Posts Tagged ‘music education communications’
[NEWS] New online communications & marketing courses for music education, community music, music therapy
A new online course has launched, to help people working in music education, community music, and music therapy to improve their skills in communications and marketing. The short course – the first of a series – guides individuals or teams through the steps they need to take to become clear on their priorities for…
Read More15 helpful and easy-to-use apps and tools for social media, communications & marketing
A few of the tools and apps that I use regularly in my work – useful for people responsible for communications, marketing, digital marketing, social media.
Read MoreThe #Mymusicaljourney Twitter campaign
Last month I ran a short Twitter campaign called #mymusicaljourney. I wanted to demonstrate a way of getting interest on social media that perhaps we don’t use enough in the music education/music for wellbeing sectors. It was also an experiment, as I wanted to test what worked, and what I could learn and pass on.…
Read MoreMarketing music lessons – why parents aren’t buying and how to change that -Part 2
Encouraging young people to take up music lessons – and their parents to part with the money – can seem like an uphill battle. This is part 2 of the series, see also Marketing music lessons – why parents aren’t buying and how to change that – part 1. Involve young people and parents The most…
Read MoreMarketing music lessons – why parents aren’t buying and how to change that – part 1 of 2
Encouraging more young people to take up music lessons – and their parents/carers to part with the money – can seem like an uphill battle. Perhaps it feels like something you’re powerless to control. Or maybe you don’t think it’s your role – particularly if you’re a music education hub in England without a peripatetic…
Read MoreHow to create and write an effective e-newsletter
If you want to communicate more effectively with the people you work with/for (whether they’re customers, fans, staff, participants or stakeholders), email newsletters are a great place to start. Write them well, and your audience will look forward to receiving them, value what you have to say, buy from you or get involved, and even…
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