A tiered action plan for independent venue operators, festival promoters, and event marketers at every level of time, budget, and technical comfort.
How to Use This Guide
Find your tier using the three questions on the next page. Start at the top of your tier and work down. Do one action completely before moving to the next.
When you've done everything in your tier, the "ready to move up" signal at the bottom tells you when to advance.
| Tier | Name | Time | Start If.. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Zero bandwidth, zero tech | 20 Minutes | Start here if you haven't touched this yet. |
| 2 | A little time, a little curiosity | An afternoon | Start here if Tier 1 is done. |
| 3 | Build something that keeps working | A focused week | Start here if Tier 1 is done. |
| 4 | The frontier | Ongoing | Start here if you have a developer relationship. |
Find Your Tier
Three Questions. One Starting Point.
Wherever you are with AI right now, there's something in here you can do today. Three quick questions will point you to the right starting place.
1. How much time can you realistically put toward this right now?
| Less than an hour | > Start at Tier 1 |
| A few hours over a few days | > Start at Tier 3 |
| A dedicated project week | > Start at Tier 3 (after confirming Tiers 1 and 2 are done) |
| Ongoing monthly work | > Start at Tier 4 (after confirming lower tiers are done) |
2. Do you have access to your venue's website backend, or a developer you can call?
| No access, no developer | > Tiers 1 and 2 cover everything you need. No website access required for any of it. |
| Limited access or occasional developer | > All four tiers are open to you. |
| Yes, and they're responsive | > All four tiers are open to you, and Tier 4 will be worth your time. |
3. Have you done any of this already? (GBP, Bandsintown, Spotify for Artists)
| None of it | > Start at Tier 1, Action 1. |
| Some, not sure what's complete | > Start at Tier 1 and verify each action before moving on. |
| Most of Tier 1 is done | > Skip to Tier 2. |
| Tiers 1 and 2 are done | > Skip to Tier 3. |
One Rule Before You Start:
Don't skip tiers. The actions in Tier 1 take 20 minutes and they're the foundation everything else builds on.
Venues that jump straight to Tier 4 and skip Tier 1 end up with beautifully structured schema markup pointing to a Google Business Profile that has the wrong phone number.
Start at the top of your tier. Verify each action. Move on.
Tier 1 | Zero Bandwidth, Zero Tech
Time: 20 minutes | No website access needed | No developer needed
For anyone who hasn't started yet, or wants to verify their starting point.
Why These Seven Actions Come First
AI tools draw from sources they've learned to trust: directories with consistent data, platforms that publish structured event information, and listings that corroborate each other. In live tests, Bandsintown and Google Business Profile show up directly in AI-generated answers about venues.
These seven actions are about making sure those sources have accurate, complete information about you. Nothing here requires logging into your website, knowing any code, or calling anyone. Just a browser and your venue name. Don't skip them because they seem simple. Most venues haven't done all seven.
Action 1
Update your Google Business Profile
Time: 5 min | Tool: business.google.com
Log into business.google.com. Verify your official venue name, address, phone number, website URL, primary category (use "Music Venue" specifically), and hours.
Correct anything that's wrong or outdated. Google's AI ecosystem pulls directly from your Business Profile when deciding how to describe and recommend your venue. If the basics are wrong here, they're wrong everywhere Google touches.
Action 2
Post your next three shows as Google Posts
Time: 15 min | Tool: Google Business Profile dashboard
Inside your GBP dashboard, look for the "Add update" button on your profile, or go to "Posts" in the left menu. Choose the "Event" post type and fill in the show name, date, doors time, and ticket link.
This takes about five minutes per show. These posts surface when fans search your venue by name and feed into Google Maps event discovery.
Action 3
Claim your Bandsintown Pro venue profile
Time: 15 min | Tool: bandsintown.pro/venues
[Heard at NIVA 2026 - Opening Session: State of Live]
Go to bandsintown.pro/venues. Claim your venue and add all upcoming shows with dates, times, and ticket links. Bandsintown feeds Apple Music, Spotify, Google, Shazam, and Bing.
In direct AI search tests, Bandsintown pages surface in answers about venue lineups and upcoming shows. This is the single highest-distribution action in Tier 1.
Action 4
Claim your Spotify for Artists venue page
Time: 15 min | Tool: artists.spotify.com, free
[Heard at NIVA 2026 - Opening Session: State of Live]
Go to artists.spotify.com and claim your venue page. Spotify venue pages have a 30% click-through rate compared to 20% across the rest of the platform. Fans share venue pages at three times the rate of other Spotify content. It's free, it feeds one of the highest-intent discovery surfaces your fans already use, and most independent venues haven't touched it.
Add your upcoming shows with dates and ticket links. Keep it current the same way you keep Bandsintown current, same 15 minutes, same habit.
Action 5
Claim your Rostr venue listing
Time: 15 min | Tool: hq.rostr.cc/venues, free early access
[Heard at NIVA 2026 - Opening Session: State of Live]
Rostr is building what they call the largest directory of independent venues in the world, purpose-built for the industry. Claim your listing at hq.rostr.cc/venues. It puts your venue in front of artists, promoters, and booking contacts alongside your capacity, past artists, ticketing info, and key contacts.
As a venue-specific directory indexed and built for discovery, it's an emerging citation source worth claiming now before it's common practice.
Action 6
Run the View Source test on your website
Time: 2 min | Tool: Your browser, no login needed
Open your venue's homepage. Right-click anywhere and choose "View Page Source" (Ctrl+U on Windows, Cmd+Option+U on Mac). In the code that appears, search for your venue name. If it's there, AI can read your site. If it's not, your site has a crawlability problem.
Note it and see Tier 3, Action 17. For more on what AI crawlers can and can't access, read "Deep Dive: Website Visibility, AI Crawlers, and the Event Calendar Problem Every Venue Should Know."
Action 7
Ask AI what it knows about your venue
Time: 5 min | Tool: chat.openai.com or claude.ai
Open ChatGPT or Claude (free accounts work). Ask: "Tell me about [venue name] in [city]. What kind of events do they host, where are they located, and how can I find their upcoming shows?" Write down anything it gets wrong or hedges on.
That's your citation fix list. For a four-platform version of this test, see Tier 2, Action 8.
You’re Ready for the Next Tier When:
Your GBP knowledge panel shows accurate info. You've posted at least one upcoming show as a Google Post. You've claimed Bandsintown Pro, your Spotify venue page, and Rostr, with shows listed on each.
And you've run the View Source test and noted any crawlability issues. You know what AI currently says about you, right or wrong.
Tier 2 | A Little Time, a Little Curiosity
Time: An afternoon | No website access needed | Free tools throughout
For operators who've done Tier 1 and want AI working as a thinking partner.
Tier 2 is about using AI tools to understand your own data better, not to generate content, not to automate decisions, but to surface patterns you'd otherwise miss. None of this requires code. It requires curiosity and about three hours.
Action 8
Run the four-AI description test
Time: 20 min | Tool: ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Google, all free
Ask ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Google each: "Describe [venue name] in [city], capacity, genre focus, what makes it distinctive, and what's coming up." Compare the four answers. Where they agree, your citation profile is solid. Where they disagree or hedge, something's sending a conflicting signal.
That conflict list is your priority fix list. For a deeper look at what these results mean, read "Fans Are Using AI to Find Their Next Show. Does Your Venue Rank?"
Action 9
Run a free citation scan
Time: 30 min | Tool: moz.com/local/search, free
Go to moz.com/local/search. Enter your venue name and zip code. The scan returns every directory listing it finds and flags inconsistencies in your name, address, or phone. Download the report. Fix the top ten sources first: GBP, Apple Maps, Yelp, Bing Places, Facebook, Bandsintown.
For the full citation audit process, download our NAP Audit Template.
Action 10
Paste your ticket sales data into an AI tool
Time: 30 min | Tool: Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity, all free
Export last month's ticket sales from your ticketing platform, even a simple copy-paste of the table works. Then use an AI tool as your data analyst.
Try this prompt: "Here is my ticket sales data from the past 30 days. [Paste your export.] Please analyze it as a data analyst would. Which shows sold fastest? Which underperformed relative to their on-sale window? Are there patterns by genre, day of week, or price point? Flag anything that surprises you."
Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity all handle this well. Try the same data in more than one and compare which gives you the most useful read.
Action 11
Connect Google Search Console to your website
Time: 5 min to set up, then ongoing | Tool: search.google.com/search-console, free
Go to search.google.com/search-console and add your venue's website. It's free and takes about five minutes to verify. Once connected, it shows you exactly which search queries are bringing people to your site and which pages are getting impressions but no clicks.
Think of it this way: Google Business Profile tells you what's happening before fans reach your website (how your listing appears in search, how many people clicked). Google Search Console tells you what's happening once they get there (which pages they found, what they searched for).
Both are free. Both give you information you can't get anywhere else. Export three months of Search Console data and paste it into an AI tool: "Summarize what's working and what isn't."
Not sure how to navigate GSC or find the export? Take a screenshot of the interface and paste it into Claude or ChatGPT: "Where do I click to export three months of search query data?" It will walk you through it.
Action 12
Have a regular check-in with whoever runs your paid advertising
Time: 15 min | Tool: Your phone or email
If you're running paid advertising, whether that's Meta ads, Google ads, or campaigns through any other platform, it's worth a regular check-in with whoever is running them on three things: what the campaign is currently optimizing toward, what last month's budget produced, and what changed recently and why.
Frame it as a routine conversation. If you can't get clear answers to all three, that's useful information too.
Read "How to Challenge Your Marketing Vendor's Monthly Report (Without Becoming Your Own Worst Enemy)" before escalating.
Using AI as a Marketing Strategy Partner
Actions 8 through 12 use AI to audit what already exists: how AI currently describes your venue, where your citation profile has gaps, and which search queries are bringing fans to your site.
These three actions shift from auditing to deciding. Where should your marketing budget go this month? Which shows need content attention? What is your audience actually responding to? You don't need a marketing agency or a data analyst for any of it. You need the right questions and thirty minutes.
Action 13
Pull together your fan signals and find the patterns
Time: 30 min | Tool: Claude or ChatGPT, free
[Heard at NIVA 2026 - Grassroots Marketing 2026]
Your fans are telling you what they want. Most venues aren't hearing it because the signals are scattered. Gather what you can: copy recent comments from your social posts, fan replies to your emails, reviews from Google or Yelp, and patterns in which shows sell fast versus slow.
Paste it all into Claude or ChatGPT and ask: "What patterns do you see? What does this audience respond to? What are they asking for that I'm not giving them?" Messy, mixed input is fine. The point is to stop guessing and start listening at scale. Note: AI tools can't crawl your social accounts directly, so the copy-paste step is yours.
Action 14
Let your data guide your marketing budget allocation
Time: 20 min | Tool: Claude or ChatGPT, free
Before you allocate any marketing budget this month, paste your upcoming show calendar into an AI tool with whatever context you have: past performance of similar artists, ticket sales to date, genre, day of week, competing shows in your market.
Ask: "Based on this, which shows have the most upside with additional marketing budget? Which are likely to sell on their own? Where should I focus first?" Give it your real numbers. A show that's 60% sold two weeks out needs different attention than a show that hasn't moved in three weeks.
You'll get a prioritized starting point that's better than a gut call, and you'll stop spreading the same marketing budget across every show regardless of demand.
Action 15
Build a show catalog for always-on Meta advertising
Time: 45 min first time, 20 min monthly | Tool: Claude or ChatGPT, free | Applies to: venues running Meta ads
[Heard at NIVA 2026 - Let's Get Into the Weeds with Meta]
For venues running Meta ads: instead of writing ad copy show by show, build a monthly catalog of ready-to-run ad descriptions.
Open Claude and tell it: "Here are my upcoming shows for the next 60 days. [Paste your calendar.] Write five short ad descriptions for each show, one sentence each, from five angles: artist, venue experience, social connection, urgency, and FOMO. Format them so I can drop each one directly into Meta ads manager."
Do this once a month. You'll have a full catalog of copy ready to run across 20 or 30 shows simultaneously. Small marketing budgets spread across a catalog outperform large budgets on single shows when the targeting is right. That's how you compete without matching larger promoters' spend.
You’re Ready for the Next Tier When:
You've run the four-AI test and made a fix list. You've corrected your top citation sources. You know what search queries are bringing fans to your site. You've had a productive check-in with your vendor.
And you've used AI as a thinking partner at least once, not just for auditing, but for strategy.
Tier 3 | Build Something That Keeps Working
Time: A focused week | Some website access helpful | Low-cost tools
For operators ready to build systems that reduce per-show effort over time.
Tier 3 is where the compounding starts. Each action here is a one-time build that keeps doing work after you're done with it. A show announcement template built once saves fifteen minutes on every future booking.
A post-purchase email sequence built once runs automatically for every ticket sale. The week of effort pays back over months.
Action 16
Build a show announcement and content template
Time: 45 min to build | Tool: ChatGPT or Claude, free
[Heard at NIVA 2026 - Grassroots Marketing 2026]
Open ChatGPT or Claude. Write a prompt that generates: a social caption, two to three A/B email subject lines to test, an email body (in your brand voice if you've run the voice brief exercise), and a two-sentence crawlable event description. All from just the artist name, date, and genre.
Refine it on two or three real upcoming shows until the output matches your voice. Save the prompt somewhere you'll find it. That's 45 minutes once, then five minutes per booking forever.
Content that doesn't require the artist: post load-in photos. The setup before the show, the crew rigging lights, the stage coming together, your staff getting ready. That content performs because it's specific to your room, it's visual, and it builds anticipation without depending on artist-supplied assets. Staff spotlights work the same way. Fans follow people, not logos.
Read "AI Tools Your Team Can Use This Week (Without a Tech Background)" for prompt templates to start from.
Action 17
Publish show announcements as crawlable pages
Time: 15 min per show | Tool: Your website CMS, no code needed for most platforms
For every new show, publish a simple page on your website: artist name, a sentence or two describing their sound, date, doors time, age policy, parking note, and ticket link. Plain text, no widget. This is the announcement you're already writing for email or social. It just needs to live on your site too.
This makes your events readable by every AI crawler and qualifies your venue for Google's Preferred Sources feature as a side effect. Read "Deep Dive: Website Visibility, AI Crawlers, and the Event Calendar Problem Every Venue Should Know" for the full crawlability framework.
Action 18
Set up a post-purchase email sequence
Time: 2-3 hours if supported by your platforms | Tool: Your ticketing + email platforms
Create two automated emails that go out after a ticket purchase:
- A confirmation with practical logistics, parking, doors time, what to bring, what to expect.
- A day-of reminder.
Whether you can automate these depends entirely on your ticketing platform and your email platform, and whether they can talk to each other. Some platforms (like Mailchimp with an integration, or platforms with built-in CRM tools) make this straightforward. Others don't connect at all, and you'd need a manual follow-up process or a platform switch.
Ask your ticketing provider: "Do you support automated post-purchase email triggers, or is there an API or Zapier integration that connects to my email platform?" The answer will tell you how to proceed.
If it's not possible on your current setup, the day-of reminder is still worth doing manually for your biggest shows. Read "Your Email List Is the Only Audience You Actually Own" for the full email infrastructure framework.
Action 19
Claim Apple Business Connect
Time: 15 min + a few days to verify | Tool: business.apple.com, free
Go to business.apple.com and claim your venue. Apple Maps is a significant AI data source and is almost universally neglected by independent venues. Verification takes a few days, so don't wait.
Your venue information here must match your canonical NAP exactly. It feeds Siri, Spotlight, and Apple Maps, all of which AI tools draw on.
Action 20
Claim Bing Places for Business
Time: 15 min | Tool: bingplaces.com, free
Go to bingplaces.com and claim your venue. Bing holds roughly 17-18% of US desktop search and its Copilot AI assistant pulls from Bing Places directly. Combined with your Bandsintown Pro listing, this means your shows should surface in Bing event searches. Most venues have never touched this listing.
Action 21
Rewrite your venue descriptions across all platforms
Time: 1-2 hours | Tool: Each platform's dashboard, no website access needed
Go back to every platform in your NAP audit: GBP, Yelp, Apple, Bing, Facebook, Bandsintown, TripAdvisor, your own About page.
Replace generic marketing language like "premier destination for live music" with specific, citable facts: capacity, location, age policy, parking, genre focus, what makes your room distinct. Two to three specific sentences will outperform two paragraphs of copy every time. This is what AI reads when it decides how to describe you.
Read "Deep Dive: Writing Event Content That Gets Cited, Not Just Indexed" for the full content framework.
You’re Ready for the Next Tier When:
You have a show announcement template that saves time on every booking. You're publishing each show as a crawlable page on your site. Your post-purchase email sequence is live and running automatically, or you have a clear plan for why it isn't possible on your current setup.
Apple Business Connect and Bing Places are claimed and current. Every platform description is specific and citable.
Tier 4 | The Frontier
Time: Ongoing | Developer conversation needed for some steps | Long-term investment
For operators building durable AI trust infrastructure.
Tier 4 is where AI stops guessing about your venue and starts knowing it. These actions build the technical and content infrastructure that earns citation authority over time, the kind that keeps compounding for months and years.
A note on developer conversations: a couple of these steps involve asking a developer for help. We tell you exactly what to say so you're not starting from scratch.
Action 22
Implement MusicVenue and Event schema markup
Time: Varies, 1 hour to several days | Tool: Google Rich Results Test (free) + your developer
Schema markup is invisible code that tells AI exactly what your venue is and what events you're hosting. Go to search.google.com/test/rich-results and enter your URL. If it shows no detected items, you have no schema.
On WordPress: install Yoast SEO or RankMath and configure for LocalBusiness and MusicVenue.
On Squarespace: use Settings > Advanced > Code Injection to paste JSON-LD schema. What to ask your developer: "Can you add MusicVenue schema to our homepage and Event schema to each show page? The Event schema needs name, startDate, location, performer, and an Offer block with the ticket URL."
Download the Schema Implementation Templates for the exact code. Read "Schema Markup: What It Is, Whether Your Venue Has It, and Why AI Cares" for full context.
Action 23
Build a ticketing platform friction auditor
Time: 30 min to build and test | Tool: Claude
This is a browser-based AI tool that scores your ticketing platform the way a first-time buyer would experience it. Enter your platform name and it returns friction scores across checkout flow, fee transparency, guest checkout, and mobile wallet support, plus the single highest-ROI fix. Build it once and run it whenever you're evaluating a new platform or making the case for a switch internally.
Only 21% of ticketing platforms offer single-page checkout, which research shows is the highest-ROI factor in reducing abandonment. Most venues have no idea which side of that line their platform is on. This tool tells you.
Action 24
Build a brand voice brief for your venue
Time: 45 min to build, ongoing reference | Tool: Claude
Paste five to seven examples of your best-performing copy into the voice brief builder: your best captions, your best email subject lines, your best show announcements.
The tool reverse-engineers your voice into a reusable brief: words you never use, phrases you always keep, formatting rules, and emoji guidelines. Once you have the brief, use it as a standing instruction for every AI tool you run.
New team member writing social? Give them the brief. Vendor writing ad copy? Give them the brief. It's the thing that keeps your voice consistent as your team scales.
Action 25
Build a relationship with your local music press
Time: Ongoing, 30 min per show | Tool: Email, your website
Third-party coverage from credible local sources, city magazines, alt-weeklies, neighborhood blogs, local music writers, is one of the strongest AI trust signals available. AI weights corroborated external mentions more heavily than what you say about yourself.
Send show announcements to local writers with a genuine pitch about why this show is worth covering. Build a press page on your website with high-res photos, a brief venue bio, booking contact, and recent notable shows. Maintain a list of local entertainment calendars and submit to them consistently.
Read "Deep Dive: How to Build a Digital Presence AI Actually Trusts" for the full trust infrastructure framework.
Action 26
Run the four-AI trust test quarterly
Time: 30 min quarterly | Tool: ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Google, all free
Every three months, repeat the four-AI description test from Tier 2, Action 8.
Ask ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Google each to describe your venue. Compare to your previous results. Are the answers more confident? More specific? More consistent across platforms? Are your upcoming shows surfacing correctly?
The delta between each quarterly test tells you whether your investment is compounding. Document the results so you can show progress over time.
Read "What I'm Watching in AI Search: Google AI Mode, Preferred Sources, and the Bing Question" for current context on what these results mean.
You're Mastering AI Strategies When:
Every major AI tool describes your venue accurately and confidently. Your event schema is valid and your shows are surfacing in Google Events. You have a voice brief that keeps your content consistent across tools and team members. Your quarterly AI test shows consistent, improving results. You have a local press relationship that generates regular third-party mentions.
At this point, you're not chasing AI visibility. You've built it.
Quick Reference
All 26 Actions at a Glance
| # | Action | Tier | Time | Access |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Update Google Business Profile | 1 | 5 min | None |
| 2 | Post upcoming shows as Google Posts | 1 | 15 min | None |
| 3 | Claim Bandsintown Pro * | 1 | 15 min | None |
| 4 | Claim Spotify for Artists venue page * | 1 | 15 min | None |
| 5 | Claim Rostr venue listing * | 1 | 15 min | None |
| 6 | Run the View Source test | 1 | 2 min | None |
| 7 | Ask AI what it knows about your venue | 1 | 5 min | None |
| 8 | Run the four-AI description test | 2 | 20 min | None |
| 9 | Run a free citation scan (Moz Local) | 2 | 30 min | None |
| 10 | Paste ticket data into an AI tool | 2 | 30 min | None |
| 11 | Connect Google Search Console | 2 | 5 min setup | Website verify |
| 12 | Check in with whoever runs your paid advertising | 2 | 15 min | None |
| 13 | Pull together fan signals and find patterns * | 2 | 30 min | None |
| 14 | Let your data guide your marketing budget | 2 | 20 min | None |
| 15 | Build show catalog for always-on Meta ads * | 2 | 45 min / 20 min monthly | None |
| 16 | Build show announcement and content template * | 3 | 45 min | None |
| 17 | Publish show announcements as crawlable pages | 3 | 15 min per show | CMS access |
| 18 | Set up post-purchase email sequence | 3 | 2-3 hrs if supported | Ticketing + email |
| 19 | Claim Apple Business Connect | 3 | 15 min | None |
| 20 | Claim Bing Places for Business | 3 | 15 min | None |
| 21 | Rewrite venue descriptions across all platforms | 3 | 1-2 hrs | None |
| 22 | Implement MusicVenue + Event schema | 4 | Varies | Developer |
| 23 | Build a ticketing platform friction auditor | 4 | 30 min | None |
| 24 | Build a brand voice brief for your venue | 4 | 45 min | None |
| 25 | Build local press relationships | 4 | Ongoing | None |
| 26 | Run four-AI trust test quarterly | 4 | 30 min/qtr | None |
* Heard at NIVA 2026. See individual actions for session details.
Other Guides
| Guide | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| AI Crawlability Checklist | Engine-by-engine tests + fix list for your website |
| NAP Audit Template | Field-by-field citation audit across 10 platforms |
| Schema Implementation Templates | JSON-LD templates for MusicVenue, Event, LocalBusiness |