Audio By Carbonatix
A tech consultant, Kobby Spiky Nkrumah has described data as the new currency for the music business.
According to him, musicians and their management need to understand their data to enable them to use it effectively.
He lamented, “The creative industry in Ghana isn’t leveraging the plethora of digital opportunities available.”
He was speaking at a seminar organised by the Musicians Union of Ghana (MUSIGA) on Friday, September 2, 2022.
The seminar was a Music in Africa Live Project supported by the Federal Foreign Office, Siemens Stiftung, and Goethe Institut.
According to the tech expert, if creatives mine their data effectively, they can be able to monetize their digital platforms effectively.
Spiky Nkrumah who also hosts Geek Squad on Joy FM advised participants to think global for their careers and advised them on how to use the various social media platforms.
"This includes when to post and what strategies to use for each platform.
He noted that “A good strategy can move your from coins to cash.”
Another resource person at the seminar, Prof. Emmanuel Osei Akyeampong, a strategy and brand expert and lecturer with GIMPA, told the participants that their brand equity will determine their worth in the industry.
He advised them to pay special attention to their brand values since that is what will determine their longevity.
Referring to artistes such as the Tagoe Sisters who were at the seminar and Bessa Simons, acting president of MUSIGA, he noted that it is because they are true to the brand values that they are still relevant in the music industry.
Prof. Akyeampong also took participants through the process of building and maintaining their brands, the tangibles that will manifest their brands and the intangibles that will underpin their brands.
These include the quality of their brands and the emotional benefits their listeners and fans can derive from them.
In his presentation, Ahuma Bosco Ocansey, Director of Communications and Special Projects with MUSIGA and General Manager of Ahotor 92.3 FM took participants through a journey on the history of the music business and the various key developments in the industry.
He then zoned into the opportunities presented by the internet and how to leverage those opportunities.
The acting president of MUSIGA, Bessa Simons in his welcome address expressed the Union’s appreciation to the Music in Africa Foundation for their support for the programme.
He noted,” Today, the music industry has changed so much from when some of us embarked on our careers nearly 50 years ago. In those days, the music business was different.
"With a good demo, you knew you could get a producer, and some front money and they would do the rest for you. If your song was good, you were on to a good time.
"These days, the business has changed. From your bedroom, you can distribute your music to various online stores, build your fanbase on social media, play online shows like we were doing during the Covid lockdown and you can be making some money.”
Present at the seminar were representatives of the Union from Eastern, Central and the Volta Regions.
Others included S.K Agyemang, National Treasurer; Chizzy Wailer, National Organizer and Rev. Dr Thomas Yawson, all national executives. Also present were Greater Accra Regional executives including Ras Caleb Appiah-Levi, chairman; Elizabeth Tagoe, deputy chairperson; Alex Odoi, Welfare Officer and Bright Quaye aka Joe Wizzy, organizer all of Greater Accra MUSIGA.
Latest Stories
-
Ketu North MP to award new classroom projects
14 minutes -
ECG announces temporary power curtailment in Volta, Oti
19 minutes -
‘We are coming after you’ – Bono Minister to cocoa smugglers
22 minutes -
COCOBOD anti-smuggling unit arrests four suspects, impounds over 100 bags of beans
25 minutes -
Vendors commend GAWU for creating market access at trade fair
29 minutes -
Afadzato South rice farmers appeal for urgent remedies to prevent post-harvest loss
32 minutes -
Congo launches $100m US-backed mining guard to secure sites
59 minutes -
Lack of rainfall raises fears for Ivory Coast cocoa crop
1 hour -
French coastguard rescues more than 100 migrants crossing English Channel
1 hour -
IS claims responsibility for Nigeria attack that killed 29 people
2 hours -
Ghana moves forward with plans for new national airline
3 hours -
Terror trial to begin for man accused of plotting attack on Taylor Swift concert
4 hours -
Taylor Swift files to trademark voice and image after AI concerns
4 hours -
Man pleads guilty to murder 2 decades after death of Run DMC’s Jam Master Jay
5 hours -
Why Spotify has no button to filter out AI music
5 hours