Grow Your Audience On Spotify With These Helpful Tips

Spotify has become one of the most popular music streaming services in recent years. Spotify has millions of users, and Spotify’s audience continues to grow each day. Spotify is available on a variety of platforms, including iOS and Android devices, computers, and even smart speakers like Google Home. This means that you can listen to your favorite tunes from Spotify no matter where you are! This blog post will discuss how you can grow your Spotify audience with some of the most helpful tips

 

Create a Spotify account and upload your music 

The first step in garnering an audience in Spotify is by creating an account and uploading your music. Spotify users can listen to Spotify music for free but will have advertisements in between songs. Spotify also offers a premium version that costs $11.99 per month and allows Spotify users to remove all ads from their playlists! 

 

If you want your audience to buy Spotify streams make sure they are getting the most value by going with Spotify’s paid Spotify program Spotify Premium.Spotify is a great way to gain exposure and build your audience, so make sure you upload all of your music! Make sure all of your song titles are clear so people know what they’re listening to when browsing through the list.

 

Create Spotify playlists

 

Another step in growing your Spotify audience is by creating Spotify playlists that highlight not only the best songs from your album or mixtape but also include some of the most popular tracks from Spotify as well. This will increase your exposure on Spotify. Spotify users can create their playlists, and if you have a playlist that includes popular songs from Spotify it will allow Spotify listeners to find your music more easily! This is particularly helpful for artists who do not already have an audience but are trying to grow their Spotify following by using the Spotify platform.

 

Add an album cover photo 

It is also a good idea to add an album cover photo with one or two members of your band. This will make it easier for listeners to identify which artist is performing each song. Spotify allows you to upload photos in the About section of your Spotify profile.

 

Include a link to your Spotify music

Another way that Spotify can help get more listeners and shares is by linking each song back to your Spotify artist page. This will allow users to click on the album cover, which takes them directly to specific songs. Spotify allows you to insert links on the Spotify platform into each song, which can direct listeners back to your Spotify artist page or any other site that you want them to visit.

 

Follow other artists on Spotify

When you follow other artists on Spotify, you will most likely get their attention. From there, ask them for feedback about your music or to answer a few questions. Spotify is all about community so networking with other artists can be very helpful!

 

  • Spotify fans

Creating Spotify playlists dedicated to your music, and sharing them on your page lets people know that you are an artist they should listen to. Also, by adding people as followers or playlist listeners it shows Spotify that you are an artist people listen to! Spotify will then promote you and your music more often.

  • Spotify promotion

Use Spotify playlists for your benefit by adding all of your songs on certain Spotify lists that contain similar artists or musicians, which could help boost the number of listeners to each track. This is a great way to get noticed! Spotify is all about finding new and great music, so using Spotify playlists for your benefit can help you grow a bigger audience!

 

  • Spotify listeners

Last but not least, Spotify recommends artists similar to the ones that are already on your playlist. If those artists have an active fanbase or following it would be smart to add them as well! Spotify is all about community and letting music lovers listen to different types of genres or artists. You can even use the “Browse” function to find new artists that you might like or be interested in.

 

If you want to get more likes and followers on Spotify, your music must be professional and well-produced. Even if you can’t afford a producer or don’t have access to expensive recording equipment, there are still plenty of things you can do yourself to create better-sounding tracks. It all starts by making sure everything about your account looks as good as possible. This, plus the tips listed above, are all geared to ensure that you effectively increase your audience in Spotify.

Apple puts pressure on record labels for more iTunes exclusives #Apple #iGreed #JTB

APPLE HAS BEGUN putting pressure on major record labels to release new content exclusively through its iTunes store

The LA TIMES reports

 

Apple Inc. has begun pressuring the major record companies to offer new releases exclusively through its itunes store — a move that would initially block availability on streaming services such as Spotify or Beats Music, according to several people familiar with the matter.

Apple executives contend that on-demand music services have begun to cannibalize download sales, and its representatives are demanding the labels create a period reserved for digital purchasing.

Music industry insiders, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals from the industry’s dominant retailer, said Apple’s push for a new release window — similar to the one that some Hollywood studios impose for films newly released for home viewing — shows the Cupertino, Calif., tech giant is scrambling to retain its competitive advantage in an evolving digital music market.

 

 

 

 

 

These are really changing times, and I think everybody’s going to be trying different things, whether it’s iTunes, Spotify or the labels,” said Irving Azoff, manager of the Eagles, Christina Aguilera and other acts. “It’s kind of up for grabs.”

Apple’s iTunes online store accounts for about 80% of all download sales in the U.S. But after a decade of uninterrupted growth domestically, digital song and album sales began to slump in 2013 and continued to slide this year.

Song downloads were down 12% through the first eight weeks of this year compared with a year earlier, and digital album sales were off 13%, according to data from Nielsen SoundScan.

Industry insiders attribute the decline to a variety of factors, including the growing popularity of streaming services, as well as increased competition for the consumer’s ear.

Mobile devices have become the digital era’s equivalent of the Sony Walkman. Some 48% of smartphone owners use their portable devices every day to listen to streaming music, as opposed to 42% who use them for downloading music, according to Nielsen.

 

Although Apple remains the single largest manufacturer of smartphones, more U.S. consumers now own Android devices running Google’s software, according to researcher the Yankee Group. As consumers gravitate to Google-powered smartphones, they lose access to the world’s biggest and most widely recognized music retailer, Apple’s iTunes.

Apple has been meeting with major label executives, and approaching individual artists, in a bid to secure exclusivity to bolster sales. A spokesman declined comment for this story.

“I’ve never had anyone [at Apple] say streaming is killing our business,” said Jim Guerinot, whose Rebel Waltz Management handles No Doubt, Trent Reznor and other acts. “They’ve been very specific for 10 years about wanting extra content — just like Best Buy, Wal-Mart and Target. They’re very aggressive about trying to do something that will differentiate them from everybody else.”

In meetings with music industry representatives, people familiar with the matter say Apple has cited the brisk sales of Beyonce‘s fifth studio album in December, which was offered solely through iTunes and became the fastest-selling album in the digital store.

Though few artists enjoy the popularity of Beyonce, Apple uses the example to buttress its argument that withholding albums from streaming services can spur sales.

 

But Beyonce’s album also provoked a backlash from retailers Target and Amazon.com, which refused to carry the CD when it was released.

 

More recently, hip-hop artist Kid Cudi’s release, “Satellite Flight: The Journey to Mother Moon,” was made available as an album purchase only through iTunes and other digital retailers. It debuted last week at No. 4 on Billboard’s Top 200 album charts, selling 87,000 units.

Another rap act relied heavily on streaming to build awareness for a forthcoming release — and debuted at the top of Billboard’s album chart last week.

Schoolboy Q’s “Oxymoron,” which was heavily promoted on Spotify, sold nearly 139,000 copies in its first week. The rapper, whose two earlier albums, “Setbacks” and “Habits & Contradictions,” sold 17,000 and 48,000 units respectively, hardly enough for a lock on the top spot.

Spotify users in the U.S. had listened to 3.3 million streams in the months ahead of the album debut.

It’s not a great strategy to try to dictate how people consume music when they’re clearly asking for and in fact doing something different on a wide scale,” said Spotify Chief Content Officer Ken Parks. “It just doesn’t work for anyone.”

Longtime music industry analyst Mark Mulligan said streaming services may be luring away Apple’s most devoted music customers.

“It’s not that streaming is replacing downloads in a larger sense,” Mulligan said. “What it is doing is going right after the spending of some of the most valuable download customers there are — and Apple’s most valuable download customer.”