How to Promote a Concert on a Small Budget (And Actually Fill the Room)

Photo by Sterre Reeuwijk on Unsplash

Putting on a show is one of the most exciting things you can do in music. The planning, the anticipation, watching people discover something they love for the first time in a room with fifty strangers. But here’s the thing nobody tells you until it’s too late: a great show with nobody in attendance is just a rehearsal with better lighting. Promotion is the job, and the good news is you don’t need a major label’s marketing department to do it well.

The single most important thing you can do before you spend a single penny is build and maintain an email list. Email remains one of the most effective marketing tools available, and if you aren’t building a mailing list yet, your next gig is the perfect time to start. Social media platforms change their algorithms constantly, shadow-ban accounts without warning, and generally make it harder every year to reach the people who already follow you for free. Your email list is yours. Nobody can take it away. Start collecting emails on your website through a sign-up form, and gather zip codes too so you can segment your list by location when you have shows in different cities down the road.

Social media still matters enormously, just use it smarter than most people do. Target people who love the type of music you play and people who are in the area of the concert. Post regularly on every account you own and make sure the fans you already have share and interact with your content. The algorithm rewards engagement, so ask questions, post behind-the-scenes rehearsal clips, share the story of how the show came together. Behind-the-scenes rehearsal footage creates a sense of intimacy, and quick cuts of past performances build anticipation ahead of the show. TikTok in particular has become a genuinely powerful tool for reaching local audiences who had no idea you existed last Tuesday.

When you’re ready to spend a little money on paid advertising, even a tiny amount goes further than most people expect if you’re smart about targeting. Start with a smaller budget to gauge what works, and be prepared to adjust based on performance metrics like reach, engagement, and ticket sales. Ten or fifteen dollars boosting a well-made Instagram Reel to people within twenty kilometres of your venue, filtered by music interest, will almost always outperform a hundred dollars thrown at a vague, untargeted post. Target ads within a realistic distance of the venue, adjust messaging based on local preferences, and focus on areas where similar artists have found success.

Don’t overlook the power of your local community, both online and in person. Embrace free marketing tools. A website, a newsletter, a link-in-bio tool, and active social media accounts are must-haves. Beyond that, reach out to local bloggers, community Facebook groups, neighbourhood subreddits, and music forums. Post in “things to do this weekend” style groups. Many cities have free local event listings through newspapers, radio stations, and arts councils that most people never bother to use. Cross-promote with other bands on the bill. Their audience is your audience for the night, so make sure they’re sharing the show too.

Your ticketing page deserves more love than it usually gets. Make your ticketing page as enticing as possible. Include an event description with the location, bios of the performers, and all the important event information. Add links to the artists’ music so people can listen, and embed videos to make it even more engaging. A bare-bones event listing with just a date and a price tells people almost nothing about why they should come. Give them a reason. Describe the vibe, the room, the feeling they’ll walk away with. People don’t buy tickets to a show; they buy a night they don’t want to miss.

Finally, remember that your most powerful promotional tool is the fans who already love what you do. Some artists enjoy a rare luxury where their fans become their most powerful agents of promotion. When fans feel connected, they naturally become ambassadors for the show. User-generated content provides valuable social proof that paid ads simply cannot replicate. Give your existing fans something to share. Offer an early-bird discount, a limited presale, a little exclusive content just for them. Make them feel like insiders. When someone tells their friends “you have to come to this show with me,” that’s worth more than any ad you’ll ever run, and it costs you nothing but genuine connection with the people who already believe in what you’re making.