In our main guide on electronic music promotion, we outlined the 10 essential strategies every DJ and producer should understand to build long-term momentum.
This article is part of that series.
In earlier chapters, we covered:
- Defining your artist brand
- Building a release strategy
- Promoting music before release
- Networking
- Email marketing
- Storytelling around your releases
Now we move into one of the most talked-about and misunderstood parts of music promotion: Spotify playlists.
Because while playlists can absolutely increase visibility, too many artists treat them as the entire strategy.
They’re not.
7. Use Spotify Playlists for Electronic Music Strategically
Spotify playlists can help your music travel faster.
But they should support your growth—not define it.
The artists who build sustainable careers use playlists as one piece of a larger ecosystem.
Why playlists matter
Spotify playlists create:
- Discovery
- Passive exposure
- Algorithmic momentum
- Social proof around your release
A placement on the right playlist can introduce your music to thousands of listeners who would never have found you otherwise.
Especially in electronic music, playlists often function as modern-day radio.
The mistake most artists make
They chase numbers instead of relevance. A massive playlist with low engagement or the wrong audience rarely creates meaningful growth. Smaller playlists with the right listeners often perform better long-term.
The 3 playlist layers you should focus on
1. Editorial playlists
These are Spotify-owned playlists.
Examples:
- Electronic Rising
- Melodic Techno
- Housewerk
- Altar
- Mint
These placements can generate huge reach—but competition is intense.
2. Independent curator playlists
Often overlooked but extremely important.
These playlists are:
- More niche
- More genre-specific
- Often run by real fans, DJs, labels, or blogs
For underground electronic music, these can outperform large editorial lists in engagement.
3. Personal & peer playlists
This is where your early momentum starts.
Friends, peers, DJs, and supporters adding your track to their playlists creates:
- Early activity
- More saves
- Better algorithmic signals
Never underestimate this layer.
How to improve your chances of playlist support
1. Pitch before release
Use Spotify for Artists at least 7 days before release.
Be clear about:
- Genre
- Mood
- Instruments
- Context of the track
2. Target playlists that actually fit
Don’t send peak-time techno to organic house curators. Research matters.
3. Build relationships with curators
The same networking principles apply here:
- Follow their playlists
- Engage with their content
- Understand their direction before pitching
What actually helps Spotify’s performance?
Spotify’s algorithm pays attention to:
- Saves
- Shares
- Repeat listens
- Playlist additions
- Completion rate
This means engaged listeners matter more than passive streams.
Tools & platforms to support playlist strategy
- Spotify for Artists
Essential for pitching and analytics - Soundplate or similar
Playlist submission platform - SubmitHub
Curator and blog outreach - Groover
European-focused music pitching platform - Songstats / Chartrmetrics
Track playlist performance and ecosystem growth - Beatstats
Track your releases on labels and see hpw things are evolving
How playlists fit into your bigger strategy
Playlists should amplify:
- Your release strategy
- Your network
- Your storytelling
- Your audience-building efforts
Without those foundations, playlist traffic often disappears quickly.
Common mistake to avoid
Buying fake playlist placements.
Artificial stream damage:
- Your audience quality
- Your algorithmic profile
- Your credibility
Short-term numbers rarely create long-term listeners.
What success actually looks like
Success isn’t just:
“My track got playlisted.”
It’s:
- New followers
- Repeat listeners
- Saves
- Organic growth after the release
That’s the difference between exposure and momentum.
Bottom line
Spotify playlists can accelerate your growth. But they work best when they amplify an existing foundation—not when they replace one.
Next up: Part 8 — Creating content that documents instead of sells
(where we break down why process-driven content consistently outperforms hard promotion).




