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How to promote your Spotify playlist

Playlists are the new mixtapes, but before you can curate the future of music you need to develop a following. We can help with that.

Spotify playlists have quickly become one of the most sought-after types of coverage in music promotion. Some argue playlists are quickly overtaking blogs in terms of influence, and it’s hard to disagree. Several Spotify playlists have millions of followers, and dozens more have ten-thousand subscribers or more. Do you know any blogs with that kind of dedicated following? We don’t.

And make no mistake: Spotify is becoming more social every month. The company already shared plans to let artists engage with fans directly, and there have been rumblings throughout the industry that Spotify will add more editorial offerings to their service soon. If all goes as planned for the company, Spotify could not only control music but the conversation around music as well.

With all this in mind, it should come as no surprise that many aspiring tastemakers and music professionals are trying their hand at launching the next great Spotify playlist. The company does not disclose many figures related to playlist creation, but it’s not hard to imagine hundreds, if not thousands of new playlists being made every day. Most never reach more than a handful of people, and many others burn out before they become a dominant force in their niche.

We cannot tell you the secret recipe to playlist stardom, but we do know a number of things anyone can do to improve their Spotify following and help raise support for the artists they admire.

Identify a target market and cater your playlist to meet their needs.

Very few people make successful playlists by sharing whatever songs interest them at any given time. The best playlists are curated to engage a very specific audience, like 90s hip-hop fans or people who identify as crust punks. Figure out who you want to share music with and fill your playlist with talent that you believe will fall in line with their interests. Don’t worry about other people beating you to the market you choose as much as you do trying to maintain regular updates.

Create great cover art

Branding is as important in playlist promotion as it is in any other facet of the music business. If you want to build a following you need to be easy to identify, and those efforts begin with creating cover art that entices people to give your playlist a click. There are many tutorials on how to accomplish this circulating online, but the two keys to success are originality and composition. Don’t just make something that looks good, make something that stands up and screams, “Look at me!”

Promote your playlist to your personal market (and take chances).

Becoming influential on Spotify is similar to finding success on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. You have to put yourself out there in order to grow, and you have to think outside the box to make your playlist stand out.

A quick way to do this is to use simple promotional tools like sponsored posts to reach out to your social media network. Your playlist could also be advertised personally. Contact your local venues, bars, independent shops, and cafés and ask them to shuffle it. You will get a lot of nos, but there will be people who oblige as well. Take the risk.

Make a marketing plan in advance of starting to market your playlist.

There’s an old saying in business that every minute spent planning something saves ten minutes when it comes time to do that thing. Before you begin shouting into the void of the internet about your playlist, take time to figure out where you should promote and how you will go about getting people’s attention. That goes along with figuring out your audience, yes, but also applies to your cover art, playlist description, and promotional copy.

Enter Reddit’s Playlist competition

Reddit is as close to the Wild West as you can get online without entering any legally questionable territory. Among the many offerings of its massive community is a subreddit developed by and catering to playlist creators. Not only can you upload and share your playlist with people who are interested in discovering new playlists, but you can enter into a monthly competition that offers the opportunity to gain a lot of exposure for your curation skills.

Submit your creation(s) to playlist websites

Did you know there are sites that exist for the sole purpose of exposing people to new music through playlists? Websites such as Playlists.net and Sound Plate are designed to help you promote your playlists. For example, Playlists.net collaborates with the “Playlist a Day” app, which you can find in both Android and iOS app stores. Basically, this app gives users a random Spotify playlist based on a theme they’ve chosen. Add your playlists, and find new, random fans each day!

Contact the artists on your playlist, as well as their teams!

Do you know who loves finding new playlists? The people tasked with helping an artist gain exposure. When you add a song to your playlist you should be tweeting about and tagging the artist behind it online. You should also tag or email their team (PR, label) to inform them of the track’s inclusion. Some won’t respond, but others will help you promote your playlist because they’ll know you’re serious about your curation efforts.

Follow great playlists

You should never expect people to do something you wouldn’t do yourself, which is why you need to be following playlists. Seek out similar playlists that have found success from their promotional efforts and learn from their behavior. What does their cover art look like? Do they change the art? How often is the playlist update? Do they curate the track order? Learning what makes other people successful will, in turn, help you become successful in playlist making.

Collaborate with blogs and influencers

Teamwork makes the dream work. You should contact music bloggers who cover the artists featured in your playlist and work on a collaboration or a playlist takeover with them. Have the writer post about it to their social media profiles encouraging fans to share and ask them to add a playlist widget to their site.

Create more playlists

A smart business person does not put all their time and effort into one project. Leaders of industry don’t rely on a single revenue stream. If you want to become an influential curator you will need more than one great playlist. Develop as many playlists as you can find time to maintain, and use their success to promote other playlists you offer.

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50 Hard Rock/Pop Punk Playlists you should be pitching (and how to reach them)

Playlists are the new mixtapes. If you want to get ahead in your career, you need to appear on these popular playlists.

Music discovery has changed. The days of people sharing MP3s online or burning one another CD-Rs in their bedrooms with artwork made from a Sharpie are now considered the dark ages. Today’s music listeners discover new artists and songs through playlists, but discovering the right playlist for your music and how to contact the curator behind it can feel impossible at times.

We’re here to help. With the assistance of several friends in the music business, we have uncovered fifty (50) influential hard rock and pop punk playlists that are actively helping artists at every level raise their profiles on a global scale. We’ve also found the people behind them, or at least, a means to contact those behind them, and we’re giving that information to you for free today.

Smart artists will recognize that this is not a perfect solution to pitching problems they currently face. There are thousands of artists working every day for increased exposure through Spotify playlists, and many of them will likely be reaching out to these same contacts in hopes of being noticed. We ran tips to help you stand out while playlist pitching last month, and we will run more in the months to come. Be professional, be engaging, and always be true to yourself. Let the curators know what makes you and your music unique.

Name Contact
2019 Christian Rock indiechristiansound@gmail.com
All Things Heavy jesea@highroadpublicity.com
beach goth @yung.thuy
Beats n Bass [ drum and bass / dance / liquid ] @katetechtastic
Best Covers sol@safetyorange.com
Best Of: Metalcore / Hardcore @DekaAgency
Big Rock Bangers wearekooluk@gmail.com
blessings for sleepy sad teens @cryopotato
Breakout Core (Metalcore. Melodic. Post Hardcore) info@beheadingthetraitor.com
Early 2000s Pop Punk Nostalgia rnwalsh17@gmail.com
ELITE TRAINING @ToddActual
Euro Punk info@antillectual.com
Feesten/Uitgaan Remco.wiefferink2002@gmail.com
forever pop punk @blfarber
GHOST VIBES | EMO/POP PUNK @danplourenco
Happy Hardcore @Jalmaan
Hardcore Bangers @samimadlad
Hardcore Christian Fight/Motivation Workout @ivanrmacias
HARDCORE OLD SCHOOL (1978-1989) @hardcoreoldschool
Hardcore Workout Music by Fitify martin@fitifyapps.com
Hardcore/Punk Crist√£o Abril meneguel@gmail.com.
HEAVY METAL / METALCORE / HARDCORE – COLLECTION @ChrisMavUK
Japanese Punk-Alternative @teachoice.
KOREAN HEAVY METAL | SCREAMO & K-HEAVY METAL | KPOP HEAVY METAL @aryatully
Makeout – Kinky Version – Sexy songs @lissaa_souza
Memes do Hardcore – HC BR @memesdohardcore.
Metal United – Metal / Metalcore / Deathcore / Rock / Post Hardcore / Alt metalunitedinfo@gmail.com
Metalcore / Screamo / Postcore / Hardcore metalcore.playlist@gmail.com
Metalcore/Deathcore/Post-hardcore/Alternative themetalcorecommunity@gmail.com
Midwest Emo Revival / Post Indie-Rock IDK natgoodhue@gmail.com
Music for the Ginger Soul gingersoul1019@gmail.com
New Pop Punk Essentials gavinbonar@gmail.com.
Now That’s What I Call Breakdowns! jordan@killthemusic.net
Pop Punk & Positivity by Get Your Head Straight @getyourheadstraightuk
Pop Punk + @de7eck
POP PUNK 2019 ukpoppunkers@gmail.com
Post Hardcore Indonesia @rayasabari
PROZAC @ollydagger
Punk Love (716-563-5856)
Rap Hardcore / Hip Hop Hardcore / Rap Underground / Rap Latino / Rap Chileno / Rap Mexicano @bonnevilla
Rock/Punk/Metal Mix qbroadwaymp29@gmail.com.
rock/reggae/hardcore/ laurocg@gmail.com
Screamo x Metalcore x Post-Hardcore x Hardcore x Metal @gmcauchi_
Shrednector (Pop Punk / Indie Rock) @shrednector
Spring is in the ear @sabrinasterntal
Suomi Finland Punk & Rock sofapromotions@gmail.com
Tight Jeans, Tighter Scene jesea@highroadpublicity.com
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Spotify founder says “close to 40,000” tracks added to streaming service every day

The latest data point from Spotify’s founder reveals a hard truth about competition in the streaming age.

Spotify Founder and CEO Daniel Ek spoke with investors this week during a quarterly earnings call to discuss the latest developments at the streaming giant. Amongst the many tidbits of information shared, including the companies’ recent success crossing the 100-million paid user count, was the fact that nearly 40,000 new songs are added to the service each day. To be specific, Ek said:

“with more than 50 million tracks now available on Spotify, and growing by close to 40,000 daily, the discover[y] tools we’re building have never been more important to consumers and artists alike.”

Daniel Ek, speaking to investors on April 29, 2019

Let’s put that figure into perspective. Forty thousand tracks per day equal about 280,000 songs a week or around 1.2 million tracks per calendar month. In a year, this volume would add up to a whopping 14.6 million.

Therefore, at its current rate, every three-and-a-half years, Spotify will add over 50 million tracks to its library. Considering the platform currently boasts a catalog of roughly 50 million songs total, the current growth rate would double Spotify’s music library by 2022, and it could happen sooner than that.

To look at it another way, let’s accept that the average song is about three minutes long, or 180-seconds. With 40,000 songs added every day, Spotify is creating roughly 2,000 hours worth of new competition for clicks each morning.

If you listened to every song added to Spotify in a single day without taking breaks it would take you a little more than 83 days to hear everything. That’s almost three months of music being added to one streaming service each day.

Daniel Ek also added that the “number of creators that are engaging directly with Spotify’s platform continues to increase, growing to over 3.9 million” in the first three months of 2019. That figure refers to musicians and podcasters, both of whom are contributing to the overwhelming amount of content being added to the platform each day.

Artists reading this now may find themselves in a panic. After all, how can anyone adding music to the platform with a promotional juggernaut behind them hope to stand out in a sea of music far too large to ever be consumed in full? For them, Ek offers this data point:

“In Q1, we saw a 20% increase in the number of artists streamed on our platform year-over-year and a 29% increase in the number of artists with at least 100,000 listeners.

Daniel Ek, speaking to investors on April 29, 2019

The best chance most artists have of being discovered on Spotify is through appearances on popular playlists. We ran the advice of one playlisting professional on our blog last week, and we plan to share more in the weeks to come.

If Spotify’s catalog is growing at this unprecedented rate, it’s highly likely that the same can be said for Apple Music and Amazon Music, as well as their smaller competitors. Streaming may be helping the music business recover from its low point, but it’s certainly not helping developing artists make careers out of their work in the same way physical media sales once did. At least, not yet.

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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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How Spotify’s new Hulu bundle may hurt musicians

Following an appeal to stop mechanical royalty rates from rising, Spotify’s latest bundle threatens to take even more money away from artists.

Spotify made headlines this week by announcing Spotify Premium now includes a free subscription to Hulu’s ad-supported plan. The new perk is available now to new and existing subscribers alike, but not everyone is thrilled with the news.

The streaming giant has been battling a string of negative press since coming out against new royalty rates set by the Copyright Royalty Board (Spotify). Spotify was not alone in appealing the ruling, which plans to raise mechanical royalty rates by 44% over the next four years, but the company made matters worse for itself after posting a blog in defense of their decision. 

“Does Spotify think songwriters deserve to be paid more?” the post asks. “Yes — this is important to songwriters and it’s important to Spotify. The industry needs to continue evolving to ensure that the people who create the music we all love — artists and songwriters — can earn a living. The question is how best to achieve that goal.”

As we covered last week, the new CRB ruling aims to raise the value of a song from $0.003 per stream to $0.004, but Amazon, Spotify, Pandora, and Google disagree.

In its blog post, Spotify said it is generally supportive of a 15 percent rate, provided the rates cover what it calls the “right scope of publishing rights,” including those for videos and lyrics. Spotify argues that the CRB’s decision limits the type of non-music offerings it can present to potential subscribers.

“A key area of focus in our appeal will be the fact that the CRB’s decision makes it very difficult for music services to offer ‘bundles’ of music and non-music offerings,” the company said. “This will hurt consumers who will lose access to them. These bundles are key to attracting first-time music subscribers so we can keep growing the revenue pie for everyone.”

The music industry, however, is not buying Spotify’s claims.

David Israelite, the CEO president of the National Music Publishers Association, cut straight to the chase on Twitter by saying that it was a “big mistake” for Spotify to “try to deceive songwriters and artists” with the blog post.

In its blog post, Spotify said it is generally supportive of a 15 percent rate, provided the rates cover what it calls the “right scope of publishing rights,” including those for videos and lyrics. Spotify argues that the CRB’s decision limits the type of non-music offerings it can present to potential subscribers.

“A key area of focus in our appeal will be the fact that the CRB’s decision makes it very difficult for music services to offer ‘bundles’ of music and non-music offerings,” the company said. “This will hurt consumers who will lose access to them. These bundles are key to attracting first-time music subscribers so we can keep growing the revenue pie for everyone.”

Many in the music industry were quick to argue against the company’s claims. David Israelite, the CEO president of the National Music Publishers Association, said on Twitter that it was a “big mistake” for Spotify to “try to deceive songwriters and artists” with the blog post.

“I didn’t think Spotify could sink much lower — but they have,” he said. “This statement is one giant lie. I’m sure a PR team spent a great deal of time and energy crafting a statement to try to deceive artists and songwriters. They must think artists and songwriters are stupid. They are not. The CRB ordered a rate increase for songwriters. Spotify is against it. It really is that simple.”

Songwriters of North America (SONA) seconded Israelite’s comments by saying that Spotify, along with Amazon, Pandora and Google, who are also appealing the CRB rates, are clearly in the wrong.

While it’s easy to appreciate the allure of Spotify’s Hulu bundle, it’s also hard to ignore the fact that offering more for less ultimately comes with a price. If Spotify is charging consumers the same amount for its service while offering access to another service altogether the money being spent will inevitably be split between those entities. Whatever share Spotify takes will then be split between the company and the artists who rely on its platform to get their music to consumers.

Spotify may have a point in its argument against the ruling, but the company may also have ulterior motives for wanting to keep mechanical royalty rates low. Musicians don’t care if consumers get access to Hulu with their Spotify account. Some may even argue artists are against it, as it provides more programming that distracts consumers from listening to music.

It’s clear the battle for mechanical royalties is far from over. Right now, consumers seem to care about the needs of their favorite musicians, but will the promise of cheaper streaming solutions be too good for them to resist? Only time will tell.

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Spotify Officially Releases its Playlist Submission Feature

Another week, another major announcement from Spotify.

Just a few short months after announcing a beta launch, Spotify has officially released its playlist submission feature. The new tool allows artists, labels, and teams to share new music directly with the company’s editorial team for playlist consideration.

In an announcement made through the company’s official blog, Spotify claims more than 67,000 artists and labels submitted music since the feature started being tested in July. They also say that their official playlists have added more than 10,000 artists for the first time thanks to the move.

Taking those numbers into consideration, it appears that artists who submitted content during the beta testing period had (roughly) a 1 in 7 chance of being added to a playlist. With the official release upon us, not to mention a fresh wave of promotion for the feature, it’s likely those odds will change as the number of daily/weekly submissions begin to rise.

To access the playlist submission feature, artists and their teams must first join Spotify For Artists, which offers musicians the ability to track their plays, view analytics, see fan base demographics, and most recently, the ability to upload music directly. The company suggests adding pre-release music as early as possible, preferably weeks before its set to go public, but not later than seven days before its street date. From there, artists select one song they believe in and fill out a submission form. Artists will need to choose several relevant genre and thematic tags, as well as offer insight into the story behind their music. A full description of the submission process, as explained by the Spotify editorial staff, can be found below:

Spotify also released several case studies to show the effects of successful playlist submissions. For example, when Gustavo Bertoni’s song “Be Here Now” was selected to appear on the Acoustic Morning and Fresh Folk playlists, his monthly listeners jumped from 7,000 to 617,000.

Alt-rock band Yonaka saw their numbers increase from 82,000 to 290,000 when they were added to New Music Friday, and the Dutch rapper Bryan Mg went from 4,600 to 33,000 monthly listeners after ending up on the La Vida Loca playlist.

How the streaming revenue of the artists studied changed after inclusion in the company’s playlists was not included in the Spotify case studies, but each undoubtedly saw an increase. The rise in total listeners also helps Spotify’s larger narrative regarding how its platform can raise an artist’s overall profile, which in turn should lead to more (or more significant) touring opportunities.

Spotify added that even when songs aren’t selected for playlists before their official release, having tracks submitted through the uploading feature with all their metadata included means they’re ready for inclusion on future playlists if that comes to pass.

In short, it’s worth the effort for artists to try their luck with playlist submissions.

A video promoting the new tool was also released alongside the official announcement. You can view it below:

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