For years, independent artists have been told the same story: you need a label, a publicist, or a massive following to get on Spotify playlists.
That simply isn’t true.
I spent three years working as an editorial playlist curator at Spotify, and now I help independent artists get placed on editorial and algorithmic playlists across major DSPs. Some of the most successful placements I’ve worked on came from artists making very little money—sometimes none at all.
If you’re a nano-influencer or an artist earning under $10K a year, this article is for you.
They don’t see your income, your ad spend, or your gear list. What they do notice are signals that suggest listeners genuinely care about your music.
Curators pay attention to:
- Song quality and clarity (not perfection)
- Listener intent (saves, repeats, full listens)
- Consistency (not virality)
They do not care if:
- You’re unsigned
- You don’t have a manager
- You don’t run ads
- Your following is small (as long as it’s engaged)
Small, focused audiences often perform better than inflated ones.
The One Thing You Must Have Before Pitching
Would a stranger understand what kind of artist I am within 30 seconds?
That includes:
- Your artist bio
- Your latest release
- Your previous 2–3 tracks
- Your visual presentation
You don’t need a rebrand. You need cohesion.
Nano-influencers often win here because they’re closer to their audience and less scattered in their messaging.
How Artists Under $10K Should Approach Playlist Pitching
1. Use Spotify for Artists the Right Way
When you pitch through Spotify for Artists:
- Focus on why the song matters
- Describe who it’s for, not why it’s “good”
- Mention real listener reactions, not dreams
Bad pitch:
“This song is going to blow up and change my career.”
Better pitch:
“Listeners who like intimate indie pop with lyrical storytelling have been saving and replaying this track.”
Curators think in terms of listener experience, not artist ambition.
2. Optimize for Saves, Not Streams
Streams are passive. Saves are intentional.
If you’re small, your goal is not volume—it’s behavior.
Ways to increase saves:
- Ask your audience why they saved the song
- Encourage full listens (not skipping)
- Share the story behind the track before release
A song with fewer streams but a high save rate often beats a louder, emptier release.
3. Release Consistently, Not Constantly
You don’t need monthly releases.
You need predictability.
A realistic schedule for under-$10K artists:
- 3–5 releases per year
- Each release supported for at least 4–6 weeks
- Clear messaging around why this song exists
Consistency tells Spotify you’re serious—even if you’re early.
Why “Small Artists” Sometimes Get Chosen
Here’s something most people don’t realize:
Curators like discovering artists early.
They’re not just filling playlists—they’re shaping taste.
Artists with:
- Clear direction
- Strong listener signals
- Thoughtful releases
often feel more exciting than artists chasing trends or over-producing content.
Being small isn’t a disadvantage if you’re intentional.
The Real Advantage of Nano-Influencers
Nano-influencers already understand:
- Community
- Conversation
- Trust
Those same principles drive playlist success.
If your listeners:
- Finish your songs
- Save them
- Share them organically
Spotify notices.
And curators do too.
Final Thought
You don’t need permission to grow.
You don’t need a label.
You don’t need a big budget.
You don’t need to “fake it” until you make it.
You need:
- One strong song
- A focused audience
- And a release strategy built on intention
That’s how artists under $10K get playlisted—and keep growing.






