Answer the questions, we do the math. Numbers come from Luminate or Spotify for Artists.
1 · The artist
2 · Their songs
3 · The deal
Who are we signing?
Basics about the artist and their situation.
Artist name
What kind of music do they make? pick the closest — this sets the projection curve. If truly between two, pick both.
Rap / Hip-hop
Country
Pop
R&B
Alt / Indie
Roughly how many songs have they released in total? check Luminate/Spotify — even a rough count helps
Spotify monthly listeners & followers both from their Spotify profile — required; together they tell us reach vs. real fans
Are other labels after them?
No — we're likely their best offer
Some interest
Yes — real competition
What's their momentum right now?
Growing — recent stuff is hitting
Steady
Cooling off
Their songs
Add their songs from the last 12–18 months (recent ones matter most). Lead-artist tracks only — skip features, and skip anything released on a major label. For each song grab two numbers from Luminate or Spotify for Artists: its best month (highest streams in any 30-day stretch) and its last 30 days.
Have Luminate or Soundcharts exports? Drop the files here or click to browse — we'll pull the numbers automatically. CSV or Excel · per-track files, a file with a track column, or a whole-artist Activity Over Time export · daily, weekly, or monthly all work
SongRelease dateBest month (streams)Last 30 days (streams)
No Luminate access? Quick estimate.Just two tracks: their biggest and their newest. Use the total play count straight off Spotify — we work out the monthly numbers from the song's age. Wide error bars — pull real data before papering anything.
Best track
Newest track
If their newest track IS their biggest, enter it on both lines. Ignored if you've entered songs above or dropped a file.
"Last 30 days" is optional but valuable — it tells us whether their songs hold listeners better or worse than a typical song in their genre, and the sizing adjusts automatically.
Every deal is budgeted as 10 songs of artist output. "Safe range" floor = deal recoups in 6 months if year-1 projections hit; ceiling = deal breaks even on streaming within 4 years. Above ceiling, streaming alone won't pay it back. This is a sizing tool, not a contract.