Vivogig Uses Fan Photos to Get Fans More Engaged in Musicians’ Shows
Bands and musical artists have used photos from concerts as promotional items for years. However, getting good pictorial content from gigs can cost a lot of money and require a lot of resources for artists, especially if a major label doesn’t back them. Bands need a paid photographer to get the content and need to put up on their website or across social media. Cool product Vivogig wants to take the effort out of this process by allowing bands an easy way to use their fans best photos for promotional and marketing content. Fans download the Vivogig app to their phone and upload their gig photos to a band’s profile, where other users can vote on and rate their photographs. This system creates competition between fans to upload the best photos and get their content featured on the app. Competition like this ensures that Vivogig only features the best quality fan photos on a band’s profile page. Fans who use the app but have trouble with their phone’s camera may need smartphone computer repair to fix the issue.
Vivogig has a unique marketing model. While fans are the ones who interact with the app mainly and upload their photos to bands and artists’ profiles, Vivogig actually markets directly at musicians rather than fans. Vivogig encourages bands to claim their Vivogig profiles officially and become active on the app. In theory, this gets bands and artists to engage their fans and ask them to download the Vivogig app and post more content on it. This could essentially turn every active artist on Vivogig into a spokesperson for the brand.
Bands do not only benefit from fans getting their gig photos featured and shared on other social media, but also from the Vivogig photo widget that they can add to their websites. The widget takes the highest rated photos from an artist’s Vivogig profile and creates a continuous stream of content for their website. This acts as a promotional tool for bands active on Vivogig.
Vivogig is currently only available on the Apple App Store. This means anyone who has technical trouble with the app will require Apple tech support.
About RESCUECOM:
RESCUECOM provides computer repair and computer support, 24/7: Meeting every tech support need including data recovery, virus removal, networking, wireless services, and computer support for all brands of hardware and software. For computer support or information on products, services, or computer repair, visit https://www.rescuecom.com or call 1-800-RESCUE-PC.
For More Information, Contact:
David Milman
CEO
david@rescuecom.com
1-315-882-1100
Filed under: iPhone apps, startups