
Music Marketing 1 of 3: Know Your Sound, Audience & Goals
Published May 30, 2025
This is Part 1 of our 3-part series designed to help independent artists stop posting blindly and start building real strategy. We’ll walk you through what actually works — from understanding your audience to building your band website, to smart advertising and social media use. If you’re tired of vague advice and just want clear, practical steps to grow your music career, you’re in the right place. Let’s get started.
What Does Your Music Actually Sound Like?
Before you can market anything, you have to know what you’re offering. That might sound obvious — but for a lot of musicians, it’s the hardest part. When you’re deep in the creative process, it’s tough to step back and describe your own sound clearly.
Forget abstract questions like “What feeling does your music create?” or “What’s your artistic essence?” Those might help in a therapy session, but they won’t help you market your music.
Instead, ask the question that matters: What does your music actually sound like — to a stranger?
- What instruments and production elements are most prominent?
- What kind of vocal style do you use? Spoken word? Melodic? Aggressive?
- Is it electronic, acoustic, distorted, raw, polished, lo-fi, experimental?
Use reference artists to create a quick shorthand for your sound:
- “For fans of Arctic Monkeys and The Strokes”
- “Imagine Phoebe Bridgers with trap beats and cinematic strings”
- “If Radiohead scored a horror movie”
This isn’t about boxing yourself in. It’s about giving people a clear reference point. That’s positioning — and it’s essential.
📖 Helpful Link: MEGA Music Genre and Feedback Advice Thread - Read about major music genres with example band / artists.
🎤 Bonus Tip: Ask 3–5 people (not close friends) how they’d describe your sound. Look for common patterns — those may be more accurate than your own perception.
Define Your Audience
Once you have a handle on your sound, the next question is: Who is this music for?
Don’t say “everyone.” That’s how you end up reaching no one. Instead, zoom in: What types of people already listen to similar music? What’s their age range? What platforms are they on? Are they Spotify-heavy listeners or more into Bandcamp, vinyl, or live shows? Are they casual fans or deep-diving liner note readers?
How to find this data:
- Spotify for Artists: Top cities, age/gender breakdown, related artists
- YouTube Analytics: Watch time by age group, device sources, comment sentiment
- Instagram Insights: Location, age, gender, top-performing content
No fans yet? Start by researching artists with a similar sound. Look at who follows them and what content gets traction. From there, build a test audience: follow their followers, join related groups, post in similar hashtags, run small ads ($10–$20), and see who responds.
⚠️ Important: Don’t buy followers or use fake-growth schemes. It corrupts your data and hurts long-term growth.
Sample Audience Profile
Once you've looked at your data and done some research, try putting together a few sample listener profiles. These can guide everything from your bio to your content strategy. You don’t need to get it perfect — just close enough to create with purpose.
You can create up to 2–3 audience profiles that represent different fan segments. Here's an example for an indie-pop artist:
Name | Chloe (The Escapist Fan) |
Age Range | 18–24 |
Location | Urban / College Towns — U.S., U.K., Canada |
Favorite Platforms | TikTok, Instagram Reels, Spotify, YouTube |
Music Taste | Indie pop, dreamy synth, bedroom pop (e.g., Clairo, Conan Gray) |
Hobbies | Journaling, art, fashion, late-night playlists |
Education Level | College or recent grad |
Challenges | Feels overwhelmed and seeks emotional escape in music |
What They're Looking For | Authentic music that “gets them,” lyrics they can relate to, aesthetic content |
🎯 Tip: These profiles don’t box you in — they help you communicate more clearly. As you grow, update them based on real data and evolving fans.
Set Goals Like an Artist Who Means Business
Vague goals like “blow up” don’t help. Use the SMART framework to set clear targets:
- Specific: Clear and focused
- Measurable: Something you can track
- Achievable: Realistic for your current level
- Relevant: Moves your career forward
- Time-bound: Has a deadline
Examples:
- “Release 3 singles in the next 6 months with weekly promo content”
- “Reach 100 email subscribers by year-end using a free download opt-in”
- “Run a $25 ad campaign comparing engagement between two target audiences”
Track your results, refine your process, and stay focused on inputs that lead to real outcomes.
Plan Your Releases Like a Campaign
Many artists treat a release like a finish line — when in reality, it’s just the beginning. If you drop a song with no buildup, no supporting content, and no follow-through, it’s likely to disappear in the noise. A proper release strategy turns a song into an event.
The Three Phases of a Strong Release:
- Before Release: Build anticipation. Share sneak peeks, lyrics, behind-the-scenes clips, and artwork.
- Release Day: Make noise — short-form video, emails, live Q&As, and platform-tailored posts.
- After Release: Keep it alive with performance clips, fan reactions, lyric breakdowns, etc.
📅 Bonus Tip: Map out 2–4 weeks of content per release using a content calendar. Focus on stories, reels, email, and engagement-driven content.
⚠️ What to Avoid: Zero notice drops, one-and-done posting, and overly salesy pitches. Focus on storytelling and momentum.
Sample Release Campaign Timeline
Every serious artist needs a strategy — even if it’s lean. Here’s a 6-week example timeline you can adapt to promote a single. Remember: Consistency is more important than perfection.
Week | Focus | Sample Activities |
---|---|---|
Week 1 (6 weeks out) |
Tease What’s Coming | Share BTS clips, mysterious lyric lines, or song titles. Start building curiosity without giving everything away. |
Week 2 📨 Submit to Spotify |
Announce & Prep | Reveal the name, artwork, and release date. Submit your song to Spotify for Artists at least 7 days before release (ideally 3–4 weeks out) to be considered for editorial playlists. |
Week 3 | Tell the Story | Explain why you wrote the track, share voice notes or live snippets, and connect emotionally with your audience. |
Week 4 | Hype Week | Drop teaser clips (hook or chorus). Start email countdowns. Engage fans with polls or lyric reveals. |
Week 5 🎵 Release Day |
Launch the Track | Share the song with a strong visual or music video. Update all links and bios. Thank early supporters. Run a small ad or boost the best pre-release content. |
Post-Release Week 6 and beyond |
Keep the Momentum | Submit to playlist pitching platforms like SubmitHub, Groover, or Daily Playlists. Share reactions, fan messages, and new clips weekly. Follow up with blogs or influencers. Don’t let the promo stop at release day. |
📌 Tip: You can reuse content across platforms — one clip can become a Reel, TikTok, Story, and YouTube Short. Plan ahead so you don’t burn out.
Build Real Industry Connections
Marketing isn’t just about ads and social media. Relationships matter. Building a solid network of venues, blogs, playlist curators, influencers, and fellow artists can open doors you didn’t know existed.
Start small. Make a spreadsheet of potential industry contacts: venue bookers, tastemakers, writers, and niche influencers who support your genre. Add notes about how you found them and what kind of work they do.
💡 Tip: Use LinkedIn, Instagram, and even TikTok to research people. Follow them, engage thoughtfully, and avoid sending cold emails that look like spam. Relationships take time to build.
Look for local opportunities first, especially if you’re starting out. Building strong relationships close to home can lead to press, gigs, and word-of-mouth exposure — which will strengthen your presence when you expand outward.
Artist Strategy Checklist
Before you move on, make sure you’ve covered these essentials. Your foundation will shape everything that comes next:
- ✅ I’ve defined my sound in a way that’s easy to describe
- ✅ I know which artists or genres I align with
- ✅ I’ve started identifying my ideal audience
- ✅ I’ve set 1–3 realistic, measurable short-term goals
- ✅ I understand this is a long-term game — and I’m showing up intentionally
- ✅ I’m building a contact list of venues, blogs, and potential allies
This is where strategy begins. Part 2 will help you package all this into a compelling artist brand.
Promoting Your Music Used to Be Hard
From playlist pitching to EPKs and email updates, SongTakes makes music marketing something you can actually do — and do well.