Brands, like bands, should own their fans

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For any business today, there is no substitute for direct contact with a customer. Anyone unconvinced need only look to Radiohead.

The rock group released their eighth album, The King of Limbs, on 18 February. As with the previous album, In Rainbows, it has initially been made available only from Radiohead’s own website.

The band are no longer signed to a label, choosing instead to record, market and distribute their songs at their own expense. That has proved no barrier, as the awareness generated around this latest launch has shown.

With a total marketing spend of zero, Radiohead have attracted a level of publicity most bands - and brands - would covet enviously. There was no ad campaign or PR effort, just a simple announcement on the website and a message to an email list two days before release.

The rest of the work was done by fans themselves. Within hours, #Radiohead was a “trending topic” on Twitter and the story had been picked up by news media around the world. Imagine if brands could mobilise their customer bases in this way.

There are caveats, of course. Radiohead have nearly 20 years of successful recording and touring behind them, in what might fairly be called a high-interest product category. Their email subscribers probably also consist of an unusually high number of music journalists. An unknown act could hammer away at the music market in this way for decades and never leave a dent.

Yet it would be obtuse, and would miss the point, to ignore Radiohead’s marketing model for these reasons. Their strategy could be replicated by numerous brands, should they be dedicated enough to create the right conditions.

Picture from Radiohead's latest video for their single Lotus Flower

Picture from Radiohead’s latest video for their single Lotus Flower

Radiohead are able to pull off this audacious achievement not just because they have multinational and mainstream popularity - though that helps. More importantly, they have a community of highly engaged customers and advocates. They in turn have vibrant and relevant forums in which to spread the word, amongst themselves and amongst others that the band would want to target.

Crucially, there is also a product that generates excitement - Radiohead’s first album for four years.

But none of this would be possible if Radiohead did not own the relationship with their fans. For years, the band has been consistently providing reasons for them to hand over their data - in the form of email addresses - by using their mailings as a source for getting news, tour dates, ticket announcements, artwork, merchandise and other valued content.

What is more, those ordering the new album must first register with an email address, ever expanding the database for future use.

Any marketer reading these past few summary paragraphs should feel it is within their power to create the conditions necessary for this model to work. No-one would claim it is easy to achieve, but neither is it restricted to the world’s biggest bands, or brands.

Please help us to understand marketers’ attitudes to data - and you could win £200 John Lewis vouchers. Click here to fill out the Marketing Week/Data Strategy survey on multi-channel marketing, in association with Alterian. Your answers will inform an in-depth piece to be published in Marketing Week during March this year.

Readers' comments (3)

  • Actually, I think that it's the fans owning the band in so far as the band is taken to heart by the fans, and their 'adoration' causes them to act.

    Radiohead have earned the respect of their fans, certainly, but they don't own them. They have done a great job of creating/inhabiting their own brand space, but they have ensured that their fans can have access to that space as well.

    Afterall, it is the fan who owns the brand perception of the band, not the other way around.

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  • I listen to the London radio station XFM who had a Radiohead day the week King of Limbs was released. They played songs from the new album as well as material from old throughout the day. Constant texts from fans were fed out via the station and have continued to do so this week - promoting Radiohead again and again every step of the way. The album is also available to download from XFM for around £6. In Rainbows was available for fans to decide on how much they paid - if anything at all. The album sold on average for around £2 with nearly 60% choosing to download it for free. How ever Radiohead choose to promote themselves, their fans are always at the fore front and the band will continue to sell out the biggest venues time and time again. I am proud to say I have been a fan since their first album Pablo Honey released in 1993. The bands lead singer Thom York has always had time and respect for their fans - way to go!

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  • Indeed, Radiohead has a smart way of reaching their fans and the music industry. They have in previous years generated a new way of placing their albums on the market (eg. placing the download on their website and asking the fans to pay what they thought it was worth for the download as mentioned by the comment by Sonja) and thus, reinforcing their idependence to the main stream market. Curious to think that though Radiohead has this anti relationship with order, rules, control and somehow capitalism, they seem to be the ones who are most knowledgeable in this commercial and market sense. Thom Yorke is a mindmaster when it comes to maintaining a strong relationship with his fans. There is this feeling that he cares for us and wants us to know that, even if it means making a special appearence at the Park Stage in Glastonbury 2010. Care for your fans/audience, make them aware of their value to you. The response, is.... well, we just need to look at what happened when Kings of Limbs was released. Brilliant.

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