By Matt Wright
Our Partner Interview series continues with Alex White, Co-Founder & CEO of leading music analytics startup Next Big Sound. Next Big Sound’s tagline is “actionable intelligence for the music industry,” and as the interview below attests, they’re laser-focused on that goal. Read on.
Can you give our readers a quick overview of what Next Big Sound is?
Next Big Sound provides a centralized dashboard for music industry professionals to see all the data relevant to their artists in one place. We track MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, SoundCloud, Wikipedia, Last.fm and many other web properties and sell context and recommendations around this data.
You recently launched your Next Big Sound Premier offering. How is this different from the free version?
Our Premier platform let’s people in the music industry see social media data, traffic to an artists’ website, traditional sales and radio information and P2P data all in one centralized dashboard for the first time. We offer an activity and event stream where we pull in blog & news mentions, chart appearances, and live performances so you can start to see what actions and events actually drive results. We also have a geographic and demographic application that let’s people see where their social media fans are located and even allowing them to click through to the individual fan’s profile page.
Any thoughts on where you guys might be going next, features you’ve been thinking of, etc?
When we first launched nextbigsound.com in August of 2009 it sparked thousands of industry conversations that coalesced into the Premier offering. We’re continuing to listen to our biggest users and earliest customers to prioritize what we build next. Song-level detail and more advanced geographic applications are some of the most heavily requested.
You guys are focused on mining data to figure out who’ll be the next big sound, but what’s the next big social network? What are some social sites or apps that you think are especially relevant right now?

Next Big Sound's Alex White
It’s not really a social network but we’ve noticed a lot more artists using Bandcamp as their “home” online and think they have built a great product. There is a lot of hype around geo-location and game dynamics. FourSquare sits right in between these two trends and is surging in popularity but for musicians the lions’ share of activity still occurs on the major social networks (Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, MySpace).
Are social connections really driving sales? Give us an example.
Social media activity is almost always a half-step ahead of sales meaning we see a spike in social music activity right before a bump in sales (see attached screen shot). It’s a much lower friction action to watch a band on YouTube, stream on MySpace, follow on Twitter but once all these smaller actions are aggregated you see that they foretell harder metrics like digital sales.
Easy Star All Stars are using NBS premiere with IODA sales activity integration. They are about to release a new album (Dubber Side of the Moon.) What advice do you have for them regarding their social media strategy before, during and after the release date?
Like most artists they probably have a marketing plan leading up to and supporting the release of the new album. If they aren’t measuring anything, how do they know which actions and events drive awareness and ultimately sales?
First the band should establish their baselines ahead of the album release marketing campaign – how many new plays, views, fans, comments and sales do they typically get each day? Then they should test the effectiveness of different strategies – is money more effective when spent on Facebook ads, Google Adwords or sending flyers to street teams in major cities? Leading up to the release they should be watching the social media activity and traffic to the website since the album isn’t available for purchase. After the release date they should monitor how well that social music activity and fan engagement translates to paid transactions.
Are there any flags they should be keeping an eye out for that would hint that they should change strategy?
Next Big Sound provides a results measurement platform where you can see what’s working, and often more importantly, what’s not working. If your numbers remain stable at your baseline level then you’re not experimenting enough and breaking through the noise. A flat line during a marketing campaign can often be as insightful as a spike.
Check out this look at Easy Star All-Stars premiere account analytics:

Many thanks to Alex for taking the time to talk to us. Next Big Sound Premier is currently offering a special discount for IODA rightsholders, details of which can be found on the Parters tab in the IODA Rightsholder Dashboard. We definitely suggest checking it out!








