April 29, 2025

Tips for Success | Part 2 – The Art of Entrepreneurship

So a while back I did a couple rants regarding some of my favorite misconceptions within the entertainment industry. As a busienss owner who has both generated millions as well as paid millions out to other service providers I have seen it all, so this is my attempt to set the record straight for all the upcoming future entrepreneurs in today’s music and entertainment industry.  There is a lot of room for great talent, but if you can’t understand the business or how to conduct business in today’s landscape then you will never be successful, no matter how talented. So please, take this with a grain of salt, and remember, I will be fine, this is for you guys out there who just don’t get it, the only person that will benefit from this advice is you!

Remember, there is no specific order here, maybe someday I will come back and organize these thoughts, but these came to me on the plane from LA to MIA overnight, enjoy.

  • Fail often
  • Create often
  • Stagnancy is your enemy
  • Work for free, often, if your work creates value you will be compensated in some way!
  • Work on your passion
  • Never begin a conversation with “How much will I be paid?”, EVER
  • If you create value in the marketplace you will be compensated as such in one way or another
  • Work with as many people as possible, many partnerships fail, but don’t be discouraged, out of those you will retain life long positive relationships
  • Be up front. Secrets will never help you in any way. Transparency at all times in all aspects of your business.
  • Graphic Designers-
    • Work for free doing projects that get your name out there and work on various sites, blogs, facebook.
    • Until people are knocking down your door to hand you money you have not created enough value to the marketplace.
    • Keep it up.
  • Video Creatives –
    • Work with as many artists as possible for free to get your product out there.
    • Create unique compensation agreements with artists (have them put an ad budget together for the video when its out instead of paying you, etc.)
    • Until people are calling you off the hook offering you top dollar for your services, you are not a professional. So don’t even think about charging professional prices
    • You will know when that point occurs
  • Artists –
    • Invest your money – Throw concerts, free concerts, parties, free music, give to fans
    • Work with as many people as possible
    • Fail often, it is the only way to learn
    • Until the phone starts ringing off the hook for bookings and verses you are not a professional. To become a professional you need to invest more money and time.
    • If you can not invest the money and the time then give up now and try to find something to do that aligns with your passion as well as allows you to find time to do music as a hobby, not a profession
    • You will know when people are demanding your music, only at this point are you a professional and you have created value and can charge anyone for anything
Anyways I guess the main point of this rant was that you must work for free to be an entrepreneur, just because you have a camera does not mean you have created value in the marketplace and can charge $100/hr for video work. Until you are offered money for your services you are not a professional and have not created the value to charge for your services.  This is why it takes thousands and thousands of hours of free work to make it in this game and any other business as a entrepreneur, its not easy.  If you are not willing to invest thousands of hours of uncompensated work you will not ever be a professional in this industry full of entrepreneurs.  Value is created only through hard work and experience and creating a portfolio that clearly shows your value, with complete transparency.  so get started now and fail as often as you can to eventually become a successful part of this industry!
My example: I worked for 3 years 12 hours per day minimum 7 days per week to get where I am today, for free, $0 pay, after I graduated with a 3.8 GPA from one of the top Entrepreneurship programs in the US with a B.S. degree.  During those 3 years we invested over 1 million dollars back into our business. This is what it takes to become mildly successful.  I still do free work developing new partnerships on a daily basis, and fail often at it.  So get out there and get started giving yourself away completely and fail as often and quickly as you can to hopefully become a success one day!

Top 5 Urban DJ Coalitions

dj-turntable-1024x768DJ Coalitions have always been a staple of the music industry, mostly for behind the scenes.  A record literally can NOT be broken to major airplay without the assistance of the DJs and by association, the DJ coalitions.  In today’s industry, the DJ is ever more important as a fragmented industry has to be unified by the DJs and major tastemakers to bring records to the masses like they once were.  The DJ represents all that is left of the traditional music industry, as power has shifted to the consumers from major labels, radio and distributors.

  1. Core DJs – The Core DJs are probably the most widely known DJ coalition in the world headed by national mixshow director Tony Neal. The Core DJ Retreat also represents an annual industry event that is a must attend.
  2. Coast 2 Coast DJs – Represent over 750 DJs that do mixtapes as well as the Coast 2 Coast All Star Radio DJs
  3. Hittmenn DJs – Highly influential group of DJs, mostly located in the south region now just expanded to Hittmenn West
  4. Bumsquad DJs – Large group of Radio DJs headed by Latin Prince
  5. Shadyville DJs – Shadyville DJs have a short but highly effective list of top DJ talent, the group is headed by DJ Whoo Kid of 50 Cent fame.

Also See:

  • Fleet DJs The FLEET DJS are an amazing mix of on air radio talent and mixtape gritty djs ready to break the next best artist in their city or in their hood. DJ Klassik and DJ Profulent started building their organization in early 2006 without any thought of it being a DJ crew.
  • RocHarder DJs – ROCHARDER DJ’S HEADED BY DJ T-ROC! http://www.rocharderdjs.com BROKE ALL THE SNAP RECORD’S.
  • Hood Hard DJs – Headed by DJ Aaries with the slogan “TEAMWORK Makes The DREAM WORK..!!”
  • Southern Style DJs
  • Slip N Slide DJs

A&R Uncut – What’s Your Gimmick?

whoareyou

If your initial response to the title question is “I don’t have one”, “I don’t need one” or even “I don’t want one”, then you should definitely reevaluate your goal to be successful in this business and consider a career checking vital signs or flipping burgers; because a gimmick is the second most important necessity in the path towards being a Star or even just a successful musician.  One of the most important things an artist can do is exploit a personal characteristic other than the service they provide (i.e. sing, rap etc.) to gain an advantage over the competition, a gimmick.

If you really take the time to observe all of your favorite artists and music’s biggest acts, they all have succumb to this task that many fear compromises the integrity of their creativity.  This is where you have to ask yourself whether you want to write and record music for your personal listening pleasure or whether you want to have thousands of fans and make a lasting career out of it.  If it makes you feel any better… you should know that understanding yourself as a person and a musician is really the only way that you can truly isolate this character that has earned many artists a cult following.  The ability to harness this characteristic, nurture it and know how to project it is merely an extension of your creativity and is actually a gift that separates the wannabe musicians from the true stars.

The average person has one or more personality traits or characteristics that separate them from other people.  It could be anything from your swag, to your voice or even your interesting sense of style.  For some artists it’s the characteristic about you that people actually hate.  For example, Kanye West exploited his arrogance and became the guy that people love to hate which drew attention to him and gave him an advantage over his competition (side note: need to know when to turn it off).  Another artist great at self-exploitation is Lady Gaga.  She exploits her performance skills and ability to be theatrical to stand out from other would-be pop stars in music.  We could look back to artists such as Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder.  Although both were extremely talented, their gimmick was that they were THAT talented and void of eyesight.  These exploits are what make people notice you in a room full of pianists playing the same piece.   Now to add credit to the above acts, they are extremely gifted musicians and at the end of the day it will always come back to the music, but your marketing and self promotion is the driving force to delivering this gift to the world.

How do you find your “Gimmick”?  Write a list of the things you most admire about yourself or the one thing that people point out about you all the time whether you like it or not.  For example, if everyone says “you are such a bitch” then that is probably you’re “Gimmick”.  It could be a physical attribute; rarely it is but could be.  But in most cases, your inner self dictates your outer being.  So maybe you are flamboyant and aggressive.  Find a way to express that in your music, your clothes and your performances.  Make sure your team understands and knows your “gimmick’.  Once you isolate this character hold onto it, be this character all day, at work, at home and in the bed.  If your gimmick is a superhero, sleep in your cape.  Use it all the time until it becomes second nature.  Your “Gimmick” needs to come naturally.

Understand that just because you are forcing your “gimmick” does not mean it is not natural.  Sometimes we spend more time suppressing who we are by trying to be who we are not because we want to fit in.  Everyone can spot a phony…so the worst thing you can do is try to swag jack.  Most of the unsuccessful artists or one hit wonders were just that because their swag was not convincing.  For example, a rapper I am closely familiar with released a record that went on to sell thousands of downloads and ringtones.  When he went to release his second album that revealed his true creative ability and his natural swag, it was rejected by the masses.  Yet, that was him at his best and pretty dope, if I say so myself.  Some artists go in for a quick save by recruiting a team of people to help identify their “gimmick” and come up with great ideas that would make it visible to others.  For example Rihanna went from being a colorful soft spoken Caribbean girl closely resembling Beyonce to this hard-core edgy chic that releases music that challenges her competition with every release.  She pulls it off because it was already there but it took people around her to draw it out and find a way to make it work.

So if you don’t know your “gimmick”, step away from the microphone… slowly.  Archive all of the songs you have recorded before you read this article.  Find yourself and start recording again.  Put it in everything you record.  If that means your songs become a fusion of hip hop, rock, punk and soul, push it until it feels right.  As a creative person your job is to be a bit crazy and eccentric, so recruit a sane person to organize the mess you created.  Trust you will be amazed with what you discover is the real you.