
Nicholas Holland
The dazzling world of startup investors and the entrepreneurs that entice bets on success has been exploding in Music City.
Nicholas Holland, who describes himself as, “an avid supporter of the Nashville entrepreneur ecosystem,” created his first company at 23, then sold it at 26. Next he started the highly successful
CentreSource, an Interactive Agency which he recently stepped down from to helm his latest venture full time—
Populr.
Populr is all about creating published one-pagers online or Pops. CEO Holland and his group of investors, which includes music industry notables such as Joe Galante, Mark Montgomery and Paul Schatzkin, are convinced Pops will take root and eventually occupy an essential place in every marketer’s toolbox.
Also featured in the following interview is Populr’s Senior Communications Strategist,
Heather McBee, who previously served as VP, Marketing and Web Initiatives for Sony Music in Nashville. McBee’s unique perspective creates a strong understanding of how the new product can interface with the entertainment community.
In the following discussion we asked
Holland and McBee about Nashville’s entrepreneur community, how they characterize the new company and the colorful journey which has brought Populr into existence.
BossRoss: Nashville, with its traditional roots and Bible belt values seems an unlikely place to birth a technology/entrepreneurial hotbed. How did this happen?
Nicholas Holland: Back-to-back recessions across America created an environment where people’s primary source of wealth collapsed—their homes. At the same time we all have email addresses, interface with a variety of social and virtual connections and have become comfortable interfacing through computers and mobile to a larger world. Finally, Nashville is experiencing a much stronger economic vibrance than many other cities across the country. The result is that individuals have lost trust in corporate America and their personal finance vehicles and have found themselves wanting to build wealth outside that system.
BossRoss: And these changes created a group of wanna-be investors and entrepreneurs?
Holland: Yes. Overall, the changes have created situations where access to capitol is no longer restricted to brick and mortar ideas. You can actually start a business with just a computer and smart phone. As we’ve moved from a blue collar to a services society the exchange of goods has become more fluid because it’s really just information. So you have a reason to become an entrepreneur, access to become an entrepreneur and finally a city which very much supports it. The overall impact of entrepreneurship is sometimes small, but the irony is that it makes a huge splash in terms of its allure and appeal. Ninety-five percent of startups fail but they still gather fans who want to cheer for the underdog. I hear people saying all the time, “If I didn’t have two mortgages and four private school kids I’d love to do what you are doing.” And that creates the investor ecosystem which makes it all possible. Over the last 7 years in Nashville we saw the
Entrepreneur Center and various funding groups emerge. Media publications then began attributing more of their pages to these efforts. The culture of entrepreneurship is on fire across the country. But Nashville is three degrees hotter than everywhere else, which makes it such a great place to be.
BossRoss: When was Populr born?
Holland: It started officially in Nov. 2011, but really began a few years earlier. My agency, CentreSource, required a lot of high touch communications. I wanted to step up our sales efforts with something more than email and attachments, something on the web. Our clients were immediately drawn to the idea of being able to easily create pages online. The web is active, visual and live vs. email which goes out of date as soon as it’s done. People wanted to use it for sales, internal communication, training and customer on-boarding. Unfortunately, our first and second prototypes simply didn’t work and we put our plans on the back burner. When we came into 2011 my team wanted to try again. I told them, “Anything above expenses and taxes up to $10k per month I will give back to the team. So if you build a recurring business model and it brings in $10k a month you guys can buy iPads, Kindles, beer whatever you want.” We named the project “10k.” Two weeks later they returned wanting to build Upopper! By the end of February the name evolved to Populr. We got the .me domain, built the logo, established some branding and the team promised a June delivery.
BossRoss: This sounds easy. Everything went according to schedule, right?
Holland: No. First we missed June, then July and it still wasn’t ready. I thought, “this is going to kill me.” But I remembered something my family said, “If your business doesn’t run without you it isn’t really a business.” I began to toy with the idea of stepping down from CentreSource to build Populr as a separate company, full time.
Bullpen, a Nashville microfund accepted me, so I stepped down from CentreSource, recruited two team members and we began building Populr full time in Nov. 2011. We moved into the Entrepreneur Center a month later and by April our first version was ready. My mentors insisted we formalize the business model immediately so we added a slew of features such as collaboration, team sharing and security. It took us another four months to get that done, but amazingly by late August 2012, but we had arrived squarely in the Alpha stage.
BossRoss: What about the financing?
Holland: It wasn’t a cinderella story. I put in about $125k of my own money and then raised another $450k in a convertible note. At our current burn rate that should take us through the end of this year. We’re being capitol efficient and making money, but it is still a big chunk of cash. We have nine employees.

Heather McBee
BossRoss: Heather, how do one-page web sites fit into the big picture of social media and branding?
Heather McBee: Your website remains the core, the home where you return. Populr becomes an extension of that home base. It offers the flexibility to quickly create and launch a page without having to call a developer and go through a multi-day or week process. Then you spread it via social media, email, all the venues. The sites are mobile optimized so they work beautifully in that space as well.
BossRoss: How do people use these one-page sites?
McBee: They are highly interactive which creates lots of possibilities. The Lost Trailers, for example, are using Populr in a variety of new ways. After a show in Detroit they’ll record a special message, add some fan photos and create a Pop. Next they publish it via social media and geo-targeted posts on Facebook. It gives them a way to go back into the market quickly and easily with custom branding and reinforce that fact they were just there. Big Machine Label Group is using Populr in another way—to contact radio and deliver assets. Instead of sending emails to station PDs with an attached MP3 file, bio and three paragraphs of information; they send a link to a highly dynamic environment. And they can track who opened it, what each programmer clicked on and how much time they spent. Leadership Music and the Americana Music are using custom themes and finding unique ways to reach their membership.
BossRoss: How do you see adoption spreading in the entertainment industries?
McBee: Right now we’re building some innovative case studies. Nashville is our core, but as it grows we’ll start reaching out to labels in New York and L.A., management companies in Austin and everyone else around the country. We know this platform is also perfect for film, TV and books. There are so many applications for these one-page sites that it just continues to grow.
BossRoss: I noticed the CMA used a password protected Pop to provide documents and information at its recent Board of Directors meeting which I attended. It was convenient having all the files (downloadable) in one place.
Heather: We’ve also suggested additional uses to them like preparing sponsor pitches for the CMA Music Fest or CMA Awards and to provide digital tools and assets for street teams.
BossRoss: What is the biggest difference between the entrepreneur space and the music industry?
McBee: It’s fast and flexible because decision making doesn’t take large committees or repeated meetings. In the music business there are expectations about royalties, systems, accounting and people you are accountable to plus multiple gate keepers that touch every artist. On the entrepreneur side you walk in every day with the feeling you can change the world, because you’re creating something no one else has done.
BossRoss: Nick, what’s next on Populr’s entrepreneurial roadmap?
Holland: We’ve already checked off the typical seed investment boxes. We’ve built and launched a product plus validated that people will naturally gravitate to the product and upgrade and pay without our involvement. Our biggest chore now is the conversation which goes, “That’s impressive. How do I use it?” People want it to replace something. They ask, “Does this get rid of email marketing? Or my website?” We’ve learned Pops are like the tablet in that it’s about expanding how you consume media not replacing a previous device.
BossRoss: Do you have other competitors in the space?
Nicholas: We haven’t seen any direct competitors. But there are some consumer-based one-page builders like
www.about.me which creates online business card/bio pages. People are experimenting with the micropublishing concept, but we haven’t seen anybody on the B2B side which we believe is a much broader application.
BossRoss: How do you describe Populr?
Holland: There’s three things we say to position it. Populr is very effective at creating engaging online content quickly and easily. Then through sharing across social media, email and other channels it helps you gain attention and be heard. Finally, it helps you improve your message with its Micro-Analytic tracking tools that deliver critical insight into who is reading, opening, sharing and responding to your communications. Ultimately the question becomes, “If you can easily create and share a single page what would you do with it?”
Launching An Idea And Making It Populr
/by bossrossNicholas Holland
The dazzling world of startup investors and the entrepreneurs that entice bets on success has been exploding in Music City.
Nicholas Holland, who describes himself as, “an avid supporter of the Nashville entrepreneur ecosystem,” created his first company at 23, then sold it at 26. Next he started the highly successful CentreSource, an Interactive Agency which he recently stepped down from to helm his latest venture full time—Populr.
Populr is all about creating published one-pagers online or Pops. CEO Holland and his group of investors, which includes music industry notables such as Joe Galante, Mark Montgomery and Paul Schatzkin, are convinced Pops will take root and eventually occupy an essential place in every marketer’s toolbox.
Also featured in the following interview is Populr’s Senior Communications Strategist, Heather McBee, who previously served as VP, Marketing and Web Initiatives for Sony Music in Nashville. McBee’s unique perspective creates a strong understanding of how the new product can interface with the entertainment community.
In the following discussion we asked Holland and McBee about Nashville’s entrepreneur community, how they characterize the new company and the colorful journey which has brought Populr into existence.
BossRoss: Nashville, with its traditional roots and Bible belt values seems an unlikely place to birth a technology/entrepreneurial hotbed. How did this happen?
Nicholas Holland: Back-to-back recessions across America created an environment where people’s primary source of wealth collapsed—their homes. At the same time we all have email addresses, interface with a variety of social and virtual connections and have become comfortable interfacing through computers and mobile to a larger world. Finally, Nashville is experiencing a much stronger economic vibrance than many other cities across the country. The result is that individuals have lost trust in corporate America and their personal finance vehicles and have found themselves wanting to build wealth outside that system.
BossRoss: And these changes created a group of wanna-be investors and entrepreneurs?
Holland: Yes. Overall, the changes have created situations where access to capitol is no longer restricted to brick and mortar ideas. You can actually start a business with just a computer and smart phone. As we’ve moved from a blue collar to a services society the exchange of goods has become more fluid because it’s really just information. So you have a reason to become an entrepreneur, access to become an entrepreneur and finally a city which very much supports it. The overall impact of entrepreneurship is sometimes small, but the irony is that it makes a huge splash in terms of its allure and appeal. Ninety-five percent of startups fail but they still gather fans who want to cheer for the underdog. I hear people saying all the time, “If I didn’t have two mortgages and four private school kids I’d love to do what you are doing.” And that creates the investor ecosystem which makes it all possible. Over the last 7 years in Nashville we saw the Entrepreneur Center and various funding groups emerge. Media publications then began attributing more of their pages to these efforts. The culture of entrepreneurship is on fire across the country. But Nashville is three degrees hotter than everywhere else, which makes it such a great place to be.
Holland: It started officially in Nov. 2011, but really began a few years earlier. My agency, CentreSource, required a lot of high touch communications. I wanted to step up our sales efforts with something more than email and attachments, something on the web. Our clients were immediately drawn to the idea of being able to easily create pages online. The web is active, visual and live vs. email which goes out of date as soon as it’s done. People wanted to use it for sales, internal communication, training and customer on-boarding. Unfortunately, our first and second prototypes simply didn’t work and we put our plans on the back burner. When we came into 2011 my team wanted to try again. I told them, “Anything above expenses and taxes up to $10k per month I will give back to the team. So if you build a recurring business model and it brings in $10k a month you guys can buy iPads, Kindles, beer whatever you want.” We named the project “10k.” Two weeks later they returned wanting to build Upopper! By the end of February the name evolved to Populr. We got the .me domain, built the logo, established some branding and the team promised a June delivery.
BossRoss: This sounds easy. Everything went according to schedule, right?
Holland: No. First we missed June, then July and it still wasn’t ready. I thought, “this is going to kill me.” But I remembered something my family said, “If your business doesn’t run without you it isn’t really a business.” I began to toy with the idea of stepping down from CentreSource to build Populr as a separate company, full time. Bullpen, a Nashville microfund accepted me, so I stepped down from CentreSource, recruited two team members and we began building Populr full time in Nov. 2011. We moved into the Entrepreneur Center a month later and by April our first version was ready. My mentors insisted we formalize the business model immediately so we added a slew of features such as collaboration, team sharing and security. It took us another four months to get that done, but amazingly by late August 2012, but we had arrived squarely in the Alpha stage.
BossRoss: What about the financing?
Holland: It wasn’t a cinderella story. I put in about $125k of my own money and then raised another $450k in a convertible note. At our current burn rate that should take us through the end of this year. We’re being capitol efficient and making money, but it is still a big chunk of cash. We have nine employees.
Heather McBee
BossRoss: Heather, how do one-page web sites fit into the big picture of social media and branding?
Heather McBee: Your website remains the core, the home where you return. Populr becomes an extension of that home base. It offers the flexibility to quickly create and launch a page without having to call a developer and go through a multi-day or week process. Then you spread it via social media, email, all the venues. The sites are mobile optimized so they work beautifully in that space as well.
BossRoss: How do people use these one-page sites?
McBee: They are highly interactive which creates lots of possibilities. The Lost Trailers, for example, are using Populr in a variety of new ways. After a show in Detroit they’ll record a special message, add some fan photos and create a Pop. Next they publish it via social media and geo-targeted posts on Facebook. It gives them a way to go back into the market quickly and easily with custom branding and reinforce that fact they were just there. Big Machine Label Group is using Populr in another way—to contact radio and deliver assets. Instead of sending emails to station PDs with an attached MP3 file, bio and three paragraphs of information; they send a link to a highly dynamic environment. And they can track who opened it, what each programmer clicked on and how much time they spent. Leadership Music and the Americana Music are using custom themes and finding unique ways to reach their membership.
BossRoss: How do you see adoption spreading in the entertainment industries?
McBee: Right now we’re building some innovative case studies. Nashville is our core, but as it grows we’ll start reaching out to labels in New York and L.A., management companies in Austin and everyone else around the country. We know this platform is also perfect for film, TV and books. There are so many applications for these one-page sites that it just continues to grow.
BossRoss: I noticed the CMA used a password protected Pop to provide documents and information at its recent Board of Directors meeting which I attended. It was convenient having all the files (downloadable) in one place.
Heather: We’ve also suggested additional uses to them like preparing sponsor pitches for the CMA Music Fest or CMA Awards and to provide digital tools and assets for street teams.
BossRoss: What is the biggest difference between the entrepreneur space and the music industry?
McBee: It’s fast and flexible because decision making doesn’t take large committees or repeated meetings. In the music business there are expectations about royalties, systems, accounting and people you are accountable to plus multiple gate keepers that touch every artist. On the entrepreneur side you walk in every day with the feeling you can change the world, because you’re creating something no one else has done.
BossRoss: Nick, what’s next on Populr’s entrepreneurial roadmap?
Holland: We’ve already checked off the typical seed investment boxes. We’ve built and launched a product plus validated that people will naturally gravitate to the product and upgrade and pay without our involvement. Our biggest chore now is the conversation which goes, “That’s impressive. How do I use it?” People want it to replace something. They ask, “Does this get rid of email marketing? Or my website?” We’ve learned Pops are like the tablet in that it’s about expanding how you consume media not replacing a previous device.
BossRoss: Do you have other competitors in the space?
Nicholas: We haven’t seen any direct competitors. But there are some consumer-based one-page builders like www.about.me which creates online business card/bio pages. People are experimenting with the micropublishing concept, but we haven’t seen anybody on the B2B side which we believe is a much broader application.
BossRoss: How do you describe Populr?
Holland: There’s three things we say to position it. Populr is very effective at creating engaging online content quickly and easily. Then through sharing across social media, email and other channels it helps you gain attention and be heard. Finally, it helps you improve your message with its Micro-Analytic tracking tools that deliver critical insight into who is reading, opening, sharing and responding to your communications. Ultimately the question becomes, “If you can easily create and share a single page what would you do with it?”
Twitter Music Coming Soon
/by Sarah SkatesA web page posted Friday (April 12) invites users to sign in. Once clicked, it reads:
Overall, Twitter music is expected to spur music discovery by sharing the listening habits of its 200 million users.
On Thursday, Twitter officially announced the purchase of We Are Hunted, which recommends new music based on social media conversation.
MusicRow No. 1 Song
/by Eric T. ParkerFlorida Georgia Line
Florida Georgia Line shines on the MusicRow Chart this week with its second No. 1 hit, “Get Your Shine On.”
This latest single, written by Rodney Clawson, Chris Tompkins, Brian Kelly and Tyler Hubbard, reinforces the band’s fun-loving nature after the duo’s last hit, “Cruise.”
If you haven’t caught the 2013 ACM fan-voted New Artist of the Year in concert, you’re in luck because they’re booked solid, playing various dates with the headlining tours of Luke Bryan and Taylor Swift. Catch them in Nashville when they perform during Craig Wiseman’s 9th annual Stars For Second Harvest benefit at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium on Tuesday, June 4, 2013.
If you go, you might even find yourself singing along!
Hunter Hayes To Take Part in MTV's Artist To Watch Live Series
/by Jessica NicholsonHunter Hayes
Hunter Hayes is slated to take part in MTV’s Artist to Watch Live series and campaign. A concert from Hayes will be livestreamed on MTV.com on June 18 from New York’s iconic Webster Hall, with select performances then made available for on-demand viewing on Artists.CMT.com.
In January, MTV first announced Artist to Watch, a new pro-artist and music discovery initiative and campaign across all of MTV’s television channels, websites and social networks. Every two weeks, MTV selects and features a new “Artist to Watch,” spanning multiple genres including pop, EDM, country, hip hop and rock.
Previous performers to take part in the series include Zedd, Robert DeLong, Jessie Ware, Twenty One Pilots, Timeflies and Austin Mahone.
Tickets to attend the show can be purchased here beginning Friday, April 12.
Kree Harrison Enters 'Idol' Top 5
/by Sarah SkatesKree Harrison
Nashvillian Kree Harrison made it to the Top 5 remaining contestants last night (4/11) on American Idol. For the first time in show history, the top five is comprised entirely of women.
Harrison, who is originally from Texas, but now lives in Tennessee, performed “What The World Needs Now Is Love” this week on the show.
Past Idols Kelly Clarkson and Scotty McCreery also returned to the stage for performances.
For the last five years, a male has been crowned American Idol champion, with winners including McCreery, Phillip Phillips, Lee DeWyze, Kris Allen and David Cook.
Ashley Monroe, Mat Kearney To Perform At Google For Creators Nashville Workshop
/by Jessica NicholsonThe free event reached capacity last month, but those still interested in attending can sign up at googleforcreators.
Paramore Releases New Album
/by Sarah SkatesIn the years since that prior album, founding members and brothers Zac and Josh Farro exited the band, and members Hayley Williams, Taylor York and Jeremy Davis regrouped and refocused.
For the latest music they teamed with producer Justin Meldal-Johnsen who has recorded with Beck, Nine Inch Nails, Garbage, Dixie Chicks, Sara Bareilles, Kid Rock and Pink. “If you haven’t heard any Paramore albums, start with this one and not the first one,” Williams told the New York Times.
During the break between Paramore projects, Williams relocated from Nashville to Los Angeles, and scored a Grammy nomination for contributing to B.o.B.’s hit “Airplanes.”
Listen to the entire Paramore album plus two exclusive tracks only on Rdio.
Artist Updates (4-12-13)
/by Jessica Nicholson• • •
• • •
• • •
• • •
• • •
Atlantic Records’ Brett Eldredge was joined by Warner Music Nashville’s John Esposito (President & CEO), Chris Stacey (Sr. VP, Promotion), Scott Hendricks (Sr. VP A&R) and Rob Baker (RLB Artist Management, LLC) on April 10 in Miami to celebrate Eldredge’s opening slot on Taylor Swift‘s RED tour.
Pictured (L-R): John Esposito (President & CEO, WMN), Chris Stacey (SVP Promotion, WMN), Brett Eldredge, Scott Hendricks (SVP A&R, WMN) and Rob Baker (RLB Artist Management, LLC)
Songwriters, Country Radio Honored in Las Vegas (Photos)
/by Jessica NicholsonThe BMI Board of Directors celebrated some of BMI’s most prolific songwriters at the 65th Annual National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) Dinner on April 9 in Las Vegas. The private event celebrated the career of Michael Bolton, and was attended by BMI songwriters Gary Allan, Natalie Cole and Chris Daughtry.
Top broadcasters including Clear Channel, ABC, NBC, and CBS, along with other key NAB members, BMI executives, and Federal Communications Commission (FCC) members were in attendance.
Pictured (L-R): Gary Allan; Natalie Cole; BMI President & CEO Del Bryant; Michael Bolton; and Chris Daughtry.
• • •
The ACM Radio Awards Reception was also held in Las Vegas the same week (on April 6), to celebrate winners Cody Alan (CMT Radio Live with Cody Alan; National), Cornbread, Judi Diamond and Cap’n Mac (WIL-FM, St. Louis; Major Market), Chris Carr, Maverick and Statt (WUBE, Cincinnati; Large Market), Rowdy Yates, Sunny Leigh and Carly Rush (KVOO, Tulsa, Okla.; Medium Market), and Gator Harrison, Styckman and Cowboy Kyle (WUSY, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Small Market). Radio station of the year winners included WYCD in Detroit (Major Market), KAJA in San Antonio (Large Market), KUZZ in Bakersfield, Ca. (Medium Market) and KCLR in Columbia, Mo. (Small Market).
Gary Allan joins several radio award winners at the Radio Awards Reception.
Personality Award winners pose at the 48th Annual Academy Of Country Music Awards ACM Radio Awards Reception at MGM Grand on April 6, 2013 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Charlie Cook On Air: Raising The Bar
/by contributor“Up-tempo death march.”
“Fun lively experience.”
“Truth about love.”
This is not about reviewing a CD, but some thoughts about what is happening with country music CDs today. It is all good.
Two Lanes of Freedom (Tim McGraw), Based on a True Story (Blake Shelton) and Wheelhouse (Brad Paisley) have all been released in the last three or four weeks.
These are three artists who have been around for a long time, yet today we can honestly say these three CDs are heads and shoulders above what they have done in the past. Some of you may say, “Well, they should be getting better every time.” But there is much more here.
All three guys have done great projects in the past but this time these new CDs are so much better than anything we have heard from other albums.
Tim has already had a No. 1 single off Two Lanes and his current single with Taylor Swift and Keith Urban on guitar is sure to be a No. 1 hit and certain to be a leader in the collaboration category for the CMA and ACM awards. Name Drop alert: I spent a minute with Tim last week in Las Vegas and we talked about this CD. He is more comfortable with his music than he has been in years and that came through. He also has unqualified support from Scott Borchetta at Big Machine and that comes through too.
Don’t downplay the support from the top. Blake has a GREAT friend and fan in John Esposito at Warner Brothers and it is no coincidence Blake’s star took off as Espo came aboard at the WB. Blake also has Scott Hendricks in his corner and that is worth a ton.
That said, it is Blake first, second and third. Another name drop: I was chatting with him a couple of weeks back and told him I believe he has driven the huge growth of the format for the last 18 months. He has been such a star on The Voice that the appeal of country music has spiked.
Blake also has a No. 1 single from this new CD and there should be four or five more off True Story including the current single, “Boys ‘Round Here”, “Country On The Radio” and “Ten Times Crazier.”
I was at a Brad Paisley CD preview the other day in Las Vegas and we got to hear the new CD a few days before it was released. You know Brad is a big video guy so many of the cuts, even before the CD was released, came with videos. We saw the videos along with hearing the music and that gave all of us more insight into what Brad was thinking.
Again, with huge supporters in Gary Overton of Sony and Lesly Tyson at Arista, Brad has the confidence to deliver music from his soul.
Brad has had a hit with “Southern Comfort Zone” and “Beat This Summer” is sure to be a No. 1. Additionally, the video is great.
He is always pushing the envelope with his music but this time he has blown through the envelope with a couple of songs. “Accidental Racist” and “Those Crazy Christians” are sure to get additional attention.
I find it interesting these three CDs all dropped within a month of each other. Three established superstars have delivered albums that could all become classics in the years to come. This is a big deal.
Is it the influx of great new male performers like Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Brantley Gilbert, Lee Brice, Jason Aldean, Hunter Hayes and on and on, driving these three to meet the raised bar?
Whatever the reason, we country music fans are the real beneficiaries.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of MusicRow.)