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A Step-By-Step Guide To Making The Most of Your Next Single Release

Your next single release should be the biggest moment of your career to date. Whether or not that turns out to be the case is entirely up to you.

In the streaming era, singles matter as much — if not more — than albums. A single song can determine whether or not someone gives the rest of your music a chance, if they see you on tour, or if they ever think of you again. You have one chance to convert listeners, and most of the time that chance is the first thirty-seconds (or less) of any song you choose to promote.

With this in mind, it is very important that you treat each single release as if it is the biggest thing to ever happen. Your singles should be events that are promoted heavily and celebrated thoroughly. Everyone should know you have a new song, even if they don’t get around to streaming the track themselves. 

Thanks to our pal Jesea Lee from High Road Publicity, we now have a seven-step guide to maximizing the value of a single release. Check it out:

Set a release date with enough lead time!

Most artists don’t have enough content to fill two months of promotion for a single song. Maybe you’re the exception, but generally speaking, four to six weeks is an ideal timeframe to promote new music. That allows you time to make sure everyone who cares about your career and many who don’t are made aware of your plans. 

Create a Spotify pre-save campaign.

Streaming is king, so you might as well bow down and acknowledge the reign Spotify has over the music business. Pre-saves ensure people don’t forget your new music is released, and they only take a few minutes to create. SmartURL is a tool which allows you to create different geo-redirect links for music & more. It is completely free, although some features are restricted to registered users only (registration is free!). SmartURL has a tool called ‘Pivot’, which will allow you to put all of your URL links into one landing page, such as iTunes/ Google/Amazon/Spotify, etc, and your fans can then choose their favorite service and be redirected to it. If you’re looking to only set up a pre-save, there is a specific ‘Pre-Save’ tool. This is open to registered users. To set up a pre-save on Spotify you’ll need the URI of your release.

Other pre-save link generators exist. Find the service that best meets your needs and use it.

Update your Spotify profile.

When your new single comes out, and the world is finally paying attention, how will people know who you are and what you’re all about? Spotify profiles can feel sparse at first, but you can make the most of them by adding thoughtful bios, tour dates, and plenty of pictures for your fans to enjoy. If you have the budget, please consider hiring someone to help create a bio and other content for your page.

Submit for Official Spotify Playlist Consideration and Release Radar.

Playlists are the new mixtapes. Placement on popular playlists can turn unknown musicians into viral sensations overnight, sell tickets, and get people talking about your music. Spotify has a great tool for playlist submission that will get your song in front of curators who oversee some of the platform’s most popular playlists. Here’s how it works:

  1. Log in or sign up to Spotify for Artists using a desktop computer.
  2. On the ‘Home’ section, click ‘Get Started’ next to the music you’d like to submit.
  3. If it’s an album or EP, choose one release to submit.
  4. Complete the playlist submission form, giving as much information as possible about the track.

Reach Out to Press and Independent Playlists

You know what is louder than you screaming into the void known as internet about your new material? Dozens of people screaming into the void about your new material.

Haulix is used by thousands of artists to reach tastemakers in all corners of the world with fully-customizable promo pages that compliment the music being shared. You can sign up today for a one-month trial, upload your contacts, and immediately begin promoting your music to people in positions of influence throughout the industry.

If you need help finding independent playlist curators, try this post or this one.

Tease on socials. 

Your creativity outside of writing and recording will likely determine how much traction your new single receives online, especially from people unfamiliar with your work. Create and share teaser clips, video clips, memes, song lyrics, behind the track information, and anything else you can think of to promote the song’s upcoming release. If you need help coming up with content ideas, especially if you have a limited budget, we recommend learning from artists like Heart Attack Man and Hot Mulligan. Both bands keep their names circulating throughout their music scene without needing to constantly release polished music videos or studio tracks. Just be yourself (in the most creative way possible).

Prepare your release day social posts

The last thing you want to happen on release day is to find yourself scrambling for content. At least five days in advance of your single release, take time to craft a series of social media posts that are unique to each of your channels. Know what you’re going to post to Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, as well as when you’re going to post it. That way, when the day comes, you can focus all your energy on engaging with listeners in real time. 

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Industry News News

Tik Tok’s third music superstar is coming, and her name is Stunna Girl

Following the breakout success of Lil Nas X and Blanco Brown, Tik Tok users are currently creating a viral smash for Bay Area rapper Stunna Girl.

Tik Tok is unstoppable. Not only has the video-sharing app generated more than one-billion downloads worldwide, but it has (so far) created two new stars in the world of music. The first was Lil Nas X, whose success on the platform with “Old Town Road” lead to the longest-running number-one song in Billboard chart history. The second, Blanco Brown and his song “The Git Up,” took a talented songwriter from obscurity to RIAA certified Gold status in less than three months.

Now, Tik Tok is about to have its third star-making moment of 2019. The lucky artist connected to this moment is Stunna Girl, a Bay Area rapper with a moderate string of YouTube hits, but nothing that compares to the moment she’s about to have in the months ahead.

Recently, Stunna Girl uploaded her song “Runway” to Tik Tok. Users quickly discovered the song, and shortly thereafter a new trend emerged on the platform. Dubbed the #RunwayChallenge, Tik Tok videos using Stunna Girl’s song look more or less like this:

Currently, there are more than two-million Tik Tok videos that use “Runway.” Over 1.3 million of those videos were created after August 1. During this same period, “Runway” hit the top 5 on Spotify’s Global Viral 50 song chart, amassing more than 1.6 million plays overall as of August 12. The track also has more than 500,000 plays on Soundcloud and millions of streams on YouTube from numerous fan uploads.

That last point is important because fans and fans alone are the ones responsible for Stunna Girl’s breakout success.

“Runway” was initially released in February 2019 as part of Stunna Girl’s album, YKWTFGO. The song was not released as an official single, and it does not have an official video. Stunna Girl herself does not have a YouTube channel or a Twitter account (she does exist on Instagram). No major outlet has covered or highlighted the song outside of sharing Tik Toks on their social channels.

Google Trends reveals a huge jump in searches for Stunna Girl and her song “Runway” beginning in late July. The song was released in February 2019.

In short, no one would care about “Runway” if it did not connect with consumers.

Much like the success of Lil Nas X and Blanco Brown, Stunna Girl’s sudden rise through the internet ranks can be entirely attributed to music fans. It’s the users of Tik Tok that made “Runway” a hit, and it’s their enjoyment of the song’s opening lines that are quickly making Stunna Girl a name on tip of everyone’s tongue.

The virality of “Runway” cannot be manufactured. No amount of label money can force listeners to create original content based on a song from a largely unknown artist, let alone listen to the track in the first place. Stunna Girl has tapped into hip-hop culture by going straight to the source of its energy, the audience, and giving them something so catchy and fun that they cannot help making it their own.

Tik Tok has nothing left to prove. If Tik Tok users like a song there is no doubt the artist behind the track can have a career. Not everyone that goes viral on the platform will become the next Lil Nas X, but they will develop an audience that seeks out their music outside of the platform.

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Artist Advice Editorials News

Four Simple Tricks For Reaching Tastemakers

Everyone wants to discover the next superstar artist, and every young artist wants to be the next big thing. We’ll help you stand out in four steps or less. Just make sure the music is good.

It has never been easier to share your music than it is right now. At the same time, however, it has never been more challenging to reach the people in positions of influence. With the barrier to entry into the music marketplace at an all-time low, aspiring talent has flooded the industry with music they believe could change the world. No one has time to listen to everything, but everyone who is anyone receives constant requests for their attention.

As a music critic and journalist myself, it is not unusual to receive more than one-hundred emails per day. During busier times of the year, such as October, that number can quickly rise above the two-hundred email mark. I want to claim that I find time to listen to everything, but that would be a lie. I look at what I know first, and then I try new things, but only if there is enough time (and there is rarely enough time).

When I speak at conferences and colleges, musicians and aspiring music professionals ask how they can cut through the noise. They yearn for a simple, secret solution that the public doesn’t know about, but no such tool or trick exists. What I tell them instead is what works for me, which is not unlike what works on everyone else. The advice may seem simple, but it is useful.

First impressions matter

You would not believe the number of artists who blindly send their music to tastemakers every single day without as much as an introductory email. These releases, by and large, go unheard. Why should I spend time listening to someone I don’t know who shows no interest in knowing me? People prefer to work with people they know and believe in, so make yourself known and give them a reason to believe in you.

Email is an excellent place to start, but social media might be even better. Engage with posts from tastemakers you hope to reach and let them know you appreciate their work. Don’t worry about selling yourself as much as making a good impression. If you can do that you will be miles ahead of the competition.

Send links, not files

As I said before, most tastemakers receive over one-hundred emails a day, and those explicitly working in artist discovery tend to receive countless more. As a result, everyone’s inbox space is limited. The only thing attaching song files to an email will accomplish is earning your letter a one-way ticket to the recipient’s trash can.

Comparisons can be enticing

Artists like to believe they are the only person/group on the planet capable of making the kind of music they create. There may be some truth to that, but you probably have more in common with other artists than you realize. Everyone is writing about either themselves versus the world, themselves versus nature, or themselves versus themselves. There are only so many stories to tell. You are likely influenced by many who have written songs about the same things you now hope to discuss. By using smart comparisons, you make it quicker for industry professionals to understand the type of music you’re creating. The faster they can understand you and your sound, the better.

Use a promotional distribution platform

The concept of “faking it til you make it” is a good approach to the music business. Industry professionals want to work with artists who know how to sell their music and how to manage the business of music.

There are numerous ways to send music to industry professionals. You can use file-sharing services or streaming platforms, but most don’t make a great lasting impression on listeners. If you want to present your art in a manner that reflects who you are as a creator, then you need a promotional distribution service.

Haulix offers a secure way to share streams and downloads of your latest release through email invitations and promotional web pages customized to reflect your talent. Not only will you be sharing your music using a service that the industry recognizes, but you will be doing so in a way that places the focus on you. Your promotional page will have no third-party ads and minimal Haulix branding. Your pages will represent you, and they can be customized to do that in many ways (cover art, background images, videos, bio, tour dates, etc.).

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Artist Advice Editorials News

Music Marketing 101: Work The Line

Clever digital marketing will get you far in the music business, but creative real-world marketing still matters.

Waiting in lines is an essential part of the live music experience. Be it a club show or an arena gig; music fans stand in lines to enter virtually every show they attend. The most dedicated followers often line up hours before anyone else to ensure they get to stand as close to their musical heroes as possible. That kind of devotion is an essential part of fandom, and it provides up and coming musicians a great opportunity to build their following.

When tours come through your region with lineups that relate to the music you perform, you should be working the line. In the simplest terms, working the line refers to a face-to-face promotional effort where musicians engage with music fans waiting to attend a show. It’s simple, effectively free, and can yield new followers of your career.

Many musicians work the line in three simple ways:

  1. The performers carry signs or wear shirts promoting their music. That way, everyone who sees them also sees their logo.
  2. Musicians will often carry a phone or portable MP3 player with high quality (over the ear) headphones. With each person they encounter, the musician will ask them to give their music a chance. They will also have CDs and download cards available for anyone who may feel compelled to make a purchase on the spot.
  3. After sharing their music, artists will ask consumers to sign up for their mailing list or to follow them on social media. That way, everyone who takes an interest in their music is contacted at least one additional time in the future. 

Some musicians think outside the box. Recently, I was walking by a venue in Grand Rapids, MI, when I spotted the following message written in chalk under an overpass:

Grand Rapids’ rapper Beatrat has the right idea when it comes to music promotion.

When fans line up for shows at that venue, the crowd often stretches under that same overpass. Considering there are no billboards or businesses in that space, this message from Beatrat is likely to garner some attention. It may not be pretty and it may not be the best possible representation of the music, but it is effective.

If you’re not working the lines outside venues in your area to promote your music then you letting dozens or more potential fans slip through your fingers. Step outside your comfort zone, learn how to talk about your music, and put yourself out there.

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News

Three common marketing mistakes artists make online [VIDEO]

Digital marketing is an essential element of music business success, and there are certain things everyone must do to get ahead.

Music is all about self-expression. A great song can tell the world who you are, what you feel, and what you believe matters most in life. That same material can make an impact on listeners that literally changes how they see the world around them. Music is a wonderful thing in that way, but to reach people, you need to know how to market your creativity.

Digital marketing is the backbone of music promotion today. It is impossible to imagine an artist getting ahead without having a strong presence online. Before you can reach the masses with your ideas, however, there are a few essential marketing concepts you need to understand.

First and foremost, consistent branding is what separates musicians people remember from the ones who are forgotten. There are way more good musicians no one remembers than there are great musicians everyone can easily recognize. The reasons for this are numerous, but more often than not, branding is at the center of it all. A great brand makes you seem more professional, more talented, and altogether better.

As for the other two elements, you’ll need to watch the latest episode of our video series, Music Biz 101. Embedded below, the video finds host James Shotwell breaking down the essential elements of successful digital marketing that many artists overlook when attempting to promote themselves online.

Don’t allow yourself to become another musician no one remembers. Watch this episode of Music Biz 101 and get to work!

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PSA: Your band does not belong on LinkedIn

LinkedIn is the place where professionals from every industry connect, but the platform has nothing to offer groups trying to promote their new release.

Social media plays an essential role in music today. Every artist has at least one account. Most have several, and if they’re smart, they create unique content for each. 

Gary Vaynerchuk, one of the web’s most prolific business strategists, says people should share 100 pieces of content per day on social media. That is a lot of work, especially if you are creating content for platforms with nothing to offer your career.

LinkedIn is no place for bands. Musicians balancing their passion for performance with the need to work a day job may find it useful for networking, but it is no place for music promotion.

That should be obvious. No aspect of LinkedIn or its marketing is meant to engage musicians. Some could argue it barely engages the music industry at large. Still, not a week goes by without musicians — or worse, bands — send invitations to industry professionals at all levels of the business.

This does not convey “I understand the internet.”

Using LinkedIn to promote your music with a profile could even be detrimental to your career. Label executives and A&R reps are seeking talent that knows how to leverage social media for success. A profile on LinkedIn for your music career reveals a lack of understanding. It says, “Hey world, I’m flailing. Please give me attention because I don’t know how to capture your eyes and ears.”

Instead of adding more social media profiles to your brand, focus your efforts on the platforms where people are already engaging with your music and similar artists. Specifically, work on maximizing your presence on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram before going anywhere else. That is where the online masses are engaging with content, and that is where the chance of discovery is highest. 

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Artist Advice Business Advice Haulix News

Fans matter more than listeners

You will never please everyone, so don’t bother trying to win over those who don’t care. One-thousand diehard fans are better than one-million casual listeners any day of the week.

One of the biggest lies that has been sold to us in business is the idea that constant growth is the only way to be successful. Take a look at the largest corporations around the globe, and you will find that they are obsessed with finding ways to increase their bottom line. They want to raise revenue and cut costs no matter what, year after year, until the end of time (or the end of their business).

We bought into this thinking for a long time as well. When we first started Haulix, our goal was to be the industry’s only promotional distribution platform. We had competition even back then, but we were headstrong and confident in our product. Ten years later and the competition has only increased, all while the industry has undergone one of the most radical changes in its one-hundred-year history. We’re still here, we’re bigger than ever, but you know what? We’re still not sure if we’re truly the biggest company in our market and we’re okay with that. Really!

You don’t want to be for everyone. When everyone relies on you the opportunity to be unique is removed because you continuously have to appeal to the broadest possible audience. Creativity thrives in the margins. You want to appeal to people who get what you’re doing, and you want to empower them to spread the good word about your creative output to those who will listen. Anything beyond that, any attempt to cater to people who otherwise wouldn’t give you the time of day, is a hollow effort that will eventually burn out.

The artists who thrive in today’s industry do so because they understand the value of a fan. A single fan can do more for your career than a thousand people who hear your song on the radio and think it’s “pretty good.” You know why? Because real fans feel your success in music is somehow representative of their success in life. If you can make it, they can too, or vice verse. Real fans join you on the journey.

The only way to attract this type of fan is to be true to yourself. Make the music you want to make, and the fans will follow. It may only be a few at first, but if you engage with them and make it known their support is appreciated more fans will follow in time. You see, people like to be appreciated because it means they matter to someone or something, and when they feel that way they are inclined to promote whatever makes them feel as though they belong.

You don’t want to appeal to everyone. Those who appeal to everyone are destined to get lost in the shuffle when the next great artist or song comes along. You want to appeal to the people who feel the way you do right now. If you can manage that, the sky is the limit for your career. Maybe you won’t be an international star performing to sixty-thousand people a night, but you will find a way to earn money from your creativity while engaging with like-minded people. The value of that experience has no price. It is something rare and true and only allotted to those who chase their dreams to the fullest without sacrificing themselves in the process.

Stay who you are. The rest will follow.

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How Cameo can improve your music and tour promotion

Celebrity endorsements can make or break certain releases, and in 2019, Cameo makes getting a celebrity to promote your music is easier (not to mention more affordable) than ever.

Every musician is different, but the ways musicians promote their music and performances are largely the same. Musicians will announce their upcoming event or thing through their channel or a music publication, and then they will continue to promote that happening until the big day arrives. There are, of course, variations in how this promotional period is handled, but most efforts boil down to text, still images, and the occasional video, all made by the group/artist. 

Cameo offers an alternative option for promotion. The service, which launched in 2017, is a platform where fans can book personalized video shoutouts from their favorite celebrities, athletes, or influencers. The company claims its mission is to “create the most memorable fan experiences in the world,” and it does this by allowing consumers to purchase short clips recorded by their chosen celebrity that are curated to mention a specific event or happening. 

Two common uses for Cameo are birthday and anniversaries. People hire their loved one’s favorite entertainer to record a short video where they offer congratulations or support or just say something funny. The clips can be downloaded and shared anywhere, and many are uploaded to the Cameo site so future consumers know what to expect.

Who can you hire on Cameo? There are seemingly hundreds of people to choose from, including Snoop Dogg, Jennifer Love Hewitt, and Gilbert Gottfried. Each celebrity chooses the price of their Cameo clips, which can range from a few bucks to $1,000. The talent also has the right to refuse or decline a Cameo request, which is important to remember.

A number of up and coming musicians have already leveraged the power of Cameo to promote their own endeavors. Recently, Michigan’s If Only, If Only bought a Cameo from Jackass star and skateboarding legend Bam Margera to promote their upcoming performance at BLED Fest in Michigan. The video, which you can view below, cost them just $65 to create:

In less than three days, the video above has been viewed over 4200 times, which nearly double the size of If Only If Only’s Twitter following

The band also posted the video to their Facebook page, where it has already generated more than 500 views.

The benefits to using Cameo as part of a marketing effort are numerous. For starters, people who recognize the celebrity are likely to watch the video, even if they may not be as familiar with your music. Additionally, the video can be shared on a number of platforms, and it provides a different voice (style) of promotion.  

However, the usefulness of a Cameo video is directly tied to the person hired to create the promotional clip. If fans are unfamiliar with the talent they may not click or care about the content. Artists need to know their audience and what that group cares about before spending money on promotion, which is true in any promotional endeavor. 

You can browse Cameo’s talent by heading over to the company’s official website. If you choose to promote through a Cameo clip, please send us a link! You can email james@haulix.com or reach us on Twitter: @Haulix.

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Artist Advice Editorials Haulix News

VIDEO: What musicians can learn from Fortnite

The most popular video game in the world, Fornite, has changed the gaming industry forever by relying on simple marketing tactics that keep fans engaged.

Fortnite is unstoppable. For the better part of two years, Epic Games’ runaway hit has dominated headlines and industry performance charts thanks to a combination of fan service and constant innovation. The game has become so popular, in fact, that it has forced competing titles to change their gameplay to mirror what fans of gaming love about Fortnite. That kind of influence is rare, but the marketing behind the game’s success is based in simple ideas that anyone can apply to their creative pursuits.

Above all else, Fortnite engages with and listens to its audience. Epic Games invests heavily in keeping players interested in the world of Fortnite through weekly updates, thematic seasons of gameplay, and a social presence that is second to none in the gaming industry. The company recognizes that fans need to feel as unique as they make the company feel by supporting their title, and because of that, Fortnite has retained its audience far longer more gaming brand without having to create and release a new game every year.

In this episode of Music Biz 101, host James Shotwell breaks down four ways artists can learn from Fortnite to improve their marketing efforts. Whether you’re a garage rock sensation or a hip-hop innovator lost in the depths of Soundcloud, this video will help you get ahead.

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Artist Advice Editorials Industry News News

How artists succeed on Spotify, according to a playlisting professional

Streaming is as much a way of life for musicians as it is a game, and games are often won or lost based on the intelligence of the players.

The promise of streaming is that it gives artists at every level a fair chance at building an audience. All songs are available everywhere all the time, and each song more or less receives the same payout per stream. As long as an artist can make people aware of their art they have an opportunity to develop a career in music. Whether or not that career becomes a full-time job is a completely different discussion, but the opportunity for success exists.

Any artist will tell you that real success in streaming today requires inclusion on playlists, specifically those curated by influencers or brands with large followings. Playlist placement can mean the difference between an artist’s fans hearing a new single and the fans of that artist’s genre hearing the same song. In many ways, playlists are the new mixtapes, or even the new radio, as they serve to help aid in the discovery of new/emerging talent.

But the question remains: How does an artist get added to notable playlists if they do not know the curators?

To find an answer, or ten answers, our friends at DigitalMusicNews worked with playlisting professional George Goodrich to offer advice to artists at every level of the business. You can find his advice below:

Write long albums with short songs.

Rappers like Drake have turned this technique into an art, with albums loaded with lots of shorter tracks. And he isn’t alone. The strategy generates far more plays, thereby ensuring a top-charting album while multiplying per-stream revenue.

For developing artists, the strategy also increases the odds of landing on big playlists — while also increasing positive metrics around songs (more on that later).

Make an impact in under 30-seconds.

Fact: Spotify doesn’t pay for any song that gets skipped before the 30-second mark. But this goes beyond the simple payment.

“Curators and streamers alike want to be captivated by a new song in under 30 seconds,” Goodrich told us. “Make your song flow well, but also don’t waste time during the first crucial seconds of a song.”

Songs are getting shorter, so always think about length.

Lil Nas X’s ‘Old Town Road’ is just 1:53, the shortest chart-topper since 1965. And that’s hardly the exception: Lil Pump’s ‘Gucci Gang’ is just 2:04, while Kodak Black’s ‘Calling My Spirit’ is 2:32.

Songs are definitely getting shorter, and Goodrich says the reasons are simple. People are more distracted, and shorter songs grab people faster and reduce the chances of skipping.

They also result in bigger payouts for artists.

Repackage old material

Goodrich told us that clever artists are now re-releasing older tracks, with the same ISRC code and previous play counts. “Artists that are smart are repacking singles into albums or compilations,” Goodrich said.

The repackaging pushes the ‘brand-new’ tracks with lots of plays into ‘new’ algorithm playlists like Discover Weekly, New Music Friday, and your followers’ Release Radar.  The refresh can result in a surge of new interest for an older cut.

Make the most of Spotify for Artists

Most artists are doing Spotify for Artists wrong — and that dramatically reduces their chances of playlist inclusion.

The number one mistake: artists should be uploading tracks into Spotify for Artists at least seven days before it hits the platform. Otherwise, the track isn’t guaranteed to catch your followers’ Release Radar playlists, which means that all of that free promotion is lost.

“A lot of artists are gunning down playlists but don’t even have access or utilize Spotify for Artists,” Goodrich said.

Be nice to your distributor — you need them more than they need you.

“Most distributors have direct deals with Spotify, which means at least one person at your distributor speaks directly to someone at Spotify,” Goodrich told us. “There are always different brand deals and playlists opportunities that can pop up only via your distribution company.”

Own your genre — or pioneer your own.

Hip hop is huge, but other genres are also generating lots of money on Spotify. Overnight, bedroom producers are minting cash on platforms like Lo-Fi Beats, and they don’t even have to tour.

But that’s just one playlist catering to a growing class of people using music to focus better. “Thanks mainly to the startup world and people just trying to focus better at work, stripped down repetitive beats are the top choice when it comes to writing or doing detailed technical work,” Goodrich said.

Goodrich said playlists like Lo-Fi Beats and Yoga & Meditation are spawning an entirely new generation of artists who are making a living off of Spotify. “There are hundreds of artists out there making thousands of dollars on these micro-niche genres across the platform,” Goodrich said. “Most of them with little-to-no fanbase outside of the platform, which they are completely fine with!”

‘Going viral’ is a fool’s errand — think long term, release lots of songs, and develop long release schedules.

Songs still go viral occasionally, but ‘going viral’ isn’t a good strategy. “In order to get noticed and get on Spotify playlists, most artists think they need a hit or just one banger to put them on,” George said.

“In reality, you don’t need a hit, you need to release more records to drastically increase your chances of creating a banger. The more releases, the more chances you have to trigger the algorithms when a new release hits Spotify.”

Try to establish a direct connection with a Spotify curator.

Yes, you can directly connect with Spotify curators if you’re lucky.

No, you cannot do this by spamming them constantly.

George recommends LinkedIn as a good place to start finding curators. Try starting here. Just make sure to target the right person for your genre (i.e., don’t splatter-spam). It’s time-consuming and not guaranteed, but the right connection can result in a plum playlist add. “If you do choose to go this route be polite in your messaging and don’t expect them to respond instantly,” says George.

Pay attention to cover art

Album art isn’t a lost art — even though it’s a tiny thumbnail these days. “Visual should not be an afterthought,” George said while urging artists to imitate the artwork of releases from successful artists.

But don’t go crazy on a thumbnail — just make it high quality and fun. “Don’t spend $5,000 on a designer,” George laughed.

Engagement is good, disengagement is bad.

Nobody knows Spotify’s exact algorithms for rating a track. But some basic principles apply. Anytime a listener saves a song or adds it to a personal playlist, that’s good and shows positive engagement. Anytime they skip it or remove it, that’s bad because it indicates disengagement. Keep this basic guideline in mind.

Dedicated followers = “guaranteed playlist real estate”

Artists with lots of Spotify followers are “guaranteed playlist real estate,” according to Goodrich. The reason is that anytime an artist releases new music on Spotify, it automatically populates the customized Release Radar playlist of every follower (just make sure you are releasing properly through Spotify for Artists). That doesn’t guarantee placement on a top playlist, but it builds a lot of momentum.

Start big, end big to reduce skipping.

Many hip-hop artists immediately hit you with the hook to grab your attention. But Goodrich is noting another trick: a lot of artists are now ending with the hook to keep listeners attentive. Slower fade-outs and energy drops can lead to late-stage skips — which can result in negative strikes.

Avoid long intros and slow builds.

More often than not, long intros kill placements. So it’s better to avoid them. “There are long intros that work, but if you want to really crush it on Spotify, long intros aren’t the way to go,” George told us.

Off-Spotify popularity helps, too.

Artists with weak Twitter and Instagram followers can have difficulty gaining traction on Spotify playlists. “It’s all relevant,” George explained while noting that he politely guides artists with IG followers under 300 back to their SoundCloud accounts.

But beyond social networking, there’s also Google SEO to think about (SEO stands for ‘Search Engine Optimization,’ and basically refers to your Google search ranking). For example: is your song appearing on the first page of Google results, and preferably, is it one of the top, above-the-fold results.

Remember: Google owns YouTube, so a YouTube result with good track metadata and information will often bubble to the top. “If the song’s performing well, it can go into feeder playlists like Fresh Finds, and then an actual human at Spotify may listen to it,” George explained.

And another pro-tip: George also advised shouting out Spotify in tweets, IG posts, and Facebook blasts.  They just might notice.

Should you get signed? A note on the power of major label representation.

It’s hard to say exactly what transpires between major labels and Spotify. Major labels oftentimes have serious sway with Spotify, but George warned us that this really depends on the specific label.

“We really don’t know what happens behind closed doors,” George said.  “Some labels have better relationships than others.”

In many cases, however, the impact can be dramatic. Beyond pulling favors and blasting Drake-style promotions, major labels are oftentimes experts in crafting streaming-friendly songs. “They know how to create and craft songs,” George said.


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