Home › Forums › General Questions › Thumbnail libraries vs others
- This topic has 7 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 5 months ago by Desire_Inspires.
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June 9, 2015 at 3:07 am #21848andrejParticipant
Libraries where clients hear the music before reading description on track they are interested(I call it tumbnail for lack of better name) or the libraries where clients read track description before even listening to the track ?
What sells better for you or where the trend go,does the tumbnail favors better music composer vs better music composer sellsman in the latter .
e.g.in client might might not even bother to listen to a fantastic and authentic piano flamenco track because music description is writen poorly since the composer speaks litlle english.Thus client misses and composer too.
On the contrary in tumbnail scenario the client hears the music first and if he likes it ,doesn’t care what desciptin says.
Would love to hear some opinions or if anyone have given a thought to this.June 9, 2015 at 6:37 am #21852andrejParticipantSorry my grammar ,I meant Thumbnail and by that those libraries that shows the tracks in small icons across the screen horizontally and vertically in thumbnail icon with waveform and name of the track below e.g.Pond5,Tunefruit etc.
June 9, 2015 at 8:13 pm #21861Desire_InspiresParticipantI don’t think either is particularly important.
June 10, 2015 at 12:57 am #21862EdouardoParticipantOn the contrary DI, I think Andrej question is quite relevant. Basically he is wondering about the approach of the customer when looking for a track.
imho, Andrej, both approach exist: case A: Listening to select + case B: reading to listen.
Case A will mostly be an amator that made a nice YT video and is looking for inspiration to what music might fit his vision. Case B will be someone who knows what he is looking for. In that situation, keywords and description will be important. Probably mostly keywords as the potential client will make a search first.
In terms of the grammar, I wouldn’t worry. Libraries are not dating sites! As long as the description is understandable. Just make sure your keywords are spelled correctly so that your track appears in searches!
June 12, 2015 at 5:27 am #21901andrejParticipantThe idea is that when client enters the keywords he gets to the page with
the possible candidates he is going to be biased by the discriptions of the tracks so he is going to make different selection for listening unless of course he listens one after the other from the beginning of the page regardless of the name and description and that seem less probable.
In the case of what I call thumbnail library he is only biased by the name
so I guess there is more chance for the better track to be selected versus better described track.
Maybe be too much psychology in this but still got me wonderingJune 12, 2015 at 8:21 am #21902Desire_InspiresParticipantThe best advice I can offer is to ask some customers what they prefer. Customers know what they want.
Customers hold the answers to these questions because they are the end users and purchasers of the music.
Composers can only guess without information.
June 12, 2015 at 11:51 am #21904AdviceParticipantThere is no question that if an end user types in some keywords and a bunch of tracks turn up, the titles and descriptions will have a big influence on which ones he/she listens to. That’s especially true for tracks beyond the first 1-2 listed. There’s a better chance the person will listen to the first ones but then become more selective and filter by what they read.
I don’t think you need to ask any customers (if you even could). Just think about human behavior and your own behavior when you go searching for something on the web.
June 12, 2015 at 1:37 pm #21905Desire_InspiresParticipantI don’t think you need to ask any customers (if you even could). Just think about human behavior and your own behavior when you go searching for something on the web.
Everybody behaves differently.
But no worries. You guys will figure it out.
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