Streaming Content - Streaming content is a very viable and great way to involve people in your business, especially if it offers something that people may like to watch. In my case, previewing scenarios and showing developer streams and comments is a great engagement tool, and directly lets your customers and supporters get in contact with you. Twitch would most likely be the best service, as it is the largest and most well known streaming platform, but YouTube is also a viable alternative - or both at once. Up and coming services like Mixer may be a platform to keep an eye on, as well as Facebook's streaming services, but those don't have the weight behind them that Twitch and YouTube do.
Music Sites - While a potentially unorthodox choice, sound plays a vital role in treatments as well. If the scenarios use custom music to soothe and help out patients, relying on music sites like Spotify, iTunes, Pandora, and so on to populate out those tracks for personal use could be a great services as well. SoundCloud and BandCamp in particular are designed for up and coming musicians to get their name and sound out there, and can reliably serve as storefronts for a time as well - which could be a great secondary revenue source in between project releases.
Music Sites - While a potentially unorthodox choice, sound plays a vital role in treatments as well. If the scenarios use custom music to soothe and help out patients, relying on music sites like Spotify, iTunes, Pandora, and so on to populate out those tracks for personal use could be a great services as well. SoundCloud and BandCamp in particular are designed for up and coming musicians to get their name and sound out there, and can reliably serve as storefronts for a time as well - which could be a great secondary revenue source in between project releases.
Bandcamp certainly has done wonders for me in the past few years. Its somewhat surprising how much you can make from using their platform if youre playing and selling the right stuff.
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