3 mistakes artists keep making when releasing music (and how to fix them)

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By:
Tobias Witt
Posted:
April 7, 2026

We see this all the time.

Artists put out great music - high-quality production, strong identity, real potential.
But when it comes to the release itself, things fall flat.

Streams stall. Engagement is low. Momentum disappears after day one.

Not because the music isn’t good - but because the system behind the release is missing.

Over time, the patterns become very clear.
Here are the three biggest mistakes artists consistently make - and how to fix them.

1. No clear release strategy

A lot of artists still treat releases like one-off events.

They finish the track, upload it, post about it on release day… and hope something happens.

But without a structured rollout, there’s no buildup, no anticipation, and no reason for the algorithm — or your audience — to care.

A strong release doesn’t start on release day.
It starts weeks before.

What we see happening:

  • No pre-release content or teasing
  • No clear timeline leading up to the drop
  • Everything happens within 24–48 hours, then silence

What to do instead:

  • Plan your release at least 3 weeks in advance
  • Build anticipation with snippets, visuals, and storytelling
  • Map out key moments: announcement → teaser phase → release → post-release push

Think of your release as a campaign, not a single action.

2. Ignoring your data

Most artists already have valuable insights — they’re just not using them.

Every release generates data:

  • Which songs get the most streams
  • Where listeners drop off
  • What content drives engagement
  • Which platforms perform best

Yet many artists rely purely on gut feeling for the next release.

That leads to repeating mistakes — or missing what actually worked.

What we see happening:

  • No review of past releases
  • No use of Spotify/Apple “for artists” data
  • Guessing instead of learning

What to do instead:

  • Analyze your past releases before planning the next one
  • Look at streams, saves, engagement, and audience growth
  • Identify patterns: what worked, what didn’t — and why

Growth isn’t random. It’s usually repeatable.

The artists who scale are the ones who pay attention.

3. No content plan

This is where most releases break down.

Even when the music and strategy are solid, the execution fails because there’s no consistent content.

Artists post randomly, run out of ideas, or stop after release day.

But attention doesn’t come from one post - it comes from repetition.

What we see happening:

  • Last-minute content creation
  • Inconsistent posting
  • No clear formats or themes

What to do instead:

  • Batch your content (shoot multiple pieces in one session)
  • Define 2–3 repeatable content formats (e.g. performance clips, storytelling, behind-the-scenes)
  • Schedule content before and after release

Consistency builds familiarity.
Familiarity builds fans.

The bigger picture

Releasing music today is not just about the track.

It’s about the system around it.

The artists who grow are the ones who treat releases like a process:

  • Planned in advance
  • Guided by data
  • Executed with consistency

When those three elements are in place, releases stop feeling random — and start compounding.

Final thought

If your last release didn’t perform the way you expected, don’t just move on to the next one.

Take a step back and ask:

  • Was there a real strategy?
  • Did we use the data available?
  • Was the content consistent?

Fix those - and your next release will already be in a completely different position.