Everything you should know about TikTok’s SoundOn

Everything you should know about TikTok’s SoundOn

Every upcoming indie artist has been debited for distribution services that do not translate into royalties in the past. Whether you used DistroKid or Tunecore, these two distributors care less if you make any profit from your music. These birds of the same feather do not help artists promote their music to make matters worse.

In our article titled, How TikTok is becoming a Music Streaming Giant, we promised to update you when any new developments arise regarding TikTok’s revolutionary distribution services, SoundOn. So, we are here with great news regarding the distribution platform.

If you are tired of paying annual fees for your music to be placed on digital streaming platforms like Deezer, Spotify, Apple, and TikTok, amongst many others, SoundOn is a better alternative. SoundOn is a new-age distribution company created by TikTok to help artists profit from their music at no cost.
You won’t be charged any transaction fees to get your music on DSPs, and you will receive 100% of the revenue generated through your music in the first year of release. Then, after the first year, SoundOn will retain only 10% of your profits. To put this into perspective, CDBaby charges a one-time fee of $9.95 per single and $29 for an album release. Then, they will take a 9% commission on digital sales. Tunecore charges the same transaction fees as CDBaby, but this time, you will keep paying them the same amount annually to keep your music on DSPs. To put out unlimited songs via DistroKid, you will pay $19.99 annually. SoundOn is way better than its antecedents.Unlike Labels, SoundOn does not own your masters, as artists keep all their music rights. You fully control where your song appears and how advertisers use it. 

Perks of distributing your music via SoundOn

TikTok hasn’t always been a level playing field for independent artists. However, the video-focused social networking giant aims to shift power dynamics using SoundOn. Below are how it intends to do so.

Free promotion on TikTok and professional guidance

In 2022, organic promotion is almost a myth, and artists have to pay to get seen on platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. TikTok is still a source of organic growth for many indies. SoundOn wishes to open up more windows of opportunities to artists by selectively promoting tracks released on SoundOn for free. 

The songs that qualify will be promoted by influencers affiliated with SoundOn promotional specialists.

Editorial Playlisting on Resso

Like Spotify, TikTok and Resso have editorial playlists for new music. Your song will be considered for editorial playlisting when you distribute your song via SoundOn. Resso is a social music streaming platform that allows users to enjoy music and create user-generated content (UGC) with other users.

Also, SoundOn intends to help artists boost their music careers to the “next level” with their selective A&R service.

Instant Verification of TikTok artist profile.

Are you unable to verify your TikTok artist profile via your current distributor? You can claim your profile by distributing using via SoundOn. This feature has been hidden from independent artists for months. The good news is that it is now accessible to all. You can also claim your Spotify and Apple Music profile on the Bytedance-supported distribution platform.

Easy Monetization on TikTok

When users use your music on TikTok, you ought to get paid. Unfortunately, many artists have been unable to get theirs because of improper distribution and lack of knowledge. With SoundOn, you can monetize your music on TikTok. You will get paid when users make content with your sound.

Final Thoughts

SoundOn has launched several self-serve and in-site marketing tools in the Beta mode. While these tools are not yet available to the general public, you can always count on us to give you a timely update when SoundOn launches them.

How TikTok is becoming a Music Streaming Giant

How TikTok is becoming a Music Streaming Giant

Don’t miss the opportunity of going viral using the tools and platforms created by TikTok to make it easier for indie artists to connect with music fans.

TikTok announced on Music Business Worldwide that they will be launching a beta program (known as SoundOn) that will help upcoming artists move from phase A to B in their music careers. The major problem with attaining exposure on TikTok is that its audience is so vast that artists find it challenging to define their fanbase, sell merch, and hold concerts in physical locations. A good example is Coi Leray, a female artist who is struggling to garner loyal fans among the hip-hop communities despite releasing successful singles and collaborating with established rappers like Lil Durk, Gunna, Wale, and EARTHGANG. With the SoundOn platform, TikTok hopes to bridge the gap between its online platform and the world stage.

Also, they are working with UnitedMasters, an American music distribution service, to help indie artists distribute their music to all music platforms directly from the TikTok app. UnitedMasters is home to popular artists like Lil Tecca, NLE Choppa, Lil XXEL, Tobe Nwigwe.

TikTok hopes to grow its commercial music library as a result of the UnitedMasters deal. TikTok’s commercial music library is a collection of pre-cleared and royalty-free songs approved by the owners (upcoming artists and established music houses).

The short-video sharing app doubles as a social networking platform fast becoming a music streaming giant. Unlike other audio-streaming platforms such as Spotify, Apple Music, or Deezer, TikTok has over 1 billion users across planet earth. Gone are the days when TikTok was dubbed the kids’ app; nowadays you can now find users of all ages on the platform. According to Wallaroo, 26% of the 80 million US users on TikTok are within the age range of 25-44 while 80% are between the ages 16-24. TikTok is a digital village consisting of all types of people from diverse backgrounds, age groups, belief systems, or gender. 

Engagement Not Consumption

TikTok pays artists per engagement, not per stream, meaning artists get paid when their music is used to create video content on the platform. Therefore, the amount of views generated by the video content has no impact on the royalty payout. Also, the amount received per engagement is determined by the market share as opposed to the standard metric view system used by Apple and Spotify.

Most artists are generally interested in the TikTok model since it can give their music more exposure. In an interview with Genius, Xeno Carr (a member of the iLOVEFRIDAYS duo) said the exposure TikTok offers on their future projects is far more valuable than the royalty payout they would have gotten from the usual pay-per-stream model.

Where Social networking Intercepts ShowBiz

Although upcoming artists in the music industry can afford to trade music royalties for viral exposure, established artists who will get heard with or without TikTok prefer to get paid by their distributors. Aside from the money obtained from the distribution deal with Tiktok, another possible way of making money on TikTok is by monetizing live streaming. While the idea of paid live streaming is still in its baby phase, it is a promising one.

When artists plan to hold live-streamed concerts, they don’t have to pay for a physical space, plus they can also make tickets very affordable for fans. The reason artists charge $200 – $5000 for concerts is because it is expensive to rent stadiums and halls for shows.

While TikTok has yet to monetize its live streaming platform, it plans to do so after attaining an impeccable user experience. Artists like Ed Sheeran, Justin Beiber, and J Balvin have held separate shows using the TikTok Livestream platform and gained huge success. For example, the J Balvin live stream has about 4.5 million unique views. Finally, the artists in the future can tour with ease and earn more money using the Livestream platform. 

TikTok for Musicians

TikTok for Musicians

Communicating with your audience via Facebook or Instagram ads all the time is not sustainable. Big artists like Drake, Sia, Travis Scott, The Weeknd, and many others were able to break streaming records because they understood the relevance of user-generated content, aka free promotion. No other social media platform encourages the UGC culture like TikTok for musicians.

A lot of upcoming artists across all genres have made it big on this video-sharing app formerly known as Douyin. Artists like Lil Nas X, Doja Cat, and Oliver Rodigro among others can boast of millions of Spotify, YouTube, and iTunes streams, thanks to TikTok.

What makes TikTok the perfect viral marketing tool for musicians?

TikTok is more than an app. The platform is home to diverse UGC-creating influencer communities, some of which have well-displayed cultures and subtle rules. These communities live and die by new hashtags and challenges. If a group of influencers like a song

and make a challenge for it, thousands of others might join the trend by creating similar videos with their creative twist. TikTok video editing tools and effects make it easy to replicate trending videos.

Once the TikTok algorithm notices a trend, it pushes it to the “For You” page of tiktokers who have interacted with such videos in the past, the “Explore” page of millions of users following the participating influencers. Depending on the immensity of the trend, it can also make it to the For You page of users who have not interacted with such videos in the past. The TikTok algorithm is designed to encourage trends and of course, keep users on the app. What might have started as a reaction video to a song can become an explosive trend in minutes.

As musicians, we must understand that the TikTok algorithm is friendlier than that of other platforms like Instagram, Twitter, or Facebook. Instagram, for example, only favors established influencers and paid promotion. Facebook is worse. In order to sustain your music business, you cannot rely on platforms that require you to put in dollars every time to get seen. What you need is a platform that feeds off viral content. A community where creating UGC is the culture. A platform like TikTok where artist dreams come true sooner than expected.

How to grow your fanbase on TikTok for musicians

To succeed on TikTok, you must be ready to follow trends without losing your creative touch. TikTok is not the best platform for misoneists, people who hate new things.

According to a 2021 Statista report, TikTok is dominated by users under 30. Three things young people love are fun, more fun, and lots of fun. Hence, to survive on the platform, you have to be fun to watch and unusually creative. Follow the steps below to grow your fanbase on TikTok.

The shorter the better; create short videos

The TikTok community appreciates micro-entertainment; meaning time is of the essence. YouTube is the place to go if you want to create long-form videos, but on TikTok, ain’t nobody got time for that.

The initial duration for videos that can be posted on TikTok used to be 15 seconds. A recent update extended the time limit to 60 seconds. When recording a video on the platform, the time limit remains 15 seconds, but you can mash four 15 seconds videos to make a minute-long video. The TikTok licensing agreement with music companies like Sony Music Entertainment does not allow users to use more than 15 seconds of their artists’ songs in videos created on the platform.

Adopt a TikTok culture

The TikTok trendy culture is divided into countless subcultures, such as punks, e-boys, goths, VSCO girls, dark academia kids, softboi, yee-boy, and many more. These subcultures dictate the fashion styles of specific influencer groups.

In summary, TikTok is not all about creating random videos for trending songs. Behind the scenes, there are hidden meanings attached to fashion styling, dance steps, lighting. The only way to get a better view of how things are run on TikTok is to explore. Believe me; TikTok is another universe on its own.

Before posting content, you need to:

  • Explore various subcultures and choose one or a combination of subcultures.

  • Follow the influencers you like and keep an eye on their fashion styles.

  • Create your fashion style using original ideas and of course, the borrowed ones.

  • Test your ideas and stick to the ones that give you the most engagement.

Draft a content calendar

I hope you have not forgotten the ultimate goal, which is to gain traction using user-generated content. If you are going to turn random viewers into fans, you must keep feeding them content.

Consistency is key.

There is no better way to be consistent than to create a content calendar. The content calendar will contain:

  • The specific date and time the content will go live.  
  • The TikTok account(s) if you manage multiple accounts.
  • The video and description.
  • The hashtags you intend to use.
  • The other social media accounts you intend to repost the content on.

You can post once, twice, or thrice a day. But desist from posting more than three videos a day even if you have a ton of followers.

Why?

You want to ensure a post gets enough exposure before posting another. Unless you are Charli D’amelio or some TikTok influencer with millions of followers, posting 5-10 posts per day is not a great idea. It can hurt your reach.

Use hashtags

Let’s say you made a video for a trending challenge for instance #respectthedrip challenge, you want to make it easy for the algorithm to know what the video is about. Using hashtags help the algorithm understand your post and push it to the For You pages of an interested audience. If the initial users that were shown your content like it, the algorithm will push it to more lookalike users.

Apart from the algorithm boost, niche hashtags like #comedy, #funny, #model, #tiktokindonesia, help you target users who are interested in your craft. You can also target people in your region with location-related hashtags. As a musician, you need to connect with TikTok users in your region, that way you will be able to monetize your music and sell out shows when you start getting tangible traction.

While there’s no restriction on the number of hashtags you use on a TikTok post, no post can have more than 100 characters. A good rule of thumb is to mix the niche hashtags with broader ones like #foryoupage, #viral, #explorepage, etc.

Do not use hashtags that have nothing to do with the video you posted. If you use a dog-related hashtag in a video that has nothing to do with dogs, you will piss off dog lovers and it will hurt your reach. While TikTok does not have a dislike button, they can hold down your video and tag it as ‘not interested’. The algorithm can punish your account if you use misleading hashtags.

Go Live

In case you want to go ‘Jonathan Harchick’ on your followers, the live feature allows you to engage your users for an unlimited amount of time. To go live on TikTok, you must have at least 1000 followers and you must be over 16 years of age. The major benefit of going live is that it increases the bond between you and your followers. Plus, it is easier to get them to turn up at your shows if you can impress them via a live performance.

Go Local

Although I have mentioned this point before, it is worth mentioning twice. I know you dream to blow beyond the borders of your state/county. I understand you want Lil Nas X kinda fame. However, even if you go viral globally, you need to be well-respected in your state because that’s your territory. Submit music to TikTok influencers in your state. Fans in your city will have a hard time forgetting you, but people outside your region? Oof! They can easily be swayed by the trending music from other artists. So get your city on lock.

Share TikTok videos on other social media platforms

What you started on TikTok does not have to end on TikTok. If TikTok was not a social media app, it could pass for an editing tool. Amaze your fans on other social media platforms with the beautiful video you made via TikTok. Doing that can also increase your followers’ count on TikTok.  

How to optimize your music for TikTok

Optimizing your music for TikTok starts from the recording studio. You have to create the song with your TikTok community in mind.

Do you belong to the community of TikTokers that love to create duets or dance challenges to UK grime kind of music?

Are you a musician that creates sad songs like Billie Elish?

What mood does your sound emit?

The good news is that there is a place for you on TikTok regardless of the kind of music you create. One thing you need to do is ensure your video creation process tallies with the mood or message your music carries. The four steps below will help you optimize your music for TikTok.

One song at a time

The truth is you cannot push all the songs on your album (if you have released one) at the same time. You need to focus all your resources on one song at a time to attain maximum impact.

We hope these six pro tips for building a Spotify fan base will help you create this virtuous cycle and take you to the next step in your music career.

Create a hashtag and challenge for your song

Creating a hashtag for your song is like giving it an identity in the ‘eyes’ of the TikTok algorithm. Also, using a hashtag helps you track the success of your TikTok challenge. If you are having a difficult time coming up with a beautiful idea for your song, you can ask your core fans or influencer friends to help you create ideas. Two (and above) is better than one.

Encourage your fans, friends, and family to make videos for the challenge

There are several ways to get your tribe to create videos for your challenge. You can reward them with tickets to your show, merch, a special shoutout on your page, or money. Your TikTok music promotion strategy should target people who know you before proceeding to a new audience. Never leave certainty for uncertainty.

Distribute your song to TikTok

It is needless to say that every step given in this guide would be irrelevant if your song is not properly distributed to TikTok. TikTok does not automatically own the right to publish 15 seconds of your song on their platform. They need your permission. All you need to do is to use a distributor that has TikTok as one of its distribution destinations. And ensure you pick TikTok when choosing the platforms you want your music to be published on. It’s that simple.  

Once your music is on TikTok, you can manage your content and get relevant data using the TikTok for artists app.

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