(L) Gli errori piu' diffusi nei siti web di gruppi e etichet…

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Autore: pinna
Data:  
To: autoprod - muzak - no-copyright - etc.
Oggetto: (L) Gli errori piu' diffusi nei siti web di gruppi e etichette
Five Mistakes Band & Label Sites Make
http://www.43folders.com/2004/12/06/five-mistakes-band-label-sites-make
(quelli di 43folders credo siano abbastanza attendibili. professionisti,
probabilmente. AHAHAHHH!! le cose scritte mi sembrano sensate, comunque)

per i nostri prodi sviluppatori queste annotazioni saranno scontate, ma
e' interessante il modo in cui sono scritte (peccato siano in inglese) e
possono aiutare i gruppi (gli artisti) a capire cosa e' utile nella
propria pagina, cosa non lo e', cosa e' dannoso.

ciao
pinna


Too much Flash

Okay, I get it. You’re creative. Awesome. But you’re totally wasting my
morning as I helplessly wait for your designer’s dancing sausages to
finish loading. Perhaps worst of all, most all-Flash sites prohibit your
fans from creating deep links to artist, album or song pages. Your fans
are trying to drive people to the cash register, but you insist on
making them watch a puppet show before they can even enter the damned
store.

Tip:
Use Flash like you would cilantro—sparingly and for a single high-impact
effect. Nobody wants to eat a whole bowl of cilantro, and nobody wants
an animated death march when they have a “passionate task” to complete.
Also, build your pages to make it super-easy to link to anything. Use
sub-page anchors, and clearly identify why they’re there.



Crappy or non existent mp3 metadata

If I load up the mp3 of your big single and it says it’s “Song” by
“Artist” on the record, “Album,” you’ve completely blown it already; I
have no way to ever find you again. Ditto for file naming. Remember:
people often download dozens or hundreds of songs at once, so it’s
really unlikely they’ll remember where Track%2007.mp3 came from.

Tip:
Fill every possible field of ID3 data with rich, correct information.
This is the digital version of an album cover, so give the kids
something to read while they’re rocking. Basic track info is a
no-brainer, but also consider adding cover art, track number, composer
credits, genre and year information, and—duh—add a link to your web site
and email address in the comments field.
Posting an MP3 without metadata is like Safeway ordering the hair-netted
sample lady not to tell hungry customers which aisle those nummy chicken
fingers are in.



Too artsy, too fartsy

People are visiting your site because they want to learn more about
bands and music—not to have a guided tour of your
designer/brother-in-law’s Photoshop brush collection. Don’t be cute with
the design, section naming, or navigation. Don’t make your visitors
solve a Rubik’s cube to pull up your lyrics page.

Tip:
Let the music be the star of the show and provide fast access to what
your visitors really came for:
1) mp3s/downloads,
2) lyrics/discography,
3) show dates,
4) contact info,
5) where can I buy this (preferably pointers to buying online for
immediate download).
Photos, old setlists, and diaries—anything that paints the personality
of the band—are all great, too, of course, but they’re still secondary
to posting and updating the holy pentagram of items above. Save the
artsy stuff for when you inevitably quit music to take up oil painting.



No search

Chances are good that fans coming to your site arrive with something
extremely specific in mind—often a fragment of lyric or the name of one
obscure song. If your site contains more than a handful of pages,
provide a clearly labeled search box (or link to a search) on every
page, and test it. Make sure your search works and drives visitors to
your most popular pages without the need for pecking around.

Tip:
Google has a free service for providing site search. It’s not perfect or
100% timely, but it works, and it’s free, and it’s better than nothing.



One-way communication (served one way)

Your fans are not empty vessels or just (ugh) a street team; they have
things to say too. Provide a clear contact email address (plus separate
ones for press and booking inquiries if you’re all famous and whatnot)
and consider having a fan message board and mailing lists for tour and
release updates. Read your email, and answer it.

Tip:
Consider creating RSS feeds for your most frequently updated stuff
(Sloan’s site does this very well).



Just in general? Don’t let your web designer build a portfolio piece on
the back of your fans and your business. Ask your fans what they want,
watch how they use your site, and then give them what they like without
a lot of hooptedoodle.

Got a bee in your bonnet about music sites?