promoting DJ/music nights in 2010
mordecai
2,204 Posts
I was part of a weekly hip-hop night that slowly built for a few years and had a good number of regulars and decent turnout most nights. It was pretty fun... not much dancing, but a fairly die-hard group of appreciative dudes.
Later, I did a monthly funk night for about 6 months that didn't really take off, but had more dancing and was enjoyable despite low numbers.
Now, I've been doing a monthly old school dance party (some 70s but mostly 80s/90s) for about a year and a half now and it has been fun. good turnout, some regulars, dancing people (including girls ).
Obviously, cities, music, venues, and audiences vary widely, but I'm curious what you've seen as effective channels of promotion in this day and age. I'd like to see our turnout increase a bit more but I'm not sure if it will really outgrow the venue in our moderate city.
I actually live a half-hour outside of the city currently, so I'm not too keen on flyering (especially when other means might be easier... facebook, local publication calendars), but I'm wondering if its still a useful promotional tool.
Later, I did a monthly funk night for about 6 months that didn't really take off, but had more dancing and was enjoyable despite low numbers.
Now, I've been doing a monthly old school dance party (some 70s but mostly 80s/90s) for about a year and a half now and it has been fun. good turnout, some regulars, dancing people (including girls ).
Obviously, cities, music, venues, and audiences vary widely, but I'm curious what you've seen as effective channels of promotion in this day and age. I'd like to see our turnout increase a bit more but I'm not sure if it will really outgrow the venue in our moderate city.
I actually live a half-hour outside of the city currently, so I'm not too keen on flyering (especially when other means might be easier... facebook, local publication calendars), but I'm wondering if its still a useful promotional tool.
Comments
i'd love to hear your take on this