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{ Wesley Verhoeve }

Hospitality In The Music Business

My good friend Seth just let me borrow his copy of Danny Meyer‘s book Setting the Table: The Transforming Power of Hospitality in Business. Meyer is a entrepreneur-restaurateur that runs a bunch of different restaurants in NYC, and an inspiration to me as far as he runs his businesses. I’m only a few pages in, but already came across something I had to share, and relate to the music business.

Hospitality is the foundation of my business philosophy. Virtually nothing else is as important as how one is made to feel in any business transaction. Hospitality exists when you believe the other person is on your side. The converse is just as true. Hospitality is present when something happens for you. It is absent when something happens to you. Those two simple prepositions – for and to – express it all.

It’s incredible how true this rings not only for the restaurant business, but for any other, and perhaps even particularly for the music business. When was the last time you bought a major label release and felt they were on the receiving end of hospitality? The big FBI warning on the back doesn’t really contribute positively, neither does the standardized packaging, the lawsuits, the one good song bundled with nine mediocre ones, the overpriced retail experience, and I could keep going.

Music is a powerful medium that is very much based on hospitality. It’s there for you, to help you relate to your fellow humans and feel less alone, to bring you joy or education, to share with friends and have a communal experience to. We can once again create a culture of hospitality around this power, but we’ll have to destroy before we rebuild. We have to re-examine which parts of the current transaction model contribute positively to the hospitality experience surrounding our art, and perhaps make some tough choices that will be written off as ‘foolish’ by industry ‘experts’. We should building the new experience right away, transitioning there while we take advantage of the elements in the current model that can help us get there.

One thing we need to do is bring our customers closer to the artist and its surrounding community. Once again show them we’re speaking to them, and we’re only there because they support us. We need to show appreciation. You get back what you put in. And when you make a sale, and the attention you gave it comes back to you, trust me, it feels really really good. Below is a tweet from Family Records superfan Heidi, which I read after a grueling 18 hour day of work last night, and it made it worth it.


Related Post: What If Danny Meyer Worked In The Music Business.

3 Comments | tags: | category: Music Business

  • http://www.thissideupsounds.com seth

    Have you read further into the book yet? Its true, hospitality is incredibly important in the music industry; not only with cultivating a community for fans from the start, but with keeping them happy and admitting when you’ve made a mistake. For example, we as a team recently had a big miscommunication with vinyl pre-orders on the Jukebox the Ghost vinyl bundle. Tons of our most supportive fans ordered the vinyl right away , and were expecting a signed copy before the holidays – but dude to communication problems with management / the distributor / the merch company, the band’s most loyal fans were incredibly dissapointed by receiving the vinyl in January ( and some didn’t even get the autographed copies they had been promised )

    What did we do? We learned a lesson from Mr Meyer and made sure to be hyper-hospitable; by sending these fans special unreleased tracks, promising autographs at shows, sending some a special 7″, and offering tickets to shows in their cities.

    This wasn’t the band’s fault at all, but we wanted to make sure that the fans felt appreciated. There would be no music “business” without the fans! If you keep them happy, they’ll keep coming back. Its ok to admit when you’ve made a mistake – just fix it and make the outcome even better.

  • http://wesleyverhoeve.com wesleyverhoeve

    Excellent point and that’s exactly the way I think people should handle a situation like that. You probably were able to turn disappointed big fans into even bigger fans by showing them you appreciate them that much. People can forgive mistakes, but only if you say sorry. Great mini case study!

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