Bands, music, and SEO - A different paradigm
For B2B or ecommerce, people often discover your brand with commercial queries like "dining room lamps" or an informational search like "how to fix a dishwasher".
Then they look around your site, your social profiles, get retargeted—before ever making a purchase—but in many cases that journey started with an non-branded organic search. Search is certainly not the only discovery channel. But important enough that investment in non-branded keywords is essential.
A (very simplified) illustration of this discovery path might look something like this:
The above is NOT the case for musicians and bands though. When's the last time you discovered a band with a search engine? Probably never.
For bands and musicians, the discovery path is flipped around. THIS is probably more realistic:
The search engine is more about reducing friction on the path to becoming a die-hard fan. I don't think many people are discovering their new favorite band like this:
But you HAVE probably tried to learn more about bands and musicians after the initial discovery with searches like this:
(No, I am not a Lumineers fan—just so there's no confusion ;) )
I don't think many musicians, bands, record labels or managers are looking at this aspect of search. Sure, you can hope that users and Google "just figure it out." Or you can be proactive and create the best fan experience possible.
SEO for bands = The branded keyword experience
So the REAL opportunity in keywords for bands and musicians is the fan experience here:
It's their "branded" terms (or what I like to call "PropWords"—proprietary keywords):
- band name
- musician names
- album names
- song names
- lyrics
- performance dates
- interviews
- etc...
For example, there's a TON of volume around Lupe Fiasco's branded terms—and this is only the tip of the iceberg:
Just because no one's discovering Lupe Fiasco in organic search, doesn't mean there's no opportunity. It's just not in the normal places you'd look for B2B or eCommerce opportunity.
So that's the lens through which the rest of this post should be seen through. SEO for bands is primarily about the fan experience searching their branded terms.
Search result opportunities for bands
1. Event listings
1.1 Optimize your own site for general tour searches
As a band, it's important to keep fans and potential fans in your ecosystem. You should keep fans on your properties (website, social etc) as much as possible—so as not to give up extra traffic to third party sites. Being visible for your own event searches is a critical way to keep them there.
Let's use on of my new favorite bands, Sylvan Esso. Here's an example of what Google typically shows for a tour search—for the query "sylvan esso tour dates":
I imagine for this query, fans are trying to get a list of all tour dates. So what is Google doing now? They are providing the list front and center.
You notice that Sylvan Esso only has one result—everything else goes to a third party site. This is already a lost opportunity to drive more fans to their site.
They could optimize for clicks by aligning the likely user intent with their appearance in the SERP. Using the SEO Mofo SERP tool, I came up with:
This listing may perform better because:
- It aligns with most likely user intent (browse all dates/location & purchase)
- The URL is more informative
- It promises something exclusive (as long as they deliver—maybe with a group discount, a meet and greet etc).
This is the start to funneling fans through your website instead of a third party.
1.2 Create pages for individual shows (with caution)
Some fans may opt to click a tour date Google has provided. What does Google do next?
Google then returns a page like this—with a TON of stuff:
This SERP is packed! It includes:
- A date carousel
- A large AdWords ad
- A map card
- Knowledge Graph card
- Top result has 4 site-links
- 7 more normal organic results, some with date snippets and extra links
Here's the kicker. There's only one tiny little link to sylvanesso.com—in the map card. And it goes to their homepage. They have a pretty poor shot at driving users to their website here.
Let's look at a result for a specific Dave Matthews Band tour date:
They're doing it a little better. Few observations with this one:
- Their link in the map goes to their tour page
- The #1 organic listing goes to their website—because they have a specific page for that exact show.
- The amount of stuff in this SERP is still immense. The first organic result is way below the fold.
- The "with caution" part is that—you don't want to just create individual pages for every show, without trying to add something of value to them—like information about the venue, past show pictures from that venue, etc. These pages can get quite "thin" and this isn't a good thing either.
1.3 Tag your site to get official ticket links
Finally, the biggest change in Google is the addition of official ticketing agents. To use one of their examples, let's look at Google's example of "ariana grande tour" (and no, definitely not a secret Ariana Grande fan—although some of the production is decent):
Not only do the tour dates show up at the top, but check out this preferred ticketing link showing prominently in the Map Card:
Google first announced this capability about a year ago. And they have recently expanded this for comedians and concert venues as well. Here is Google's official developer documentation on event markup for performers: https://developers.google.com/structured-data/events/performers I want to note, they are giving preferential treatment to official artist websites:
You have three options to specify event info:
- HTML—code it directly into your page
- Plugins or Widgets
- New "Delegation" Markup—indicate Google to source it from another webpage
2. Make an app (or several) and index them
For those not aware, App Indexing is getting pretty real. I think this is a major opportunity for bands and musicians. Let's look at mobile search volume for a few albums that have come out recently:
According to my small sample, at least 44% of album name searches are on a mobile device (not even including tablets). Recent claims are that Android has almost 50% of the smartphone market share. For Alicia Keys, that would mean about 18,500 searches a month for "girl on fire" on an Android.
Are you seeing the opportunity? No? Well, Bjork did:
She had an app developed just for her new album, Biophillia. Now, Android users searching Google for this album will be able to purchase and experience the "multimedia exploration" in this app.
If I was a label, I'd be experimenting with making apps for all albums by artists—filling them with an exclusive experience—and seeing what happens.
Google put together their 4-steps to appiness—and easy to follow guide to get your Android app indexed in Google search.
3. Get a Knowledge Graph result
I know we've look at musicians who have already reached a threshold of popularity. They are likely to have a Knowledge Graph result already.
But what if you're an up and coming musician? You may not have a Knowledge Graph result—but perhaps with a little nudge you can get one. For example, a friend of mine (and old bandmate) Lost Midas is now a solo electrofusion producer and songwriter. He is signed to an independent label and even just performed at SXSW—but unfortunately Google does not show a Knowledge Graph result:
What could someone like him do to get in the Knowledge Graph?
One thing I found interesting was Google's suggestions for how performers specifically can get in the Knowledge Graph. It's buried at the bottom of the event listings page:
3.1 Get listed in Wikipedia
This is easier said than done. Be sure to read their inclusion criteria for music.
If you feel the band or musician is notable enough to get into Wikipedia, you can then start the process here. That is the official page to add an article request for bands and musicians. Please note, Wikipedia does not want you to list yourself.
As Google states above— be sure the official homepage is recorded correctly. I take this to mean—list the exact ("canonical") version of your homepage URL. The one you would verify in Webmaster Tools.
You may also find this article on how someone claimed to sneak through Wiki's notability test interesting (although I can't officially say how good that method is).
3.2 Get listed in MusicBrainz
The other site Google recommends getting listed in is MusicBrainz.org. I don't have much experience with this site, but you can go here to learn about making contributions.
3.3 Upload audio to Archive.org
Note, this is just my hunch. But if Google is using Wikipedia and MusicBrainz to inform their Knowledge Graph results—perhaps they use Archive.org. Why not? It's one of the most authoritative sources on the web.
With Archive.org you can upload entire concerts to their site:
3.4 Create and verify a Google Plus page
Right, I know. "No one uses Google Plus." "Google Plus is dying." Perhaps there are elements of truth there. But I'd be surprised if having a Google Plus page verified with your website doesn't somehow impact Knowledge Graph listings.
My friend does not have a Google Plus listing currently:
For those needing to create and verify a Google Plus page:
- Go here and choose "Brand" to create a page. (Note, you are not creating a personal page. This is a mistake I see many organizations making).
- And then link your website to your brand page by following those instructions.
4. Customize your Knowledge Graph
Once you have a Knowledge Graph listing—that's just the beginning! Google recently added ways to control what appears there.
4.1 Specify your logo
For bands (and all organizations really) branding is an essential element of success. Google now gives you the opportunity to directly control the logo users see in your Knowledge Graph result:
As you can see above, the jazz group The Bad Plus has a random picture from an article showing—when perhaps there is a better photo they would prefer. This may be especially important from a consistency of branding standpoint.
4.2 Specify your social profiles
In addition, you can also directly control what social media links show in the knowledge graph. As I've mentioned, getting users to follow you on social is a key goal for bands in terms of audience development. Your audience is everything. And for bands, most search activity is going to come from their brand name. Why not make it easier for them to discover your social profiles?
For example, the amazing "Livetronica" Band (live electronica music) The New Deal could get all of their social links to show in their Knowledge Box:
As you can see they are missing a huge opportunity to get more fans to their Instagram, Twitter and Soundcloud profiles. There's at least 1,700 searches a month for "the new deal music" and "the new deal band".
5. Have a crawlable and indexable site
For some reason, I have noticed sites in the music industry tend to be pretty inferior. This could be due to labels using poor frameworks, or the band/artist needing to just get a website up the quickest, cheapest and easiest way possible. This can cause some issues though.
Let's check out my friend's site again. He's currently on the Flavors.me platform. It looks like there's several "pages" to the user, but to Google his website is just all one page:
As mentioned, this is a common yet often overlooked issue with music websites I see. In fact, despite Bjork getting it right by having an app—her website has the same issue:
Her website (which actually does looks like an impressive creative endeavor) is built with hashes # in the URLs. Which makes the individual pages uncrawlable.
This shows up as an issue if I try to find her mailing list in Google:
The first result goes to her record label's page. That's fine right? Well, not really because she has her own mailing list:
Because of how the website is built though, that page is basically invisible to Google—and users can not easily find it from a search.
The absence of Bjork's mailing list in search results is a critical oversight. For an artist, your mailing list is one of your strongest assets.
5. Leverage your own YouTube channel
As it's often said, YouTube is the second largest search engine. And there's no doubt music queries make up a huge percentage of their overall search volume.
5.1 Create a YouTube channel
I'm sad to have to say this, but many bands don't seem to even have a YouTube page of their own. Again, they are missing a massive opportunity to funnel fans searching for their content to their YouTube account—where they can grow subscribers, promote music and cross-promote other channels.
For example, that band The New Deal does not have their own YouTube channel:
Their live performances are a core selling point. This drives a ton of activity around their band in YouTube (people looking for concert footage). If they added some of their own on their own channel, they could capture a lot of this activity and engage with the fans.
5.2 Add video content fans are looking for
Having a channel is great, but fans are often looking for specific pieces of content. It's really nice to have lots of fans that upload this content for you for fun, but capturing some of this activity is important.
For example, another new band I have been liking a lot - Made In Heights—could be doing this:
Fans are looking for live performances, and the only ones there now are all fan uploads.
You can use YouTube search suggest to find other things fans are searching for. I don't see it mentioned often, but KeywordTool.io allows you to get YouTube search suggestions:
This can quickly give you ideas of what content to add to your band page in YouTube:
The above screenshot shows the most common searches around "Made In Heights". They mostly look like song names. If I were that band, I'd make sure they have video or content for every one of those songs.
You can use YouTube directly of course to find search suggestions off of the band name. For example, there are a lot of lyric searches. This makes sense. People want to listen to the song while reading the lyrics:
Wow! Yet, what happens when we look in YouTube for "made in heights lyrics"?
Never mind the band not having any lyric results—NO one has any lyric results. This is definitely an opportunity to provide content that doesn't exist within YouTube.
5.3 Create playlists
Playlists are also overlooked in YouTube. They have many benefits:
- Make your content easier to discover by organizing it.
- Keep viewers on your content, in your channel
- I've heard it rumored that creation of playlists can help you rank better in YouTube search only if your channel helps YouTube keep viewers... inside YouTube. Playlists can do this.
- You can organize videos from any account into your playlists.
- You can also rank in Google search with playlists (more on that below)
I started using playlists on my YouTube music channel (where I mainly post covers and tutorials of hip-hop songs on piano)—and at least anecdotally—have seen my view count rise faster than usual:
(I sure did use the word "content" a lot in that screenshot!)
Many popular artists in YouTube don't have any playlists though—for example Flying Lotus:
You can also curate playlists of videos about your band no matter who uploaded it. For example, let's say you're Drake (OK, maybe Drake's record label or social media manager). You could curate playlists of the best Drake interviews, no matter who uploaded them:
Then when fans search, they may discover the playlist on Drake's channel which could earn subscriptions and also get them watching their chosen interviews.
Speaking of Drake—remember when I mentioned you could rank in Google search with YouTube playlists? Take a look at this:
That's a random fan playlist ranking #1 for "drake playlist"—which gets 1,600 searches a month. That's not an outlying case though. I barely had to look further for another example:
"john legend playlist" gets 720 searches a month—and two fan playlists rank at the top.
6. Contribute to Medium.com
While the idea of "guest posting" is saturated in many industries, I don't see this being done a whole lot in the music industry. That's why I was impressed when I noticed a DJ named A-Trak posted this compelling article about rap in 2014:
A few months later, this article has earned:
- 254 recommendations on Medium
- 1,480 Facebook shares
- 470 tweets
- 336 Google +1's
- Including shares by Fred Wilson (380,000+ followers) and pianist Chilly Gonzales (40,000+ followers and high relevance)
It even ranks #2 for [rap in 2014]:
Although not super high volume, it potentially ranks for a lot of long tail—and will bring in consistent brand discovery from a relevant audience.
6. Provide exclusive content about your lyrics
The SEO world is no stranger to lyric searches. Just last year, Rap Genius (now just "Genius") was caught up in a Google penalty. And back on December 19, Glenn Gabe was the first to notice Google displaying full lyrics in search results:
Glenn Gabe's screenshot from December 19, 2014 of Google displaying lyrics in search.
Glenn also recently published a pretty in depth study about lyrics in the SERPs I highly recommend you check out.
In his article, Glenn astutely points out that when you add the word "meaning" to your lyrics search—the lyrics box goes away—which I found to be true looking at Sylvan Esso "Coffee" lyrics:
As a band you could release exclusive content about your lyrics such as:
- A photo of where they were originally written (on a napkin while on tour etc)
- The story about how/why they were written
- An explanation about their style (rhyme patterns, metaphors, references to history etc.)
- Share old/original versions of the lyrics or a certain line and the process of revisions
Fans and music publications could also create exclusive content about the lyrics. They could interview the band about their meaning—or publish their own in-depth interpretation of the meaning.
I also want to point out—there can be a lot of search volume for a single line of a song lyric, if the song and artist are popular enough. Check out the volume for this one line by Drake:
That's 1,000 searches a month (certainly skewed all towards February, when the album came out) for "runnin' through the 6 with my woes".
And I want to point out, 65% of those searches are being done on mobile phones
Check out search volume for Adele lyrics from years ago now:
"But I set fire to the rain" and "watched it pour as I touched your face" both get decent volume and have a good share of mobile share.
Yet there is only one result in this SERP explaining the meaning to this line:
There's definitely value to be found by:
- finding lines from lyrics with search volume
- creating content to satisfy the user intent
Both the artists AND third party publishers have an opportunity here. Genius.com is really the only true player in this space right now!
7. Optimize for real name searches
Remember my friend "Lost Midas"? This is obviously not his real name. It's Jason Trikakis. Not a hugely common name. So a search for it should return his website #1 right?
Wrong. You can't always rely on Google to "figure it out." The problem here stems back to the fact his website is not very search-friendly. His name is on the website but very hard for Google to find.
Solution in this case would be:
- Ultimately to be on a better web platform.
- But also adding his name into the title of the page (if possible on Flavors.me) would certainly be a step in the right direction :)
Also—remember Sylvan Esso? What if one were to be searching around for "Nick Sanborn" who makes up 1/2 of the Sylvan Esso duo?
Now, I'd never argue something from sylvanesso.com should appear at the top. But there's nothing from their domain on the first page. As a fan, I'd probably enjoy at least one result from one of their own domains.
Here's a few ideas for them:
- Create a bio page on their own site
- Have a personal website which can then get people to the band website etc
There's SO much more I could have mentioned in terms of marketing music these days. When I played in bands it was the days of MySpace :) I don't even think YouTube was out yet.
There are so many opportunities out there now with social media, platforms like Soundcloud and Bandcamp. I left a LOT out of this post.
If you have any questions at all, please ask in the comments below! And I also love to chat about music!
Dan, this is a lengthy, actionable, step-by-step analysis -- bravo! I especially liked these two sentences and the graphic above them:
The search engine is more about reducing friction on the path to becoming a die-hard fan. I don't think many people are discovering their new favorite band like this
Your post reminded me and is a perfect example of how both outbound marketing and inbound marketing are needed today. In your example, spreading the word about a band on social media is (in this example) outbound marketing because it creates demand. Then, once people like the band, they will search Google for more about the band -- inbound marketing (in this example) fulfills demand.
Here's another example that would have been relevant in, say, 2002. What would have been the use of optimizing a website for "SEO software" when no one would be searching for "SEO software" or even know that "SEO" exists in the first place? Good marketing -- whether for a band or for a software product -- needs both to generate and fulfill demand.
Thanks again for the great post, Dan!
Great post, Dan. Takes me back to my early days of SEO when I experimented on my music website (which no longer exists now) and getting it to rank for keywords like "acoustic music cardiff", which is why the intro made me smile - you're right, people simply don't search that way.
SEO aside, a lot of bands (even the big ones) do online marketing as a whole terribly:
There's definitely an opportunity for bands to do a lot better. They can start by reading this post... ;-)
Hi Steve
Absolutely, these are the common issues I see a lot. Playing devil's advocate even on myself, I can see their side too. I can imagine these are not actions that show immediate ROI, or maybe ROI is hard to attribute at all. They will tend to stick to the things that seem more rewarding like booking new shows, selling merch, recording new albums. A lot of this stuff is definitely an afterthought for most bands and musicians.
But I do hope the article and comments like yours can give some bands, musicians and their labels/agents etc some food for thought. A lot of these recommendations can be done pretty quickly/easily - so I think in many cases the lower effort is worth the long term gains!
This post is already above the fold for "Music SEO" (signed out) - I'm sure the timeliness/moz URL helps, but I find that deserved and interesting...I believe you just gave music PR people and promoters a number of things to (re)consider. I'd be interested to hear what multi-talent people, such as you and Mike King (red rover, red rover, ipullrank's thoughts come over), would do to differentiate pieces of content (written posts vs videos vs live performances vs webinars) as well as your personalities that may/may not overlap industry-wise.
What is the time lapse regarding modifying one's knowledge graph? Also, what do you (any reader) think of the idea of optimizing internal, didactic videos (Whiteboard Friday) via playlists? (For example, SEOWiSE has a number of WhiteBoard Fridays in one list.) Could be a good way to reintroduce older/relatable content.
music SEO = Shure shot
Great article!
Try to rank not just for your branded name, but for your GENRE + LOCATION, i.e. "indie folk band toledo ohio" etc, and go for long tail. create a huge inventory of content pages (shouldn't be hard, you're an artist), and put links up to your itunes/merch pages. collect all these folks into social accounts and keep talking to them for free. cookie them from your site and retarget with banner ads.
Shout out to Toledo!
Dan, this is a really unique blog post. There's a lot of great tips in here but I actually think this type of SEO/marketing thought process can expand outside of just bands.
There are other "brands" that users typically discover or follow without search engines - like sports teams, for instance - and a lot of these techniques would directly apply to them, as well.
Another thing I noticed and can't help but comment on: the size of the jam-packed SERPs that get populated and how full they are of 3rd party brands, businesses, and ticket sellers! It's tough for a small band to optimize for those SERPs, but nonetheless there are definitely opportunities to gain more real estate there (as you so well documented).
Brady
You're totally right. Sports teams, actors, comedians, musicals, politicians - anyone/anything creating demand because of being famous/popular.
Yeah it's crazy - popular things definitely tend to attract 3rd parties wanting to benefit (think Apple accessories).
i Agree With You Dan.
..Brand Optimization is what we do in Coming days in Seo and internet marketing. Instead of promoting keyword, 'Brand' will be promoted solely .Anyway Thanks for posting
Great Post! It is very helpul for me. Thanks for sharing!
really good material! traffic from adwords and organic is always a clue for SEO
Interesting, Thank you for sharing this
Great post and I am liking the visual walkthrough! Most often I also see that people forget the specific user flow for their niche. I also often see that a search can start at a different website, go through Google and end up at the main site.
Also, the importance of having the right data for ones brand in the SERP should not be underestimated. As you showed with a screenshot, the organic listing was below the fold and most of the page was covered with Googles own data scraping results.
I often wonder about their strategy with this. Are the trying to serve a better result by filtering out main sites and simply listing the data themselves or are they purposely covering more and more of the organic space, only leaving the Google Knowledge Graph and Ads?
Rene
Thanks for the comment and interesting question. One can not be sure what they are trying to do. But I did find the FCC information that was just released fascinating. It seems like they are always walking a fine line of balancing ads, google properties, map packs, organic results etc - they all seem to be important for their bottom line in one way or another. The constant testing they do must show that somehow that massive SERP is good for users enough to not mess up their business. It's really tough to say though, there's so many factors.
Agreed. If Google promote their own data it would devaluate the search engine and if they don't serve a wide variety of SERP data set, the user might not get a full vertical SERP with rich media, social links etc.
It is truly an balancing act.
Hi Is there any way to reindex the website home page after DMCA removal. I have changed all the copied content and design and resubmit website in Google reconsideration form. Please Advise
Thanks,
Ashish
Many detailed information about music SEO, I don`t think that is so big traffic source.
Sammy
It really depends on the specific band, musician or situation. The search volume and opportunity can vary a lot case by case!
Such a great post .Dan thanks for great information..
nice insights, music is not my busines and I rly don't google for music or sth. like actors that often, but it is very interesting
Really Music SEO is a powerful section in Seo. Nice article.
A very detailed and useful post Dan! I especially liked the Google Knowledge Graph part. Modern SEO is not just about improving your position in SERPS but it is more than that. I have worked for some local brands and believe me they were over the sky when they saw their results with Knowledge graph
Excellent imaginations, Where do you get such knowledge to write wonderful blog!. Schema markup going to help a lot in future SEO era. Schema codes going to be more popular in this current era of search engine marketing.
Wow music is a very mature and interesting niche for seo, and especially rich snippets. Crazy how almost all of the content above the fold on your laptop was either rich snippets or ads. Great post Dan.
Thanks!
Makes me wish I was in the music industry just to do some of these things! Great article!
Thanks Ronnie! I want to point out a lot of these concepts can be applied to other businesses. For example every organization can control their knowledge graph by following the info here. The YouTube optimization can be applied to a lot of other situations as well.
Dan, this is simply an excellent well thought out post! I'm in ore.
There's a few people I know that will find this both valuable and actionable.
Good job.
IMHO you missed something real important for those music groups who want to reach new users and "When's the last time you discovered a band with a search engine?Probably never." it's not true at 100%.
It's true that you will unlikely find a band with a search engine, if you think your are going to perform a search with a music genre. But, before than Shazam, Soundhound etc million of users got used to create queries such as "soundtrack of X", "song name of mercedes tv ads" etc.
Personally I felt in love of Death Cab for Cutie after Californication, the tv show. This kind of way to promote your songs works! It's works better than you can imagine.
Have you ever heard the name KIEV? It's a band, now try to search on Google, KIEV + the walking dead. You will find a long list of pages. Now, please go on twitter and perform the same search and you will see how many users have re-twitted, favorited or just found the name of this group and the song on one the walking dead episode score.
The funny thing is that you will find the official account of that band interacting with users on Twitter.
The most important thing for a music group is to run social networks accounts and use them to interact with new fans.
Indeed, the biggest point that you missed is the importance of the music streaming services. I mean services such as Spotify, Deezer etc are vital for new or niche artists for many reasons.
All these services use to link your account with Facebook, Tweeter and perhaps other social networks. Each time a user chooses to favourite a tune, immediately your Tweeter account twits it! And therefore your followers will know you liked a tune, a band etc.
In addition, these services, in particular Deezer, try to push recommendation according to your music tastes. And therefore it's important to have an account with all right information. If you band plays "electro swing", which is a niche market, it would be better to set up this genre in your information and get listed as similar to the most famous names, in this case Parov Stelar and G-swing.
My two cents form music user experience.
Dan this is the best article I've read here in a while!
As someone who studied playing the violin for many years, I still have tons of friends who earn their buck playing. Needless to say, there is always some form of advice I'm trying to give them at how to get better in selling their craft, or building a brand for themselves. This gives me tons of ammunition :)
This is one of those article that I will share for a very long time!
Dan,
It's one of the most comprehensive, well-explained and practical guide for the SEO guys who are in Music industry. I'd love to use these strategies to get the maximum out of them.
Dan, what about targeting Twitter? We all know Google now index the tweets and show in SERPs.. What if the new musicians introduce unqiue hashtags for their upcoming tours,albums or songs? I mean, if these underground musicians could manage to trend these hashtags in some cities, they definitely can get some exposure in search, wouldn't they?
Thanks again,
Umar
Hey Umar
Thanks! I think utilizing hashtags is something bands should consider doing regardless! It's a great idea though and thanks for pointing it out :) You can definitely get creative with them. The trick is coming up with something memorable, short but also unique enough it doesn't get confused with something else. Getting fans to adopt and actually use them is half the trick as well.
You're absolutely right. The recent trend on Twitter regarding the Zayn Malik just popped up in my mind while reading this post :)
This is a great article which more than anything help me think creatively about link building and others, thanks.
Great article. I like how you build a case for how content on music sites and artist's sites should be driven by search volume and searcher intent. This is a great SEO-driven approach to content strategy.
its nice article.and music is also main section in SEO action.
(link removed -Dan)
I love your comment on the 3rd party links from the Knowledge Graph!
Very helpful post, going to find any analogies in my business and try Your methods.
Music SEO is a powerful section of SEO, It can increase search visibility and Traffic very efficiently. Thanks for detailed article.
Interesting article and really helpful for those who have brands and wants to increase their audience by search
This post rocks! (pun intended) Going to share this with my musician friends.
Thanks to topic right useful you have to follow the steps that I have mentioned and carried out my site:
https://asnettoyage.blogspot.fr/