streams 240 million music videos monthly. MTV, which defined the young music video medium but now devotes nearly all of its airtime to non-music video fare, attracted 1 million viewers in prime-time viewing in August.

“Online is the single-largest place where consumers are watching music videos,” says Rio Caraeff, executive vice president of eLabs, Universal Music Group’s digital division. “When we release a video, we still put it on MTV and BET, but in terms of the most impact from audience and revenue, it’s online.”

Videos used to be given to networks such as MTV to sell CDs. Now, labels charge for video usage. “It was clear that all of our content needed to be paid for,” says Thomas Hesse, president of Sony BMG Music Entertainment’s global digital business unit. “The times when we could make our content available for free so someone would buy the CD are over. We drive usage to the Internet sites, so we should be paid.”

Hesse wouldn’t disclose exact figures, but Caraeff says licensing of music videos to sites such as Yahoo, AOL Music and YouTube reaps $20 million yearly for Universal and is growing steadily.

YouTube has been at odds with much of the entertainment industry because some of its users digitize content on their own and put it on the site without compensating the content owner. MTV owner Viacom is suing YouTube owner Google in a copyright infringement case.

But Universal, Sony BMG, Warner Music and EMI have agreements allowing their music videos to be shown on YouTube. In exchange, they share in ad revenue. YouTube attracts the largest video viewing – including movie trailers, amateur productions and tech podcasts – on the Web, with 44.8 million visitors in August.

With 23.4 million visitors in August, Yahoo is the most-visited music site, followed by ArtistDirect, MySpace’s music channel, AOL Music and MTV’s music channels, including MTV.com, VH1.com and CMT, according to ComScore.

This summer, Yahoo began offering an application to post many of its videos onto pages of the wildly popular social-network site, Facebook. It has since expanded this concept, via a test site, to post videos from Universal and Sony BMG onto personal Web sites or blogs.

Once word gets out and music fans realize that they can take the latest videos by say, Justin Timberlake or Fergie, and post them to their blog, Yahoo Music general manager Ian Rogers believes the viewing of videos online will grow “from 10 to 100 times over the next one to two years,” he says. “There’s no question people want to do this.”

He says Yahoo fought for several years to shut down sites that offered ways to hack into Yahoo Music and post videos. “We know the demand is there.”
Demand and convenience caused music fans to migrate to the Web to watch the majority of their music videos, says Rogers.

“If you want to see a music video, why would you turn on MTV and hope to see the video you want, when you could go online and get it immediately?” he says. “The shift happened as music videos became more available online and less available on TV. This was a natural evolution.”

MTV, the channel that defined music videos, isn’t sitting out the digital revolution. On-air, the TV channel urges viewers to go to MTV.com to see the latest videos and video premieres. “We realize that we live in an on-demand culture,” says MTV Executive Vice President Courtney Holt.

Holt says on-demand viewing is great, but it’s TV exposure that still makes the difference for emerging bands. He cites groups such as OK Go and Paramore, which had major online exposure but took off after MTV started playing their videos.

MTV recently bought a 50 percent interest in digital music service Rhapsody to expand its online music reach. Both Rhapsody and MTV.com show music videos on their sites, while some sites – most notably Apple’s iTunes – offer them for sale. Caraeff says streaming music videos represents the bulk of the action for music videos and that downloads represent a tiny fraction of sales. Hesse says his best-selling download of all time – a recent Timberlake song – clocked in at just 58,000 sales for $1.99 apiece.
“This is a good, growing business,” he says. “As more people get video iPods, we’ll start to see more people buying music videos.”

Label executives are also looking for streams and downloads to mobile phones – currently a niche business – to explode in the coming years as more wireless customers get multimedia phones.

“The average usage time on a phone for entertainment programming is no more than two or three minutes,” says Caraeff. “The short-form nature of music videos makes it a perfect fit.”

Q&A with Rio Caraeff

USA TODAY’s Jefferson Graham spoke with Caraeff about how music videos have shifted from TV distribution to the Web, and turned into a profit center.

Question: Is TV distribution for music videos still important?
Answer: Online is the single largest place where consumers are watching video. When we release a video, we still put it on MTV and BET, but in terms of the most impact from audience and revenue, it’s online. We’re reaching more people than we’ve ever reached before with our music, and have turned what was a promotional business into a revenue business, worth $20 million a year for us, and growing.

Q. Where are people viewing the music videos online?
A. YouTube and Yahoo Music are the lion’s share, along with MySpace and AOL. In the last quarter, we had 265 million streams of our videos online, and that doesn’t even include YouTube, which is just starting to report activity. We have a Universal channel on YouTube, and the last time I looked, we had 180 million streams. YouTube is becoming the largest place for where our videos are played.

Q. Talk about how you make money off videos.
A. We were the first major label to realize that the old ways of doing business with music videos wasn’t working anymore. Twenty years of videos as a promo piece wasn’t stimulating sales of CDs. We had to turn videos into a premium product that feels free and convince Web sites to pay license fees for usage. Now every time the video is played, we get paid. We also offer them for sale at sites like iTunes, and via mobile phones and Verizon and Sprint. Both are flourishing, but the lion’s share of activity is via streaming.

Q. Music videos used to boast of million-dollar budgets and big-name directors. What’s the state of music videos today?
A. Clearly, the days of multimillion production budgets for videos has waned, but we’ve been able to do more with less. The budgets have come down, but the creativity has risen. With the challenge of doing more with a smaller budget, some of the best videos have come in with no budget, using Mac computers, high-def cameras and a small crew.
I even envision a world where music videos are created by the fan, and collaboration that exists in a digital, all-Internet world – the artist creates the song, and fans can go online, and make the videos. We’re going to see a lot more creativity. It’s no longer just about one big company publishing, it’s a two-way communication. This is completely new to our industry and something we embrace.

Cheers for the connection with Kurb.

Supporting musicians with successful strategies on a budget.

Kurb is NZ’s leader in online promotion strategies for artists and creative projects plus we offer the cheapest
CD/DVD reproduction and
cheap posters available.

Come by our page, theres plenty to pick up about new developments in the music industry in our blogs and theres a whole lot of free info and articles at our self promotions hub. Get some scope checking out our overview of online promotion strategies and if you’re interested our artist packages or brand new campaign packages including CD’s, posters and a dedicated online distribution, promotion and videomarketing program.

All the best with your music, from Kurb
For direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromo

.....................
Kurb Myspace

This is an older blog from a few months back but stand ready – I was on one of my research binges to the morning light last night so we’re gonna have some tight new blogwise action coming this week.

It may be obvious to some of you but without a dedicated online strategy your potential as a career musician is pretty much negligible. That is why Kurb is getting so much traction on the Australasian music scene right now.

The two things I’ll be focusing on in upcoming blogs are:

content:

whether you’re in partnership with kurb to take care of distributing your content or not we need to have a serious talk about the role producing regular content plays in your long term promotion strategy.

Your idea of the great star making factory needs to be knocked down and built up again from scratch.

when I say “content” of course I mean new music, but in order to fully grasp how the online environment works, you need to understand the best way you can embrace REGULAR blogging and video making to build your online presence and expand you fanbase and key contacts.

CD’s:

we’re gonna have to start getting serious talking about future revenue streams straight away. I’ve still got too many people asking me how to market their new CD! Forget about your new CD! No one wants to pay for your new CD! I’m serious!

And if you even wanna talk to me about how you’re gonna “get signed” just forget it. Get a grip on where we’re at in 2007.

No one wants to sign you, no one wants to pay for your new CD. I mean seriously. If Radiohead and Prince have accepted no one wants to buy their new CD, why in hell is anyone gonna wanna buy yours?

You won’t ever be ready for a career as a full time professional musician if you’re not prepared to understand where we’re at.

ANYWAY . . . Older article from a few months back when i decided to get serious about blogging but thought it was worth throwing up there for a bit of depth.

The digital revolution and why your music is worth nothing.
By Matt Turner from Kurb. Copyright 2007. Don’t steal without asking.

Hi I’m Matt from Kurb promo. For my first piece here I was going to try and bring musicians up to speed with how the digital distribution of music is changing the industry but last night I had a realisation that I didn’t think many musicians are ready to comprehend let alone accept. That is why I decided to write about it.

Your music is worth nothing.

Purely in financial terms, that is. If you get a lot of fulfilment and enjoyment out of writing and performing that’s a great reward, but my clients are people who have taken the step of working towards earning a living from music and so that’s my angle. But it’s not time to collect the coins in your guitar case and go to the pub just yet.

The internet means music is becoming like water. You can try and bottle it and launch a massive marketing campaign to sell it but most people will still choose the tap. So what do you do? Give them the water for free. Start selling cups and glassware.

What the digital revolution means is that technology has now allowed for information – music – to be more accessible to anyone with high speed broadband than ever before. The fact that entertainment no longer needs to have a physical form (i.e. a CD or DVD) is totally changing the music industry. Labels, publishers, distributors, retailers all those who had the most to gain from music as a physical commodity are now bitterly resisting falling profits. Though we might certainly see a “fairer” music industry, even with the online distribution blooming into life musicians have to face that technology is slowing eroding the commercial value of music as a general retail commodity.

If your music is worth buying its worth stealing. In fact if no one wants to steal your music, you know no one will buy it! Which is all a matter of perception because on the internet it’s called “sharing” and anybody with half a clue can do it.

The patterns of consumption are changing. Teenagers aren’t going to save their pocket money and buy their favourite CD and listen to it for a month. They’re going to download something new everyday and listen to it for a week.

I’m not sure it’s a moral issue. The point I’m getting at is that I downloaded the latest Shapeshifter album and I decided I liked 3 of the songs, so I paid US$3 to download them and Shapeshifter gets US$2.07. $3. well that doesn’t buy many Porsches. In fact it doesn’t even by a happy meal, let alone a decent feed of chips for all the guys.

You have to remember when I buy the CD at the Warehouse for $30 the musician doesn’t get much more. And with slumping CD sales due to digital developments the business side of the industry is shrinking dramatically, so although Musicians can now see a bigger cut of their earnings than ever before, they have to be smart to stay in it professionally.

So whats going to pay the bills for poor Bic working her day job? Smart musicians have to realise their music that they love is no longer the product, its the window dressing. Lets talk about how musicians are going to make their money in the future:

Merchandising: To be fair this is going to make a hell of a lot more sense if you’re a teen Christian emo band that plays at the church hall once a month and has a massive following on myspace and in the youth groups. That’s why you’ll notice many of auckland’s emo and punk bands have their own label. And no I don’t mean a record label. Obviously if you’re an experimental free noise artist it may not be immediately obvious what items may interest your audience but everyone likes clothes. Giving away water at shows? Buy a hot False Start cup. Merchandising may also be a cunning way to influence fans to pay for the CD they’ve already downloaded “illegally”.

Gigs: Obviously. At least one thing will never change. Nothing beats a great live show. Maybe you don’t have a great live show. Then you might wanna pay to book a headliner that everyone knows does and support them. If you see what I mean.

Videos: “The singers shit but I love their camera work.” Again, your music maybe worth nothing but your music videos are worth more than ever. paid content is coming people. What if you wake up in 2008 and you’re being paid as much as US30c for every view on youtube? And 100 people watch your video everyday? What if your video is totally next level and it blows up or gets featured and 100,000 people watch it in a week? Hullo? Which means that guy in media school who’s always hanging around? He’s your best friend now.

Licensing: Music may not be worth anything any more but it hasn’t stopped being sexy. Music creates meaning it creates an image, and if a product has no image then it has no appeal. The trends indicate that digital licensing for film, television, advertising software and all manner of commercial uses is coming up in a big way, not only with the Merlin deal but also online licensing agencies multiplying.
See to licensing agents, labels and publishing copyrights are actually now a big drag and they love indie artists who hold all the rights themselves. Take Steriogram, arguably the country’s biggest “indie” act. Brad told me their deal with Playstation was done in less than an hour. That’d be a well paid lunch break even for Bic.

So.

Making music is what you love and it’s the reason you got into this. But lets face facts. Music is becoming lean and mean, to stay alive, you must evolve. The digital revolution means that already the music you create and record no longer has nearly the value as a product as it has in the past. But it still has value as a brand. It still has value as something true and meaningful that touches people and they believe in it. Which is every marketing manager like me’s dream.

Because then you can sell them anything.

Come by our page, theres plenty to pick up about new developments in the music industry in our blogs and theres a whole lot of free info and articles at our self promotions hub. Get some scope checking out our overview of online promotion strategies and if you’re interested our artist packages or brand new campaign packages including CD’s, o

All the best with your music, from Kurb
For direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromo

.....................Kurb Myspace

Okay okay

If you know anything about the music industry you’ll know you’re going nowhere WAITING to see if someone cares enough to “discover” you or waiting for the fans to just show up.

So isn’t it time to step up and start getting serious about what you’re doing with your music or enterprise? Then you’ll want to look at this, because I’ve been working to come up with a deal that I can call simply the best promotional opportunities available to anyone and everyone in New Zealand and Australia.

Kurb’s got 3 brand new 3-month packages designed to be the most uniquely cost effective music promotion campaigns available – so if you’re act is ready to put out a CD, go on tour, or simply start taking the steps to building the crucial fanbase that will get you noticed – just you keep rockin – we’ve got the perfect solutions.

Package 1: $NZ600 (Approx $A515)

50 promo cd’s
100 Colour A3 posters
3 month online promotion campaign

Package 2: $NZ1000 (Approx $A850)

100 retail ready CD’s
200 posters Colour A3 Posters
3 months intensive online promotion campaign including video marketing

Package 3: $NZ1500 (Approx $A1285)

200 retail ready CD’s
400 colour A3 Posters
3 months total media promotion and bookings(bookings only available in NZ sorry!)

So starting at just $NZ600 these complete packages offer CD’s, posters, online distribution AND a full 3 month online promotion campaign to sort you out for your next big move in the industry and . . .

these new packages are available in both Australia AND New Zealand!!!

There’s no one else providing this kind of value not just in the short term, but long after the campaign ends. You WILL see results.

These packages not only include a deal to get CD’s/promos and posters delivered to your door and your CD as well as mp3 downloads available to purchase on all the biggest mp3 retailers such as itunes, but a solid 3 month online promotion campaign making a big impact right across the big social networks – Myspace, Facebook and Bebo – pushing up your presence on Google, as well as including cutting edge video promotion on Youtube and 18 other video sites!

This is just the start – you can check out the full comprehensive overview of each of the cutting edge online promotion techniques we use Here

. We used to be a lot more secretive but then no ones yet come close to even offering what we do.

Many of these strategies are COMPLETELY EXCLUSIVE!!! There’s no one in New Zealand and quite possibly in Australia who even has access to all the knowledge we do and if they do they’d certainly be charging a lot more!

Forget what you think you know about music promo – I’m just telling you, the kind of stuff we do, what we’ve learnt, the tools we use – is uniquely effective. The most important part of locking in the 3 month strategy is working in a timeframe that guarantees results.

We are also now STRICTLY LIMITING the amount of artists we work with to guarantee a thorough quality of service. We want to connect on a level with the artists we work with and understand what they’re saying and who they want to say it to.

2007 has been a year of massive growth here for us at Kurb and it has become quite plain that the value of what we offer won’t always be available to smaller acts as bigger players with more money to spend become interested in what we do.

There are so many mistakes you can make in promotion which can turn into a massive waste of time and money if not carried out with the experience of those who know and have seen what works and so many things that haven’t especially in an are where change is happening so quickly!

Give your music a chance and get involved with the experts in online music promotion.

Mail me @ kurbpromo@gmail.com!!!!

Package 1: $NZ600 (Approx $A515)

50 promo cd’s
100 Colour A3 posters
3 month online promotion campaign

Online distribution (Itunes etc.)

Social network promotion through myspace (We guarantee you no less than 3000+ new fans at the very least) Facebook and Bebo

Search engine manipulation and Google campaign

Package 2: $NZ1000 (Approx $A850)

100 retail ready CD’s
200 posters Colour A3 Posters
3 months intensive online promotion campaign including video marketing

Social network promotion through myspace (We guarantee you no less than 5000+ new fans at the very least) Facebook and Bebo

Search engine manipulation and Google campaign

Video and content marketing campaign

+More

Package 3: $NZ1500 (Approx $A1285)

150 retail ready CD’s
400 colour A3 Posters
3 months total promotion and bookings (bookings only available in NZ sorry!)

Multi level international social networking and video marketing promotion through myspace (We guarantee you no less than 8,000+ new fans at the very least) Facebook and Bebo

Search engine manipulation and Google campaign

Video and content marketing campaign

International online media publicity campaign

+More

ADDITIONAL EXTRAS:

50 extra CD promos: $75

100 extra retail ready CD’s: $NZ200

Full web design and promotion: $NZ200

Cheers for the connection with Kurb. we provide professional online promotion strategies for artists and creative projects. Come by our page, theres plenty to find out about whats happening right now in the music industry checking out our blogs and theres a whole lot of free info and articles at our self promotions hub. Get some scope checking out our overview of online promotion strategies and if you’re interested our artist packages.

All the best with your music, from Kurb
For direct enquiries get us on gmail as kurbpromo

how digital promotion and social marketing works
more indie self promotion articles hub
Our artist packages
Overview of online promotion strategies

Cheers and all the best with your work from Kurb
.......................
Kurb Myspace

Kurb is back

September 11, 2007

Alright . . . Kurb is BACK!!!

more indie self promotion articles hub
Artist promotions management packages
I’ve actually been back over a week but I quickly realised I wasn’t going to just slot back into where my head was at before I attempted to do a 14 date tour while keeping kurb steaming along . . . as if that was ever gonna happen! More on that later.

Now by the end of july I had started to get a pretty good grasp on where things were headed from the crossroads of music and technology – and how what kurb does fits into that – the big question was the same one most clued up people are asking . . . we understand the direction new technology is taking the music industry, we’re just not sure how to make money off it. Yet.

Many of the experts I follow almost religiously (Andrew Dubber, Gerd Leonhard, Bob Lefsetz) Seem to advocate an almost blind faith in a theoretical premise that if you’re creating value (i.e free downloads) for users through content (Your songs etc.) and you can build recognition for your brand, you’re gonna make some money one way or the other.

One fascinating thing Bob keeps banging on about is how little money there really is left in Top 40 music – his inference is that the people who listen to that music don’t really care about it. Most of the biggest earning acts in the US are country acts I’ve barely ever heard of.

I keep referring back to local D’n B act Concord Dawn, who have accepted that filesharing is the reason they get good money playing to full houses in obscure east European cities they’ve barely heard of. Those who are the first to embrace the new technology will be the first to benefit.

Anyway, I didn’t want to come back on it after my trip without something solid for people to get stuck into.  Here’s Gerd Leonhards latest slide on revenue streams.

Look at that. I think I’ll have to take the time to analyse this in more detail at a later date.

For those looking at Kurbs agency fees of $200-300 p/month  obviously it would be wonderful for us to guarantee a return on your investment, but like so many other comparable business models, building an enterprise in the music industry is about investing in your personal brand and creating value in it before seeing a return. Kurb is a business modelling itself to allow artists to take advantage of any proven opportunity the internet is creating an income from the content and brand provided by an artist.

So its situation Normal back at Kurb – you got New Zealand cheapest rates on short cd, dvd and poster runs – we’re not talking about high end production standards we’re talking about facilitating a multi level promotions strategy on a budget. We don’t charge set up fees for graphics plus free delivery in New Zealand on all posters and CD’s means you save on heaps of hidden costs on top of the saving you’ve already made.

So then it’s about tackling the whole online situation because however you choose to see it, the internet is continuing to expand its ever growing influence on the music industry.  This certainly doesn’t mean we should turn our backs completely on traditional means, but in a country like New Zealand (where musicians are really feeling the pinch in a tiny market) you’ve got to be enthusiastic about how many more opportunities present themselves on a global level. I know this is pretty basic stuff but I’m just settling back in and all.

Though Kurb’s key online strategies for artists can be divided into two distinct areas – Social (Myspace, Bebo, Facebook etc.) and Video (Youtube etc.) it’s grounded in a concept that the artist is creating content (music, video, blogs, etc.) and we support the artist by mass distributing this content using all the “exclusive insider knowledge” (oooh! aaahhh!) I’ve built up – building and feeding a massive electronic information distribution network of digital pathways (profile pages, mp3 streaming, mini sites, blogs – lots of blogs) that reinforce themselves – and of course our particular skills and techniques for drawing on the massive audiences and opportunities for exposure and key network contacts created by a number of prominent internet communities – starting with this one.

Again, a future topic will definitely touch more how social networking is evolving – and more technical specifics of what I do for artists in networking and video promotion and why you’ve really got to approach your whole online marketing in terms of developing and maintaining a content “eco system” for your fans – it’s not enough to have a free download on myspace or a cool video on youtube it will never be that simple anymore no matter what the press say.

I’m still watching the competition but still am not aware of anyone else doing everything I’m doing. When I’m talking about the techniques I use with Kurb I’m not talking about getting in amongst the throng, I’m talking about cutting through it and standing out – and using as many electronic loopholes and shortcuts as I’m aware of to get there.

I’m really excited about working with more artists and entrepreneurs who are serious about realising a vision and creating attention for those who are serious about delivering something people will treasure and gives them meaning. It’s a really exciting time because what the internet has done is created an environment where quality and substance really does shine out amongst all the crap and for the first time in a while if you haven’t got something to offer that’s original and authentic you simply wont last.

I’m just getting back into it so drop me a line at kurbpromo@gmail.com

cheers, Matt
 

Kurb – a promotions company for artists serious about using the most effective online techniques to market their music. Come by our page and read our blogs on how the music industry is fundamentally changing now or check out:
how digital promotion and social marketing works
more indie self promotion articles hub
Our artist packages

Cheers and all the best with your music from Kurb