
3 Things Every Indie Artist Should Be Doing in 2026
Stay ahead or get left in the dust. Here’s what actually moves the needle for indie artists right now.
The game in 2026 is brutal. Algorithms flip, attention spans are shot, and everybody’s fighting for the same 8-second scroll. Raw talent still matters, but if you’re not playing chess while everyone else is playing checkers, you’re cooked.
Three things I’m telling every artist I know to lock in on—right now:
- Stop renting your fans. TikTok can shadowban you tomorrow. Spotify can bury your release. Instagram can decide reach is a privilege, not a right. Poof—your “audience” vanishes overnight.
Fix it:
- Start an email/SMS list yesterday. Beehiiv, Substack, Community—whatever’s easiest.
- Sell direct on Bandcamp or your own Shopify store. Even if it’s just a $5 exclusive demo or a hoodie.
- Pull your day-ones into a paid or private Discord/Telegram. That’s the group that shows up when the algo gods are angry.
When people follow YOU, not your content, you actually own something.
- Treat AI like the best intern you’ve ever had. The artists freaking out about AI are the same ones who were scared of home studios in 2005. Meanwhile the smart ones are moving twice as fast.
Real talk—what I’m using daily:
- Suno/Udio for instant reference tracks or weird background layers I’d never bother programming.
- ChatGPT to bang out a decent bio, pitch email, or 50 caption variations in two minutes.
- Audo.ai or whatever the flavor of the month is for quick mastering when I’m too lazy to open iZotope.
It’s not replacing your soul—it’s just removing the boring shit so you can make more art.
- You’re a media company that happens to make music. Dropping a single and praying isn’t a strategy anymore. The artists eating are the ones people want to watch even when there’s no new song.
Steal this:
- Pick ONE short-form series and stick to it. Mine’s “One-Take Wednesdays”—people show up every week even if I haven’t released in months.
- Raw studio cam, freestyles in the car, 60-second song breakdowns, gear talk, whatever— just make it a ritual.
- Collab with the random kid who has 800k followers reacting to underground music. Doesn’t matter if they’re “your scene.” Eyes are eyes.
Show up so often that people feel like they know you. That’s when they actually care when you drop.
Look—2026 isn’t waiting for anyone to “figure it out.” You don’t need a label, you need a plan. Own your people, use every tool that isn’t nailed down, and post like your rent depends on it.
You don’t have to be everywhere. Just don’t be nowhere.

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