For musicians
Link in Bio for Musicians Built Around Release Day
A musician's link in bio lives on a release calendar: presave this week, presale the next, merch and tickets year-round. ExclusiveLink schedules links to open and expire on time, and shows clicks per release, per city.
01Release week
Your link changes more often than your setlist
No other creator's bio link works this hard. A single release cycle burns through four different top links, each with its own deadline.
Announcement day needs the presave on top. Release day at midnight, the streaming links replace it. The vinyl presale opens Friday and must close when the pressing run is claimed. Tour tickets go up the week after, city by city. Miss one swap and the biggest traffic day of your quarter points at last month's news.
Most link pages make you do every one of those swaps by hand, at midnight, from a phone backstage. And they tell you almost nothing afterward: a click total, but not whether Berlin or Chicago clicked the ticket link, or which single drove the merch spike.
Labels and managers feel it too: without per-release click data, every marketing conversation is anecdotes. Which single moved merch? Did the radio week in Germany actually click through? The bio link is the one door all fan traffic walks through; it should keep the receipts, per release and per country, in a form you can drop into the next label meeting.
02Built for the cycle
Schedule the swap, gate the presale, read the cities
Links on a schedule
Line up the whole cycle in advance: presave until Thursday 23:59, streaming links from midnight, presale live Friday. The page changes itself while you play the show.
Presales that actually close
Sell the limited pressing behind a paid link that expires on deadline, or gate the first listen behind an email to grow the mailing list. On Pro, 0% of it goes to us.
Clicks per release, per city
Every link reports by day and country. Route the tour where the ticket clicks are, and show the label which single actually moved merch.
Plans start at $19; scheduling, expiry and full geo analytics arrive with Pro on the link in bio pricing page. Bands with a strong brand often pair it with a custom domain link in bio so the page lives at links.bandname.com.
03Try it now
Build your release page right here
Type a handle, pick Musician, lock the presale link. This is your page as fans will see it.
Creator type
Your links (tap the lock to gate one)
Accent
Your page, your links, your data. Set up in minutes.
What your fans see
Your dashboard (example)
link clicks
from gated links
04A presale, measured
Seven days of vinyl presale, in numbers
An independent band announces a limited vinyl pressing at $28, sold through a paid link that opens Friday and expires in seven days. Across the announcement post, two reels and the release-day rush, the page takes 3,200 clicks. Eight percent buy: 256 records, $7,168 gross, and the deadline did the selling.
The same week, the geo report shows ticket clicks clustering in five cities the band was not planning to play. Two get added to the routing. That is what a bio link looks like when it works for the band instead of just listing them.
One presale window
| Presale window | 7 days |
| Page clicks | 3,200 |
| Vinyl price | $28 |
| Buyers at 8% | 256 |
| Gross presale revenue | $7,168 |
| ExclusiveLink Pro | -$49 |
| Kept by the band | $7,119 |
05From the green room
What musicians ask before moving
I already use a smart link for releases. Keep it for the streaming split; put it behind your ExclusiveLink so tickets, merch and the mailing list live on the same page and get measured together.
Our manager runs the page, not the band. Even better: managers get exportable per-release reports, and on Studio a whole roster of artists in one view.
What happens between releases? The page keeps selling: merch, back catalog, the email gate on unreleased demos. Quiet months are what the mailing list is for.
Sound check
Release day is coming. Your link should be ready first.
Claim exclusive.link/yourband and schedule the whole cycle tonight.