Test Product

If you dreamed that your WordPress Artist Website would bring you of hundreds of quality visitors you did not dream alone. Like most artists though you probably discovered the hard way that it wasn’t so easy

Artist SEO Success Guide for WordPress
$97.00 $47.00
Black Friday Sale 48% off. Ends Sunday midnight.
Give us 21 days and we’ll teach you how to quickly and easily bring search engine traffic to your WordPress Artist Website. Even if you don’t have a clue where to begin.

“I gur newsletter and I have a website. I have a webmaster, but he tells me that the only way I can get noticed is to join hundreds of sites and spend a couple of hours every night chatting and posting on each of them. I have joined many, but it didn’t seem to make any difference. Is there another way? Can you market my website

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

6 Reasons Why Your Artist Website Should Use WordPress

Thinking about a new artist website? Two weeks ago 1stwebdesigner featured a great article titled, “Six Solid Reasons Why You Should Use WordPress”. We think that’s a great message and its just as true (if not more so) for artist websites as it is for the Joe Schmo small business.
Lets start with 1stwebdesigners 6 Reason Titles and we’ll add our 2c worth on why WordPress makes SO MUCH sense for artists! Oh – and just to be clear we’re talking here about the version of WordPress you host yourself (wordpress.org), not the hosted version (wordpress.com).

Here goes…
Flexible Open Source
In a nutshell this means that it uses a flexible open platform and that there are literally thousands of developers all over the world constantly making improvements and extensions which benefit you. It’s happening while you sleep! The framework is also free – you can put up a WordPress website with a number

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Andy Warhol: 12 Interesting Facts

Andy Warhol was a 1960s pop icon famous for his extravagant persona and attention grabbing artworks such as his famous Campbell’s Soup painting. Warhol was one of the central players in a powerful wave of art and music that swept over our planet in the 1960s and 70s – looking into his life gives a fascinating snapshot of this period.
Warhol in Heliczer's 1966 underground film, "Joan Of Arc"

Andy Warhol’s birth name was Andrew Warhola. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1928, his parents, Ondrej and Julia were immigrants from Miková in northeastern Slovakia.
His very first movie was called ‘Sleep’ and it was 6 hour long never ending masterpiece of his friend sleeping. Nine people attended premiere. Seven of them stayed and watched the movie. Two of them left within the first hour. He created at least 60 movies including Kiss, Blowjob, Eat, Shoulder, Couch, Face, Kitchen, Horse, Suicide, Drink, Closet, Sunset,

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

smARTist 2011: Ready To Turn Making Art into Making A Living?

Sign up for SmARTistWe’re very proud to announce that we have been invited to give a keynote presentation at the upcoming 2011 smARTist Telesummit. Do you know about SmARTist? If you’re serious about making a living from your art and are ready to take the next big step forward SmARTist  may be your dream come true!

The brain-child of Art Entrepreneur Ariane Goodwin, Ed.D., smARTist is the only professional-development art-career conference for visual artists that reaches around the globe – artists from more that 16 countries and 38 U.S. states have attended.

Currently in its fifth year this incredibly popular and successful virtual telesummit is structured to replicate a traditional brick and mortar conference and is the first such summit to include leading authorities from both inside and outside the art world

Are you and emerging artist? smARTist is geared toward YOU and you should seriously consider attending! Listen to a couple of testimonials from previous seminar participants:

I can’t believe the people you collected! I can’t believe the value! You know, if anyone is serious about trying to make it as an artist — particularly in this financial climate — it seems to me they’ve got to get the information you are offering or they’re just swimming in a storm — you and your crew are the lighthouse!   —Robert Girandola

I’m so glad I registered for the Telesummit. What a wonderful experience to have all this expertise and wisdom available to me “live” without having to leave home. Before I even registered for the smARTist Telesummit, I had dedicated 2010 as the year of putting myself on the map to financial success. smARTist has provided me an incredible springboard to do exactly that! —Tom Hlas

This week has been amazing…I don’t remember the last time I was so motivated and inspired. I have gotten so much from the keynote speaker’s presentations, the pre-events, even the panel days, and I am saddened that tomorrow will be the last day. Thank you so much for the time and effort that you have all put into this amazing resource for artists. I am feeling ready to re-emerge in my new locale with my confidence, inspiration, skills, and vision strong. —Julie Cooper Young

Sounds good yes? It is and if you’re serious about turning “making art” into “making a living”, smARTist may be one of the best value investments you ever make.

Want to learn more?

Sign-up to receive more information about smARTist and to be notified of the one-time-only early-bird special discount.

We’ll be there – will you? Click on the image below for more info on smARTist:

Sign Up For SmARTist 2011

FTC Disclosure: We are a proud partner of smARTist and highly recommend its value for emerging and mid-career artists! If you visit the SmARTist website via any of the links in this article and subsequently decide to purchase and participate in the telesummit we will receive a commission on your purchase.

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Art Marketing Lessons From Milarepa

Artists can learn a lot from the life story of the great Tibetan Saint Milarepa. Do you know his story?

I first became aware of Jetsun Milarepa when I read The Golden Dream, a fictionalized account of his life story by Heather Hughes Calero. It is a fantastic read although I believe the book is out of print. I thoroughly recommend it.

The start of Milarepa’s life story goes like this (borrowing from Wikipedia):

Milarepa was born in the village of Kya Ngatsa – also known as Tsa – in Gungthang province of western Tibet to a prosperous family. He was named Mila Thöpaga (Thos-pa-dga’), which means “A joy to hear.”

When his father died, Milarepa’s uncle and aunt took all of the family’s wealth. At his mother’s request, Milarepa left home and studied sorcery. While his aunt and uncle were having a party to celebrate the impending marriage of their son, he took his revenge by summoning a giant hail storm to demolish their house, killing 35 people, although the uncle and aunt are supposed to have survived. The villagers were angry and set off to look for Milarepa, but his mother got word to him and he sent a hailstorm to destroy their crops.

So, as you can see, Milarepa was off to something of a bad start in his life! But he was aware enough to know that he needed to take responsibility for his misdeeds and make amends. How did he do this? In the story as told by Hughes-Calero, Milarepa set out to find a spiritual teacher and eventually found himself under the tutelage of the lama Marpa.

Marpa was a tough teacher and focused Milarepa’s training on building houses made with large stones. This was heavy exhausting work, especially for one man and especially given the harsh tibetan weather. Marpa was relentless! – but he also didn’t give up on Milarepa.

All told, Milarepa had to build 13 houses with his bare hands, collecting all the materials himself. Marpa would look at each one and find something that wasn’t right and then Milarepa would have to start all over again. Many times he was so proud of his latest building achievement and the lessons he had learned. But Marpa would again tell him that it wasn’t right and to start again. How incredibly frustrating! Can you imagine how he felt?

Eventually Milarepa did learn the lesson that Marpa was determined to teach him and the last house was completed! There are a number of opinions on how this happened but a general consensus is that Milarepa had surrendered his ego and balanced the karma he had created in the earlier part of his life. He had now achieved an elevated state of enlightenment. Some say that he is the only Tibetan Lama to have achieved this in a single lifetime of training.

Milarepa went on to become one of Tibet’s most famous Yogis and poets and he is revered by thousands today.

So – what can an artist or an art marketeer learn from the life of Milarepa? Here are 5 things that come to mind:

  1. There is a good chance that your life is a lot easier than Milarepa’s – so feel happy and celebrate what you have!
  2. Realize that you have to take responsibility for your life and your art career success.
  3. Find yourself a good art marketing coach – a “Marpa of Art Marketing!” – someone who can demonstrate the kind of mastery you want to achieve. Do what they say.
  4. When you’re feeling tired and can’t go on, ask yourself: “Do I feel like I’ve completed 13 houses yet?” If not, keep going – Milarepa did and he achieved something truly great – and so can you!
  5. Surrender your ego. If something isn’t working don’t hang on to it. Let it go and start again. Start again 13 times if you need to. Just do it, learn what does work, and do more of that.

You will then have achieved Art Marketing Enlightenment!

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

SEO For Artists: Share Google’s Love For Art!

Lovers ~ Pablo Picasso

Lovers ~ Pablo Picasso

If you’ve been reading recent art marketing articles regularly over the last year you may have noticed an occasional minor clash of ideas on the topic of Search Engine Optimization (SEO) for Artists. I confess to being one of the culprits in these sparring matches!

My experience from working with clients at Beautiful Artist Websites is that SEO IS very important for artists – just as it is similarly important for any modern business wanting to increase its exposure to potential buyers. It is also a topic that is not well understood by artists and this is why I took several months out of my schedule to write The Artist SEO Success System.

In this post I’ll explain why SEO is important for artists and precisely where it delivers its true value. In Part 2, I’ll give you a brief introduction to the three foundations of SEO so that you can get started on optimizing your own artist website.

So why is SEO so important for artists?

First of all, lets demolish a myth or two.

Many artists say that SEO is a waste of time because Word-of-Mouth marketing is more powerful. Let me say that from my experience nothing else compares with word-of-mouth – a referral from a happy client or partner is undoubtedly the “gold standard” in marketing. It comes with an instant level of trust and positions you much closer to closing a sale.

But if that is the case why do other businesses engage in so much extra marketing and advertising activity? Why would they do that if word-of-mouth is so powerful?

The answer is because they want to grow their business as much as possible (as should you) and they recognize that if they only use word-of-mouth they are missing many potential clients. Do you want to miss out on clients?

Search Engine Marketing is part of what we call the “marketing attraction phase”. This is where you attract potential clients who generally don’t know about you at all. They don’t know your name – they only know that they are looking for art of a certain style. They could be individuals or they could be art dealers or art licensing reps. The point is – they want what you have but they aren’t connected to anyone who knows you so they will never hear about you through word-of-mouth.

The “attraction phase” can include a number of different marketing methods including SEO, Social Networking, Snail Mail marketing to galleries and dealers, networking with local arts organizations, galleries, etc. The optimum mix depends on your art and personality.

You should also be clear that the main goal of any attraction-phase marketing technique, including SEO, is not to create an instant sale. This is where artists often get confused and disappointed. Instant sales do happen, especially in the lower price-points – but what you really want is to lead them into the next phases of your art marketing process where you build relationships and create a customer for life. That is what you should be aiming for!

Just for your reference, the phases of our art marketing model are:

1. The Attraction Phase
2. The WOW Phase
3. The Relationship-building Phase
4. The Sales-Close Phase

You can read more about these phases in our free report, “7 Steps To Sell Art Online“.

But lets get back to SEO and some hypothetical examples of how it might help an artist commercially:

Gillian is an oil painter who lives in Northern New Mexico and paints landscapes, many of which are focused close to the town of Abiquiu. (Note: If you haven’t had the opportunity to visit this town you should mark it on your list of places to go – it is right near Ghost Ranch and Georgia O’keeffe’s desert home – just gorgeous landscape!)

Gillian has a website which she has optimized for search engines. During that process she discovered that many people google “Abiquiu Paintings” and “Ghost Ranch Paintings” and so she optimized her artist website to rank highly for those phrases.

Gillian has opened the door to several big potential opportunities:

- A gallery director scouting for new work of Gillian’s style and subject matter may very likely google “Abiquiu Paintings” and “Ghost Ranch Paintings” as part of their search strategy. When Gillian’s website ranks on Page 1, it means they can find her and look at her work. If Gillian’s work is great and her website does its job she may get a call from the gallery director. This is priceless attraction-marketing for free!

- Similarly, an art licensing rep may be looking for work similar to Gillian’s for a new line of home decorations at Target Stores. Search engines would be part of their strategy.

- Finally, tourists who have visited the area and fallen in love with it often get home and realize that they really want a piece of art to remind them of their experience at Ghost Ranch. What do you think might be one strategy they might use? Search engines – of course!

Now, as I mentioned above, search engines are just one of several attraction-phase marketing techniques you can use – but they are very powerful. So why would you want to miss out on the potential business with a website that doesn’t rank highly for the phrases applicable to your work that are heavily searched? Why would you risk missing out on a serious percentage of your potential new visitors?

You wouldn’t right? That would be plain crazy! But that is exactly what MOST artists are doing with their websites! And the most insane part of this is that SEO is not really that difficult to master, IF you know what to do.

Today I’ve covered WHY search engines are an important marketing tool for artists and WHERE they deliver they strength. In Part 2 we’ll discuss the 3 foundations of Search Engine Optimization to get you started.

If you’re serious about more success with your website you can also check out our “Artist SEO Success System” – a Complete 21 day program to comprehensively SEO your artist website. Created exclusively for artists it lays out a complete plan and can save you $thousands in lost time.

Editors Note: This article (written by us) was first published in Fine Art Views in October 2010.

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Get The 411 On Twitter!

Yes, you are probably well aware that I love Twitter.  But now I am taking 70 minutes to explain why.

I have combined 18 months of experience using Twitter and all the questions I get from people about how to decide if it will help them in their business.

The audio isn’t specifically for artists – but for any business owner who might want to get more insight than they are getting in newspapers and magazines.

SO, in the vein of Twitter I’ll keep this blog post short – if you or anyone you know wants to learn more about what can be accomplished with Twitter for business and some tips to make the most of your time and effort, please check out all the details here!

And of course, if you are on Twitter – follow and chat with me!

Tara Reed

About The Author

Guest Author Tara Reed has been licensing her art since 2004, working with over 40 different manufacturers in that time. Her designs can be found on everything from fabric to dishes to dish towels. Gift wrap to garden flags and much, much more.

In 2008 she began sharing her expertise in art licensing with artists wanting to learn more about the industry. With a degree in marketing and background in sales, Tara Reed has created the art and built her business from the ground up.

Learn more about Tara and her art business at Art Licensing Info

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

SEO For Artists: Share Google’s Love For Art! Pt 2

The Lovers (Section) ~ Paul Gauguin 1902

The Lovers (Section) ~ Paul Gauguin 1902

In Part 1 we explained why Search Engines are important for artists and the role they play in the “Attraction phase” of your online art marketing. In this post we’ll look more closely at strategies to be successful with search engines.

Most artist’s websites (most websites in general in fact) rank poorly in search engine results. If your website doesn’t show up on the first page you’re missing opportunities. If it’s not on the second page you’re basically wasting your time with search engines.

So, how do you rank highly? Here’s what we’ve learned in our 6 years of designing artist websites:

The Major Search Engine Traffic Success Elements

Here are the three major keys to ranking highly in search engine results:

Optimized Website Structure: Your website must be built and structured such that search engine robots can easily find and index the information on the site. Basically it must be easy to read and understand and should where possible avoid elements that are invisible to search engines. Simple also works much better for human visitors – the worst artist websites from a human perspective are almost always the ones which are overly complex or clever rather than simple and visual!

Optimized Keyword Selection: Your website must include the appropriate words and phrases to describe you and your style of art. These “keywords” and “Keyword phrases” need to be placed in the most powerful sections of your site. In addition, it’s important to ensure that the keywords you use to describe your art are the same as those being used by people searching for your style of art in search engines. There is no point in optimizing your website for terms that no one is searching on – that is like advertising beef in a town of vegetarians!

While we are on this keyword topic it is relevant and important to mention niches. At the core of SEO and of any serious marketing effort lies the concept of your niche. It is very difficult to be commercially successful as an artist if you simply describe yourself as an “Artist”. On the other hand, if you can tightly define exactly what sort of artist you are and the style of work you create it will help you significantly. It helps because your message stands out to buyers who have an interest in your style of work. The saying, “Get rich in a niche” is just as true for art as it is for any other business and you need to embrace it and use it in all your art marketing activities. Being able to describe your niche is central to success with choosing SEO keywords.

Optimized PageRank: Search engines must decide that your website has a high “Relevance” to the search term. To a large extent this is a measure of the quantity and quality of incoming links (from other websites) to your website. Just as in human social situations our importance is judged by the number of our friends and their degree of social power, so too is your website ranked by the company it keeps!

These three factors  work together to create a “sweet spot” of maximum search engine rankings. Think of it as a recipe for a cake with 3 ingredients. If you have all three in place and bake at the right temperature for a sufficient time you can be fairly confident of a superb afternoon tea! If on the other hand you miss an ingredient the cake may not rise or it maybe it will taste really bad – not so good for business.

What we have noticed with SEO is that various websites will come and go from the page 1 search engine results. The sites that stay there invariably have all three foundations solidly in place so it really is worthwhile to do it properly if you want consistent results.

Sounds simple enough doesn’t it? The truth is that it is quite simple, but it does take commitment on the part of the artist to do the research work and get the website optimization done. But then commitment and effort are what separates commercially successful artists from the rest.

If you are one of those seriously committed to success you have some options with how to implement SEO. You can research your own plan and spend thousands of dollars of your valuable studio time and you might be on the right path. You could also consider our Artist SEO Success System, a 21 day program which takes the guess-work out of exactly what to do and can get you solidly on the path to search engine ranking success. At $97 it really is unbelievably good value and we have a bunch of very happy artist customers who say so. Here are just a couple:

Daniel – Thank-you for your Artist SEO guide and workbook. I have spent a small fortune learning SEO from various experts. Your book does an excellent job of distilling the most important parts down to step by step actionable tasks. Wish I had found you first, it would have saved me thousands. Awesome value. Tim ONeill, Nebraska

As an creator of educational materials and online courses (in my day job, I have a Masters in Instructional Design) I am totally impressed with the guide and workbook. It is so well written and thought out and CLEAR! I can tell you guys did a ton of work… Bravo! …. Kristen Hoard, California

Thanks for taking the time to read and absorb this series on SEO. There is never enough great art visible in the world and I hope that you will make use of some of these concepts to improve your marketing and get your art out there where it belongs – seen and sold!

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Unsubscribe Me From Your Stupid List Please!

That is the message that greeted me in an email I received earlier this week. It was 6am and I had just made myself a cup of green tea and was starting my day in an exuberant mood as I reviewed emails. The cause of this this terse little response was an email we sent out promoting the smARTist Telesummit. This is an event which we really believe in and in 2011 we are invited Keynote speakers.

I’m normally fairly thick skinned on the odd occasion someone unsubscribes from one of our email lists – but this time I felt different. This was a person who had received some really great free information from us that would really help them to promote their art career if they actually used it. I wouldn’t have minded if they had simply clicked the “unsubscribe” button displayed visibly in the email – but to go the extra step of adding a rude little snipe like that really surprised me.

This got me wondering – do some artists really think that they should get everything free? Is it really too offensive to them that amongst all the free articles and information we and many other great art marketing and art career websites publish that we occasionally promote something we believe in that has a price tag? Surely not! But apparently so!

So, just for the record, here are a few thoughts from me on this topic. In a perfect world I would probably spend a good part of my weeks writing art marketing articles and books and teaching art marketing seminars. I have a genuine interest in helping artists bridge the gap that often exists between art and business and helping them to bring more beauty and creativity into the world. This is a world that really needs it!

That said, I and all the other art marketing writers out there run businesses – not charities. We have to run our businesses successfully because we need to eat and support our loved ones and communities. Money may not buy happiness but you can’t do a whole lot in this world without it. And I for one am several decades past being able to sleep on the sofa at my Mum and Dad’s place!

So, amongst all the volumes of free information we and many others provide, occasionally we promote products and services we believe in that are not free – and we make no apologies. If you as an artist are offended by a commercial offer then by all means feel free to unsubscribe. But before you do, think about what this might be telling you about your own relationship with art career success – because if you are uncomfortable with receiving an occasional promotion from us, how are you going to feel comfortable about asking for the sale with a new art collector? And you most certainly will have to do that!

Money is not a god to be worshiped but it is a big part of the world we live in. If you are uncomfortable with it, then it it will almost certainly feel uncomfortable with you. Think about that!

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Ask Art Marketing Secrets: Open For Questions!

Have a great art marketing question that has been perplexing you or holding you back from that stellar success you dream of? Now is your chance to ask! Our new department, Ask Art Marketing Secrets is now open for business and we’re looking forward to answering your questions.

Do you have questions or concerns about artist websites, email marketing, search engines for artists, social networking for artists, hosting open studios, building relationships with collectors online or offline, closing sales, selling art online, or any other art marketing, art business or art sales topic? Now is your chance to ask.

In most cases we’ll be able to give you some great guidance based on our own experiences selling art and working with clients at Art Marketing Secrets and Beautiful Artist Websites. If we don’t have an answer, we’ll do our very best to find someone who does.

If we think your question will help a group of artists we will post an answer it in our Ask Art Marketing Secrets Section and we’ll link back to your artist website, if you have one.

To ask your questions, simply visit our Ask Art Marketing Secrets page, fill in the form, and submit. Easy!

Note: We don’t guarantee that all questions will be answered. Our focus is on topics that will benefit artists who are serious about building art business success!

Read

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment