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6 Tips For Improving Your Black Friday Sales

November is here, which means the Christmas shopping season is officially underway. There may still be a few weeks before Thanksgiving, but that shouldn’t stop you from preparing for what could be the most profitable period for online sales you experience all year. Black Friday happens on November 27, and today we’ve prepared a series of tips to ensure your holiday sales happen without issue. Some will seem obvious, but no point should be overlooked. Every step outlined below will help streamline your business, improve shipping speed, and – if you’re lucky – bring in a few additional customers.

Check your inventory. Twice.

Your goal with holiday sales should be to liquidate as much of the merchandise you have in stock as possible while still making a healthy profit on each product sold. Before you can do this to the best of your abilities you need to know what you have available, and how much of it is in stock. Running out of something during your holiday sale will cause headaches for everyone, and that goes double if you run out of something because you forgot to check your inventory prior to launching your sale. The back and forth required to straighten out orders that cannot be fulfilled may cause you to lose future sales, as well as those you are forced to cancel. Prevent this mess from ever happening and do inventory first. Do it twice, in fact, and ask someone else to check your work.

Promote your entire sale, as well as individual items.

You want people to use your discounts to buy more than they usually would, but often those attempting to promote a store-wide sale forget the impact that promoting key items one at a time can have on consumers. You should still mention store-wide discounts, of course, but you should also make room to highlight individual items. If you’re offering 25% off everything online, you should promote the sale as how it impacts items like shirts or vinyl. Create images for Instagram and other networks that highlight how the discount impacts the cost of single items, that way people can more easily understand what a great deal you are giving them. Likewise, you can use Twitter to promote various items and their price after discounts throughout the holiday weekend.

Speaking of promotion, think about paying for it.

I’m about to say something most artists hate to hear: Paying for promoted posts on Facebook and Twitter can have a positive impact on your reach, as well as your overall sales. It would be wonderful if this were not the case, and that those who could not afford paid promotion on social networks saw their sales work just as well, but years of research has made it clear that is not the case. Thankfully, the cost of entry into paid promotions is low. For as little as five dollars you can have a guaranteed reach to hundreds, if not thousands of people who have previously enjoyed your music enough to give you a Like/Follow online. Whether or not they take advantage of the message being conveyed will depend on how you choose to present yourself, but at least you know your efforts are reaching those who are most likely to jump on them.

Create specific Twitter search streams for particular items you sell.

This one is a bit more time-consuming than other tips, but it can help you bring in a lot of new consumers who may have otherwise not checked your store. There are numerous tools that allow you to create and save Twitter search streams. Find one you like and use it to track people tweeting about shopping/looking for things like ‘new vinyl’ or ‘cool band t-shirts.’ It’s likely these people already have an artist or genre in mind when they send these messages, but you can still reply with links to your store and music. If they don’t respond, oh well. If they do, you’ve got a potential new consumer/fan.

Make the most of SEO

We’ve talked about this before, but keywords are becoming increasingly important when it comes to how people find your content online. Use a tool such as the Google Keyword tool to better understand how your customers are searching, then modify your own store to reflect what you have learned. It is important to know which keywords are mostly used during the holidays, such as ‘sales,’ ‘top gifts,’ ‘cyber Monday,’ and ‘black Friday.’

Make sure everything is working before promoting your sale.

This one may seem obvious, but every year there are a handful of musicians who see their site, or at least parts of their site, crash amidst the sudden upswing in view brought on by the holiday shopping season. Before you push your sale live, make sure every item on your store is properly listed and that every sale is working correctly. If there is a code word needed, make sure you test it out prior to sharing it online.

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How To Turn Off Your Apple Music Auto-Renewal As First Wave Of Free Trials Expire

Three months passed pretty quick, eh?

Tonight, September 30, marks the end of the free trial period for the first wave of Apple Music users. Those who signed up the first day the streaming service became available will have to decide in the coming hours if they want to keep their subscription or cancel, and those who signed up in the days after launch may want to start considering their options as well. An Apple Music subscriptions costs $9.99 per month, or $14.99 per month for a family subscription for up to six people (which requires iCloud Family Sharing). This is comparable to the cost of Spotify ($10 per month, $4.99 for students), as well as Rdio ($10 per month, which includes an offline listening mode), but doesn’t necessarily make Apple Music the better choice. That decision will likely be based largely on user preference, so we won’t waste any time trying to sway you one way or another.

If you weigh your renewal options and decide Apple Music is not for you, follow these simple steps to ensure you subscription ends when your free trial expires:

1) Open Apple Music

2) Tap the Account icon in the upper left corner of the app

3) Tap on View Apple ID

4) Select Manage under Subscriptions

5) Turn the slider next to Automatic Renewal to Off.

6. Confirm your cancellation

7. Once confirmed, your account will stay active until your current trial/month comes to an end.

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Haulix Basics: How To Prevent Promos From Ending Up In Your Spam Folder

One of the top complaints we see from journalists and clients alike is that, from time to time, a promo will end up in a spam folder rather than someone’s inbox. We have provided many people with a solution through support emails, but recently realized a post here would probably cut down on the amount of inquiries we receive on this topic.

So why do Haulix promos sometimes end up in my spam folder?

To be completely honest, we do not know with 100% certainty what causes a promo to be directed to spam instead of a person’s inbox. Google’s Gmail email service contains a spam filter that tries to identify undesirable messages, but those efforts often catch messages that are not spam in the process. A message caught in the spam filter is sent to the spam folder instead of your inbox. You can whitelist email addresses in Gmail if you never want Gmail to categorize them as spam. Gmail will send emails from the white-listed email addresses directly to your inbox, even if the spam filter would match them. You can also whitelist entire domains or whitelist emails with specific subjects or phrases.

How do I whitelist something?

It’s relatively easy to whitelist an email, and in a few simple steps you can ensure all future Haulix promos arrive in your inbox. Login to your email account and…

1. Click the “Create a Filter” link to the right of the search box at the top of the Gmail Web page.

2. Type an email address into the “From” box. If you want to whitelist all email addresses on a domain you can type “@haulix.com” instead of an email address replacing “haulix.com” with the domain.

3. Click the “Test Search” button to see which emails would have been white-listed.

4. Click the “Next Step” button.

5. Click the “Never Send it to Spam” checkbox and click “Create Filter.”

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Haulix Basics: Updating Your Contact Information (Without Sending One-Hundred Emails)

Very few things in life are permanent, and email addresses are not one of them. As you grow and develop, jumping from job to job, you will slowly accrue a variety of emails that will often complicate how people get ahold of you. The chaos this creates will only make your job as a writer more difficult, but thanks to our state of the art profile system those headaches can now be a thing of the past.

We understand that everyone in music is busy. Journalists often have numerous deadlines to meet, not to mention second jobs. Publicists, on the other hand, have the seemingly endless task of doing everything in their power to make sure their clients get the exposure they deserve. Everyone is always doing something and everyone seems to believe no one has time to help them.  We don’t necessarily believe that is true, but we have found a way to simplify the task of updating contact information in a way that eliminates both stress and the need to send numerous messages requesting a change of address on future promo materials.

When you’re viewing your Promos page on Haulix, click the ‘Profile’ tab in the upper left hand corner of the page. Here’s an example of what you should be looking for:

Once the profile page loads, you will notice a heading that reads ‘Email Accounts.’ I’ve highlighted this section in the image below:

The changes made on this page will be reflected throughout the Haulix platform. If you delete an email address from this page it will be erased from every client’s contact list on Haulix. If you change your preferred email address, that information will again be duplicated in the contact information stored on our client’s accounts. You control the flow of messaging. We just make it easy.

If you wish to remove an email currently being used by Haulix clients, simply click the ‘Delete’ button on the right side of the email. Once confirmed, the selected email addressed will be scrubbed from Haulix.

If you have a new email, or if you have an old account you simply want to have on our system, you can enter the new address in the space provided and have that email added to our database. If you want this new address to be your primary address, you can do so using the ‘Promo Senders’ section a bit further down on your profile page. For more information on how to do that, click here.

We will be posting additional tips to help you make the most of your Haulix experience in the weeks ahead. If you have any questions about our system please do not hesitate to email james@haulix.com and let us know. We will do our best to answer every request in a timely and concise fashion.

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Haulix Basics: The Best Way To Assign Promos For Review

Before any of us came to be a part of Haulix, including founder Matt Brown, we all ran our own music blogs with numerous contributors scattered all over the world. At the time, there were no services like ours, so almost every promotional release was delivered via CD through the postal service. This meant site owners and editors would either have to forward the music to their writers through the mail at their own expense, or they would have to open the mail, copy the CD contents to their hard drive, upload the files to a random file-sharing service, and then a share link to download those files with whatever staffer was assigned to tackle that particular review. Believe it or not, most chose the latter, despite being the far more time-consuming option.

Haulix was created with the hope of not only eliminating the costs associated with distributing physical promos, but also to help better the security placed around unreleased music being shared online. The first goal was accomplished almost as soon as we came online, as our membership plans are far more affordable than any physical promotional distribution could ever be, but ensuring the safety of releases is something we continue to try and perfect to this day. We offer watermarking services, automated takedown tools, and a number of additional safeguards, which we hope to expand further in the years to come.

Truth be told, the most common way leaks occur is through human error or basic negligence, and we hope to correct that – to some degree – with this post.

WHEN YOU RECEIVE A HAULIX PROMO IT IS INTENDED TO BE CONSUMED BY YOU AND YOU ALONE. If you read the fine print we include with almost every invite, this information is made very clear:

Please note by accessing any of this material, you acknowledge and/or consent to the following terms and conditions.

1. You won’t share this invitation.
2. The material will be used by you and you alone.
3. The material is watermarked with a unique identifier.
4. If the material is “leaked” and traced back to you, we will seek applicable restitution.

The reason for this is not only to protect the music you have been sent, but to protect you and your reputation within music as well. As most of the content sent through our system has a unique watermark, any content you share can and will be traced back to you in the event that content leaks online. Our system injects a watermark as soon as you click play or download on our platform, and that watermark includes a bunch of information about you, including your name and IP. That information stays with the music every time its used moving forward. If you download the album, upload the files to dropbox, then allow others to download the record, every person who access those files will be using content that has your name and information embedded in the details. If they leak it, or if for some reason a third party accesses their computer and leaks the files, the only person we will be able to trace everything to is you, the person who originally downloaded the album. It doesn’t matter if you actually leaked it or not because the agreement you made by accessing the material in the first place was to keep it safe. Period.

So, how do I share the promos I am sent with the various contributors I have assigned to review each release? The answer is simple, YOU DON’T.

The best and most secure way to get your writers the promos they want and need is to request the band and/or publicist send that person a copy entirely their own through our platform. That way, any watermarks attached to the file point to the individual covering the album and not you, thus taking the responsibility for the content’s safety off your shoulders (a bit – you should still make sure your writers are not pirates in disguise).

More importantly, requesting that a copy of an album be sent to the assigned writer allows our clients to know exactly who is engaging with their content. This gives a peace of mind no amount of email promises to keep things safe ever could. It will also go a long way toward strengthening your relationship with a publicists or band as it shows you can be trusted to follow the proper procedures for handling these materials, which is something everyone working on the press side of the business deeply appreciates.

For your own safety, as well as the continued livelihood of the artists, publicists, and labels who rely on Haulix to distribute their releases, please do not share you promos. Request additional copies as needed, but never share the content you have been given with other people. The risk is simply not worth it.

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Last Minute Tips For Warped Tour Photographers

Vans Warped Tour, the summer camp of punk rock. Every year many people get their start shooting shows by covering Warped Tour. I didn’t get my start shooting Warped, but covering it did prepare me for how to handle shooting an all day music festival in the scorching heat without water. It’s an experience unlike any other and sort of a right of passage for music photographers, especially for those in the punk/alternative field. I’ve decided that not doing a tutorial guide on how to shoot warped tour would be irresponsible, so here are some of my tips (I know Todd Owyoung has a great article on the same thing and I purposely haven’t read to avoid any plagiarism).

Gear (Technical and Professional):

You can shoot warped tour with almost any body and any glass. You’re shooting outside and your equipment doesn’t need to be top notch. Afraid of using your kit lens because of its aperture limitations? Bust it out! You’re shooting in daylight!

Remember to bring extra cards, and batteries. It’s an all day event. Sometimes we all need a reminder to bring extra cards and batteries.

Warped tour is an all day event. Make sure you have sunscreen, comfortable sneakers and appropriate clothing. And please wear deodorant, your pits will smell at the end of the day when  you’re shooting verticals 😉

Check out smaller bands:

The reason for this is simple – the little bands are the ones that are going to get big next year. Imagine having photos of Katy Perry from that one summer she spent sweating it out with the best punk had to offer on Warped Tour. I wish I did!

Last, but not least, be creative.

If you shoot vigorously like I do, then you can shoot 10+ bands at Warped. Do something different. Yeah that jump shot is great, but the only way to separate warped photos from you and every other person shooting Warped is to be creative and different.

Nick Karp is a professional photographer and freelance music writer. He recently relocated to NYC and dyed his hair bright pink because that is the kind of thing people do in the music business.

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How To Claim Your Apple Music Connect Profile Now

With the announcement of Apple Music, its streaming service and Beats1 live online radio, came Connect. This direct to fan social music platform should help artists connect with fans as they listen to music.  Chandler Coyle of The Coyle Report and Music Geek Services figured out the easiest way for artists to claim their profile, and we’ve created this post to share his knowledge with all of you. Don’t sleep on this information. Claim your account as soon as possible.

On June 30, 2015 Apple will launch their new music service called Apple Music. Included in this new service is an artist to fan social platform called Connect. Apple describes it this way:

Apple Music Connect

Apple Music is for you, the artist, to connect directly with your fans. Share your thoughts and ideas, post demos, remixes, lyrics—really, anything you can imagine—and connect with fans all around the world.

You will want to claim your Connect profile as soon as possible.

Step 1 – Visit the Apple Music Connect landing page.

and read what Apple Music Connect is all about.

Step 2 – Scroll down to prompt to learn more…

and click on the link that says Learn more about Connect for artists.

Step 3 – Before you ‘Get Started’ on Apple Music Connect, I recommend you learn even more by reading the FAQ.

Apple Music Connect FAQ

I’d like to highlight a few important questions and their answers:

What can I post?

You can post a simple message, share your favorite music from our expansive catalog, and upload your own work, including audio, videos, and photos. All users, whether they are members or not, can read your posts and stream content you upload. However, only members will be able to stream the songs, albums, and music videos you share from the Apple Music catalog.

You can also attach audio or videos that you upload to your existing albums in Apple Music and comment on other artists’ posts or respond to comments on your own posts.

Please note that you must own all rights for any content that you upload to Apple Music Connect (otherwise your access to Connect may be revoked).

Are there guidelines for the content I upload?

Apple Music offers you the opportunity to post content that’s unique and personal. Upload audio (up to 90 minutes), videos (up to 8 minutes), or photos (in JPEG or PNG file formats) in the app with a simple tap.

Audio and videos can be professionally produced or spontaneously recorded on an iPhone or iPad and posted immediately. All the audio, videos, and photos that you upload will be available to members and nonmembers alike.

Step 4 – Claim your profile and become a verified Apple Music Connect artist:

How can I get access to Apple Music Connect?


To become a verified artist, simply request access here.

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How To Start Your Own Music Industry Meetup

Hello, everyone! We are thrilled to learn that you were able to find time in your day to browse the latest content on our blog. The post you are about to enjoy is a guest piece from one of our favorite contributors, and it offers information that can help anyone aspiring to one day work in this crazy business we call the music industry.

This blog exists to promote the future of the music industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your music-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

There’s something truly wonderful about finding a community within a community. You know what I mean. You live in one place your entire life, but never really get to know the communities you’re a part of. You never get to make the connections that can ultimately make or break you, and so you never really get to feel like you totally belong.

When I first moved to San Francisco, I struggled to find friends. As a 26-year-old working from home, meeting new people, especially people interested so deeply in what I was (music) wasn’t exactly easy. But within a few months I befriended SF Intercom owner and Balanced Breakfast co-founder Stefan Aronson, and was soon introduced to 30+ new friends, all sharing some part in the music industry. It was brilliant. An incredibly simple concept that I had never even thought of: get everyone within a city’s industry together on a weekly basis to talk shop, network, and help propel one another’s dreams. I was in love.

So when I moved back to Boston after my seven-month stint on the west coast, I knew I wanted to bring all of the ethos and passion behind Balanced Breakfast with me. I quickly began putting together the skeleton of what would become the first east coast Balanced Breakfast.

But Boston and San Francisco aren’t the only places with thriving music scenes and a lack of like-minded community. In fact, I’d venture to guess most cities suffer from a lack of strong community feel within the music scene. So how can we change that? Here’s what I did. Hopefully it can inspire you to start your own music industry meet up. Maybe even another Balanced Breakfast? 

Find interested people

Naturally, this is the hardest part. Finding the people that will eventually make up your music community. Although paid sites like Meetup.com are great for a lot of things, they weren’t a site that I used during planning this. In fact, I spent no money at all in putting this together. To find interested people, I posted on just about every social media site I could think of: Facebook, Reddit, Twitter. I scoured existing music industry groups in my city on Facebook, posted in subreddits dedicated to my city, and tagged well known Twitter sites for Boston to let people know that I was putting together a weekly industry meet up, and to ask for their input on location. I even found another industry meet up along the way, and attended. Not only did I meet new people to invite to BB, but I discovered there really is a desire for this kind of thing. It’s a lot of old fashioned grassroots promotion, but in the end, it let people know we existed. 

Location & Time

The second hardest part was actually finding a location and time that worked for everyone. Once I knew Boston would be the easiest area for people to get to, I had to find a location that was fairly central, and could accommodate larger groups, because I dream big. Eventually I decided on 2pm (to avoid busy brunch crowds) and a place called Trident Booksellers and Café on Newbury Street. Bonus: It was also a bookstore, so we could peruse while we waited for a table!

Topics

The last piece to this puzzle was just figuring out format and topics. Luckily, I had seen my SF counterparts in action on this one at least a dozen times, and went off their format. But play around with what works best for you and your community. Focus on topics depending on who it tends to attract. Is it primarily musicians? Media? Bookers? Cater your topics to your primary audience, but don’t forget to make sure it’s broad enough that everyone can find interest.

And there you go! It really is that simple, cheap, and easy to put together a meet up of your own. And once you start gaining momentum, the sky is truly the limit. The SF Balanced Breakfast recently put on a one month residency, which featured a ton of bands from the meet up, and not only was it a great way to showcase our own talent, and get to know each other’s passions, but it even attracted outside attention and press furthering the strength of the community. 

So what are you waiting for? There’s a whole city of musicians, media, promoters, and more just waiting for their community to be born.  Interested in starting your own division of Balanced Breakfast? Get in touch with us here. In Boston? Join our meet up here

Angela Mastrogiacomo runs the Boston Balanced Breakfast, a group of music industry professionals that meet once a week to talk shop, network, and build a stronger music community. She is also the owner of Muddy Paw Public Relations and Infectious Magazine.

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What Is Involved In Creating A Music Video?

Hello again, everyone. Thank you so much for making time to visit our blog and spend a few minutes talking about life in the modern music business. The post you are about to enjoy was written by our friend Andrew Jones, founder of Checkered Owl Media. To learn more about his work, click here.

This blog exists to promote the future of the music industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your music-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

Every band wants a great music video, and they are right to. There is no other marketing tool quite as powerful.

When people first check out a band, most head straight to YouTube. When I have tested emails to see what promoters click on most, it’s always the videos. They are more sharable than an iTunes link and more engaging than a playlist. In fact, one study recently found that 91% of people check out a song on YouTube before purchasing. NINETY-ONE PERCENT! So, yes a great video is important.

But what does into a great video, what is the process? Everyone’s is a little different but here is mine, I tried to keep each section brief in order to give you a broad overview, any of these could be a blog post unto themselves:

Choosing a song

When a band decided to make a music video, the first step is to select a song. As a producer, sometimes I help with this process, but ultimately I leave it up to the band. Make sure to remember two things:

#1. Remember this video is going to be the first impression of your band, make sure it’s representative of your sound.

#2. Secondly, make sure there is a hook. Stick it in people’s mind’s and make sure they come back to watch again!

Writing a treatment

Next it’s time to write your treatment. This is what you will give to everyone else you want to bring on board.  A treatment outlines the core story, a few key visuals and the general feel and ethos of a project. Writing it should also force you to think through some of the issues of your video and make sure it’s cohesive. I always find it helpful to put a few pictures in as visual references for your other team members as well!

Writing a budget

Now that you have written your treatment you are ready to start to figure out your costs. Key things to remember are crew, location, gear (lights, cameras, rigging, etc.), costume, props, editing and FOOD! Trust me, hungry people aren’t fun people to get performances from.

Remember full scale videos are pricey. Most bands are poor. Find a balance and perhaps find a sponsor.

Hire crew

Next pick your crew! Most cities have a local film scene, find people that both do good work AND you like to work with. I don’t pick all my crew at this stage, but if there are key people you want in key positions get them locked down early so you can start co-ordinating schedules. Every shoot will require a different team, but to me the most critical positions on a music video are: Producer, Director, DP/Cinematographer, Make-up, Lighting, at least one swing/grip

Some of those positions can easily be combined, some can’t. Find people who know what they are doing!

Set locations

With treatment in hand, it’s time to go scouting! Find the places you created in your imagination! Hopefully you budgeted for at least a little set money…right?

Set schedule

Work with your key players, plan on everything taking 33% longer than you think it should.

Storyboard or Shot-By-Shot

music video story board rough example

Lots of people do this earlier but I like to really plan my shots at this point. I know my rough schedule, I know where we are shooting, I know who we are working with and what gear I will have at my disposal. Depending on the video, I may do a storyboard or shot-by-shot. A storyboard is more precise, which can be nice; but sometimes you want to feel things out rather than snag exact shots.

storyboard includes drawings of all major shots and can be great help to some DPs. It should also include a brief shot description.

shot-by-shot Lists every shot the director envisions. I typically also assign a shot number to each shot and include this in my scheduling.

Shoot

Nothing like it! Get everyone together and shoot everything you need. Don’t decide to fix it later, it always ends up being harder. Keep a creative and fun atmosphere. Be flexible. Listen to ideas from everyone, a lot of genius ideas can pop-up out of the blue!

Editing

This is obviously a huge topic with a million variables and worth about 5 blog posts.

In short, this is MY advice and workflow: My advice would be to use either Final Cut Pro or Adobe Premier. They are the industry standards for a reason. First you need to crank out a rough cut. Get a feel for all the clips, get them in an order that feels good, run it past a few friends. Once you are feeling good about the building block that you can get into the more finicky work of colour grading and getting a final cut that you feel really great about!

Marketing

Another whole world, which I blog about fairly often. But for this post suffice it to say, make sure you share your video. Use Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, E-mail lists and whatever else you have in your arsenal. Don’t be afraid to ask fans to share. Consider Facebook ads, consider YouTube ads.

Just make sure if you took the time to do everything I described above that you get that video OUT THERE!

This post was written by Andrew Jones, editor of Checkered Owl. It originally ran on his blog, but we loved it so much we felt it deserved to shared once more on ours. If you like his work and want to read more of his writing, or if you want to be super cool and offer him full time industry employment, reach out and connect with him on Twitter.

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How To Prevent Haulix Promos From Ending Up In Your Spam Folder

Hey, everyone! This post is not a typical advice column, but it’s an important one nonetheless. Many Haulix users complain about promos ending up in their spam folder instead of their inbox, but fear not because we have a the perfect solution (thanks to eHow).

This blog exists to promote the future of the music industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your music-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com and share your thoughts. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

So why do Haulix promos sometimes end up in my spam folder?

To be completely honest, we do not know with 100% certainty what causes a promo to be directed to spam instead of a person’s inbox. Google’s Gmail email service contains a spam filter that tries to identify undesirable messages, but those efforts often catch messages that are not spam in the process. A message caught in the spam filter is sent to the spam folder instead of your inbox. You can whitelist email addresses in Gmail if you never want Gmail to categorize them as spam. Gmail will send emails from the white-listed email addresses directly to your inbox, even if the spam filter would match them. You can also whitelist entire domains or whitelist emails with specific subjects or phrases. 

How do I whitelist something?

It’s relatively easy to whitelist an email, and in a few simple steps you can ensure all future Haulix promos arrive in your inbox. Login to your email account and…

1. Click the “Create a Filter” link to the right of the search box at the top of the Gmail Web page.

2. Type an email address into the “From” box. If you want to whitelist all email addresses on a domain you can type “@haulix.com” instead of an email address replacing “haulix.com” with the domain.

3. Click the “Test Search” button to see which emails would have been white-listed.

4. Click the “Next Step” button.

5. Click the “Never Send it to Spam” checkbox and click “Create Filter.”

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