Music Promotion
Streaming Solved Distribution. Discovery Is Still Broken.

Streaming Solved Distribution. Discovery Is Still Broken.
More than 100,000 tracks are released every day.
Nearly every track is available everywhere. Streaming solved distribution. But discovery still determines who wins. What people hear is largely shaped by opaque algorithms and editorial playlists. These systems decide what becomes visible. The logic that converts participation into visibility operates inside closed networks.
Ranking is difficult to understand.
Momentum is hard to observe.
Fan support disappears into internal systems.
As a result, most music never reaches new listeners. Not because fans aren’t discovering great music. Because the path from participation to visibility is controlled.
Fans Already Drive Culture
Every day, millions of fans promote music.
They share tracks in group chats.
They post links on social media.
They build playlists.
They text friends, “You have to hear this.”
Fans already drive culture. But fans rarely control what becomes visible. Their participation disappears into systems that interpret engagement privately. Discovery remains centralized even though participation is global.
A Different Kind of Discovery System
AUDIOPOOL introduces a different approach. AUDIOPOOL is the Music Discovery Network where fans help artists get discovered.
Artists upload tracks and activate their fans.
Fans vote and share with friends.
Fan support moves tracks up the charts.
Listeners discover new music.
Participation becomes visible through chart movement. Instead of opaque systems interpreting engagement internally, participation moves through clear rules that translate support into chart position. Discovery becomes easier to understand.
From Passive Listening to Visible Support
On most platforms:
Likes are infinite.
Signals carry little weight.
Engagement disappears into algorithms.
Participation becomes passive consumption.
On AUDIOPOOL:
Support is allocated.
Conviction becomes visible.
Chart movement reflects participation.
When support accumulates, it compounds into visibility. Not financial return. Not speculation. Visibility. Discovery becomes something fans can help shape — not something decided behind closed systems.
Why This Matters
When participation is visible and connected to chart movement, something changes.
Artists can see who supports their music.
Fans can see how their participation influences discovery.
Momentum becomes observable.
Participation moves through transparent rules.
Sponsors cannot influence chart rankings.
Markets cannot buy chart positions.
Discovery remains driven by participation from artists and fans.
The Beginning
The network is live.
Artists are uploading tracks.
Fans are voting and sharing.
Charts are moving in real time.
This is the beginning of a different kind of music discovery system. One where participation does not disappear. It becomes visible. Fan support moves tracks up the charts. Discovery determines who wins.
Welcome to AUDIOPOOL.

