Digital DJ Pool

What Artists Should Know About Digital DJ Pool

A Color Theory fan and fellow artist told me about Digital DJ Pool way back in February of 2022. Since then I’ve been paying a monthly fee to get my new tracks into DJs’ hands on or before release day.

Don’t make dance music? Me neither, and I’ve never been a DJ — I don’t know my melodic trance from my future bass.

I categorize most of my original mixes as “electronica” for lack of a better option. Remixes tend to perform better, especially ones I can tag as “house” or “trance” with a straight face.

DJs pay $10 per month to download unlimited tracks as 320 kbps mp3 files. That’s less than competitors like DJ City, zipDJ, and BPM Supreme, according to Digital DJ Pool’s SEO-optimized compare pages.

I’ve never tried any of their competitors, so I don’t know how they stack up from a music promotion standpoint. I took a quick look at DJ City, and it looks like you have to submit tracks directly to their music director. So, different model.

I pay $7 per month for an Uploader Subscription plan that allows me to upload up to 10 tracks. I must have been grandfathered in at that price, as the current rate is $10 per month.

Digital DJ Pool — DJ View

Let’s start by exploring the site from a DJ’s perspective. There are four main pages plus search.

First up is New Music:

Digital DJ Pool New Music

Tracks are presented in the order they are uploaded, which leads me to my first pro tip:

Try to upload first thing on Fridays, as the site gets the most activity heading into the weekend.

There are filters galore, including key, which I can’t decipher for the life of me! For example, my latest track is in the key of 9A. I always knew my music degree was useless.

Next up is Featured:

Digital DJ Pool Featured Tracks

How do tracks get featured? I have no idea. I spot some big names though.

Then we have Trending:

Digital DJ Pool Trending

You can buy your way onto this page, and I presume everyone does. More on that later.

Finally, we’ve got the Charts:

Digital DJ Pool Charts

I’m not spotting any of the trending or featured tracks in the charts, which suggests unlike everything else, you can’t pay for chart placement.

And that’s how DJs find music to download!

Digital DJ Pool — Artist View

Now let’s look at the site from the perspective of an artist or label i.e. where the magic happens.

You might wonder if your track will languish in obscurity once it leaves the New Music page, but fear not! There are a panoply of paid prescriptions for our plight:

Digital DJ Pool Promote Your Song

We can pay $10 to appear on the Charts (above the #1 slot) or on the Trending page for 24 hours. For $70, a ReSpin will resurrect your track with a release date rewrite, putting it back at the top of the New Music page. What’s old is new.

You’ll be pleased to hear that I tested each of these options without having to pay for it, as part of a case study I was invited to participate in. I’ll share those results below, plus insights from my most recent upload.

But first, an overview. I’ve uploaded over a hundred tracks to date. Here are my top performers, sorted by engagement:

Digital DJ Pool Engagement

Engagement refers to the number of times the track has been played, downloaded, liked, or commented on.

As you can see, the winner by a mile is “Two,” an eight-minute progressive house epic I produced back when I used to listen to Deadmau5.

Let’s venture on over to the Insights page and see what stats are on offer:

Digital DJ Pool "Two" Insights 1

Impressions is how many times the track has been seen on the site, Last Month Charting is where it ranked in its genre (progressive house) last month, and Peak Monthly Position is the highest chart ranking it achieved.

Digital DJ Pool "Two" Insights 2

All of the promotions above were part of the case study. I had no control or say in what or when they did what they did, nor have I seen the study results.

They executed two ReSpins to put it back at the top of the New Music page, a Charts boost, a Trending boost, and I guess they included it in an email campaign.

It seems the ReSpins were the most effective, but at 7x the cost of a boost, I’d expect them to be!

Digital DJ Pool "Two" Insights 3

It’s a worldwide phenomenon!

Most of the stats above should require no explanation. Reach is the number of unique users who saw the track, while Impressions is the total number of views.

Downloads strikes me as the most important metric, since DJs most likely have to download the track before spinning it at an event.

Digital DJ Pool "Two" Insights 4

Next up, lots and lots of DJ avatars. 131 pages of them to be exact! That doesn’t mean they actually spun the track though. Rather, they played, downloaded, liked, or commented on it.

Digital DJ Pool "Two" Insights 5

Digital DJ Pool doesn’t guarantee radio or club play, but how else would a radio station, club, or bar engage with the track? Unless there are dedicated account types for radio stations and clubs?

Digital DJ Pool "Two" Insights 6

Last up, the track got a couple of generic comments. I’m not sure what to make of the club support, radio support, and guaranteed hit tags. They aren’t clickable, at least on my end.

Best case scenario, my track was spun by dozens of DJs, 13 radio stations, and 169 clubs and bars.

Worst case, 312 lonely mp3 files are languishing in cluttered download folders.

To give you an idea of what you might reasonably expect, here are insights from my latest upload, which hasn’t been released outside of Patreon.

Digital DJ Pool "The Art of Anger (Matt Mancid Remix)" Insights 1

No chart results yet, since the November charts won’t close for another week and change.

Digital DJ Pool "The Art of Anger (Matt Mancid Remix)" Insights 2

23 downloads isn’t much to write home about.

Digital DJ Pool "The Art of Anger (Matt Mancid Remix)" Insights 3

A lot of the same guys.

Digital DJ Pool "The Art of Anger (Matt Mancid Remix)" Insights 4

If these represent actual spins, that’s more than worth the price of admission!

Digital DJ Pool Conclusion

Is Digital DJ Pool worth $10 a month? If you’re working in a genre that’s at least dance-adjacent, I’d say yes.

Compared to what I spend on Meta ads, Spotify Marquee, and even SubmitHub, it’s a drop in the bucket.

That said, I’ve never once heard from any of these DJs directly. While I don’t suspect foul play, it’s possible that some “DJs” are casual listeners building personal music collections.

You can try out Digital DJ Pool here (there’s nothing in it for me), and please let us know how it goes in the comments!

14 Comments

  1. How does the platform prevent that basically anybody registers to the platform and uses it like a sort of a “flatrate service” for music downloads? Is there a “check” on the platform that checks if you are really working as a DJ? If not, then that’s a minus in my opinion. The concern is that everybody could register and pay a fee of 10$ for maybe one months or two, and during that time they could download tons of music which would way exceed 10$ if you’d buy it on bandcamp.
    Also I’m not so sure how important DJ-coverage really still is these days… but that might also be because I have never really focused on it.

    1. That’s a great question Rainer!

      This Reddit thread seems to suggest that they don’t really check. And really, why would they? It’s more work for them, and potentially fewer customers.

      Still, it’s far easier for artists than it was in the old days where we’d mail out hundreds of CDs, many of which ended up on eBay.

      My DJ-friendly tracks do far, far better, so it’s safe to say the users are at least genuine dance music fans. And in my case, if someone wants to download a bunch of tracks for cheap and then cancel, they’re better off doing it on Patreon!

        1. Not a penny. Artists don’t earn royalties and there was no financial incentive for me to review the service. They didn’t know I was going to, until today! Assuming they notice it at all (I tagged them on social media).

  2. Hey Brian – Good article- On to some real metrics- in the past 3 years of using DJ Digital Pool have you seen any writer royalties (ASCAP or BMI- SESAC – PRS) that would be attributed to your Dj Digital Pool activity?
    Of course, A lot of clubs – events – festivals pay some very high fees to the PRO’s for playing music. I sometimes see my BMI account give bonus money from club/festival plays.
    As an artist (You sing on these releases,  correct?) Have you seen any money come from featured performances thru Soundexchange or PPL for Europe?
    Thanks for your time.

    1. I just took a look at my ASAP writer account. I’ve got $171 of international royalties for 2024, which is better than usual, but I can’t narrow it down to club play. Seems it’s mainly television in Germany and God-knows-what in China (“other royalties”).

      SoundExchange ranges from $12 to $27, which is way lower than the good old days when I used to get more action on Pandora. Nothing as a featured performer that I’m aware of!

      In summary, nothing worth writing home about!

  3. Hi Brian, long time reader of your site. It has proven to be incredible useful over the years – Thank you!

    I noticed my track “Keygen” within your screenshot of the Trending section of DigitalDJPool. I would just like to clarify that I have never paid for an account or promotion on this site. I use it to upload lots of my tracks and find that it has good results at getting worldwide exposure.

    Thanks once again. Keep up the good work!

    1. Thanks for the added perspective Chris! One thing I’m not understanding though… how do you upload all your tracks if you’re not paying for an account? Is there a free account option that I don’t know about? I mean, $7 a month isn’t a lot, but I’m not using the promo features either.

  4. Hi Brian, thanks for your reply. I did some digging and found an old email from July 2021 stating: “I wanted to reach out to let you know that you’ve been approved for free uploads on Digital DJ Pool.” This could have possibly happened because I was uploading lots of music at the time of their service being new, I’m not entirely sure! Now that I know about the pricing, it changes my perspective slightly however I think I would pay $7/month for it. I find that remixes/cover songs can perform very well, often receiving hundreds of downloads per song. I track my music’s Content ID usage via my distributor (Symphonic) and I have seen my tracks being featured in a lot of DJ mixes after posting it on Digital DJ Pool. Cool service in my opinion 🙂

    1. That’s fantastic! Can’t beat free. And it’s wonderful to hear that you’re able to track down some concrete results. My stuff isn’t very DJ-friendly, but I still think it’s worth the price. Thanks again for sharing your experience!

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