Real Industry brings in music executives to lead
students in social media challenge for Manchester Orchestra’s Foundation
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —
MTSU
Recording Industry students were the first students to work on a real national
artist marketing campaign with the popular indie-rock group Manchester
Orchestra as part of the Pandora Challenge: Music and Social Impact program on
Oct. 9.
Real Industry, an organization that serves as a bridge between
academia and industry for university students, held sessions in the morning and
mid-afternoon for MTSU students, who will be charged with the challenge of
creating a social media campaign to help the 1 Million 4 Anna Foundation, which
is dedicated to fighting Ewing sarcoma and is supported by Manchester Orchestra.
The challenge utilized music, data, technology and marketing, and was
one stop in a five-university tour sponsored by Pandora, to engage the
next-generation of leaders in music business and marketing to achieve social
impact. Other colleges involved are the University of Southern California, New
York University, the University of Massachusetts Lowell and Stanford
University.
Challenge participants will have access to Pandora’s Artist
Marketing Platform (AMP), Next Big Sound and the 76 million monthly active
listeners tuning into Pandora. They will devise ways to leverage AMP and data
from Next Big Sound to engage Pandora’s listeners and bring awareness to the
fight against Ewing sarcoma in young people with the 1 Million 4 Anna
Foundation, having real-world impact and influence.
Real Industry has also conducted workshops at Stanford University,
New York University, University of Michigan and other schools. This was its
first time at MTSU.
“I am honored that Real Industry chose MTSU students to participate
in their program. It will provide our students with real-world experience and
exposure to data and best practices that they might otherwise receive,” said
Beverly Keel, chair of MTSU’s Department of Recording Industry.
“In addition, this day will be special because Manchester Orchestra
is managed by Nashville’s Vector Management. One of our alums and former
adjunct professor, Jon Romero, serves as Vector’s head of Digital Marketing and
Strategy.”
Keel said Romero attended Monday’s event “to help our students
succeed in this challenge.”
“The Pandora Challenge is a unique opportunity for MTSU students to
work on a real-world artist marketing campaign with access to cutting-edge
industry tools and massive music-streaming audiences,” said Jay LeBoeuf, executive
director, Real Industry.
“Students leave having launched an impactful live campaign that goes
beyond the artist to promote a social initiative, develop their portfolios, try
out career roles, get mentored by industry leaders, and develop their
professional networks” said Priya Shekar, program director.
In 2009, 16-year-old Anna Basso was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma, a
bone and soft tissue cancer that primarily affects children and young adults.
Her family created 1 Million 4 Anna in an attempt to heal her body and spirit.
Family, friends and strangers alike pledged to pray for Anna every day at 12:12
p.m., resulting in more than 1 million prayers said in her name. Although
Anna’s fight ended after 18 months, the foundation’s work carries on, as does
Anna’s legacy.
Members of Manchester Orchestra are excited to have MTSU students
working on social impact through music marketing.
“The Basso family is basically the reason that I create music,” said
lead singer Andy Hull. “It’s about so much more than vanity and ticket sales.
It’s about being a part of something that is bigger than you can even
comprehend. Helping people without ever knowing you were helping them. When
that happens, those people actually help you.”
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