It’s likely that they want to work with you because they were already hoping and looking for someone kinda like you before you showed up.
And or they want to work with you because you resemble the ones they already work with.
And or they want to work with you because you don’t seem like too crazy of an idea.
And or they want to work with you because you represent an opportunity for easy glory, a quick hit, fast money.
It’s rare for someone or a company to jump at the chance to work with the type of artist they weren’t looking for, or have no experience working with.
You can learn a lot about the people someone wants to work with by finding out who they work with.
***The main idea that flies in the face of this is the person who is looking for a new challenge. They are rare and it hard to identify from afar. But that person is absolutely looking for a crazy idea, hard work, something new. They’re not hoping for anything that rhymes with what they’re already doing.
***One more thing…Rock band goes to rock booking agent. Makes sense. Agent turns down rock band because agent already has a rock band like that rock band. Answer: The agent isn’t telling the full truth.
You can write a song that sounds like hit. You can write a song that is similar to an existing hit. You can think this song might become a hit. You can write a song that causes the same feeling as hit songs.
But you can’t write a hit.
Because a song can only be defined as a hit AFTER it becomes a hit. See, a hit refers to something other than the actual song itself…a hit is based on popularity, consumption, culture, markets, money, planning and politics.
And we know not all great songs become hits. Songs aren’t hits, and they’re not not hits. Songs are songs. Hits don’t necessarily care about great songs. The hit parade requires much more than a great song.
You release music, post the Spotify link on social media and that’s the first time you’ve asked your fans to click through to Spotify since the last time you released music…which was long enough ago that they don’t remember.
And because it was a long time ago, you’re asking your people to do something brand new.
If you want to play the Spotify game it would be a good idea to teach your fans to go there.
You teach them to go there by regularly giving them good reasons to go there.
Do a weekly playlist, or a monthly one. Release more music. Recommend other artists. Utilize the Spotify podcast world. Make a Spotify game with clues in your bio, your playlists and song titles.
Teach your people to go to the place you’d like them to go. That way when you want them to go there, they will because that’s what they do.
When you actually release your music (which is the crowning moment for any artist) is it better for it to be the first time you’ve ever asked them to click on a link like this, or to have had your fans click on links like this a hundred times previously?