If you’ve been making music for a while, you probably remember when SoundClick was the spot for rappers and producers. Charts were popping, artists discovered new beats every day, and a lot of producers built their first loyal fanbase there. But in 2025, with platforms like BeatStars, Airbit, YouTube, TikTok and your own website in the mix, many artists are asking a simple question: is SoundClick still worth using, or is it dead?
The honest answer is: SoundClick can still be useful, but only if you understand its role. It’s no longer the one platform that carries your whole career. Instead, it’s a potential traffic source and discovery tool that should work alongside your own ecosystem – especially your own beat store.
Despite not being talked about as much as newer platforms, SoundClick still has a few advantages that can help rappers and producers:
First, there’s the legacy audience. A lot of listeners who grew up with SoundClick still go back there out of habit. Some of them are hardcore underground rap fans who are actively searching for new instrumentals and unknown artists. For certain niches, SoundClick is still familiar and trusted.
Second, SoundClick can still be a place to get discovered if you treat it the right way. You can upload your beats or songs, optimize your profile, and show up in searches and charts within your genre. It may not have the hype of other platforms, but the competition is also lower in some categories, which can work in your favor.
Third, it’s a decent testing ground. You can upload different styles of beats – for example dreamy, sad, motivational or angry type instrumentals – and see which ones get more plays, likes or downloads. That feedback can help you decide what to promote more heavily on your main beat store or what kind of custom beats to offer later.
However, there are some serious limitations if you try to build your entire career around SoundClick in 2025.
You don’t fully control the platform. Algorithms can change, the site can update, traffic can go down, and you have no say in it. If all your plays, fans and sales depend on a single external platform, your brand is fragile. As soon as something changes, your reach can drop overnight.
You also have limited control over the buying experience. You can sell beats there, but it’s not the same as sending clients directly to your own beat catalog where everything is optimized around your brand, your sound and your offers. On your own site, you can direct artists straight to focused pages like your main beats and instrumentals catalog at:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
Another issue: you’re not building a strong brand identity on SoundClick alone. You’re just another name on a big platform. When an artist buys from your own website, they associate that professional experience with you personally. This is how long-term relationships, repeat buyers and referrals are formed.
If you’re a rapper, you don’t have to ignore SoundClick entirely. You just need a clear strategy.
Use SoundClick as a discovery channel, not your home base. For example, you can search for beats that match your mood and style – whether that’s lo-fi, spiritual, sad, motivational, or aggressive angry vibes. But when you find a producer you truly connect with, it’s smart to check if they also have their own website or dedicated beat store.
A producer who invests in a professional site usually also invests in:
Higher-quality beat mixing and arrangement
Clear licensing terms
Helpful resources for artists (e.g. songwriting help or marketing tips)
If you want structured guidance, you can also use resources outside SoundClick. For example, if you’re trying to write better verses for the beats you buy, you can grab a free rap songwriting guide here:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/free-rap-songwriting-guide/
The main idea: discover music wherever you want – including SoundClick – but build stable relationships and serious releases around producers who treat their craft and business professionally.
For producers, SoundClick can still be part of your strategy – but it should not be your whole strategy.
Think of it like this:
SoundClick = a place where strangers find you.
Your own website = the place where strangers become real clients.
On SoundClick, you can:
Upload a selection of your strongest beats
Focus on clear branding in your profile graphics and bio
Strategically mention that artists can find your full catalog on your own site
Include direct links back to your beat store and offers
For example, if you’re running a beat site like Tellingbeatzz, your SoundClick profile should send traffic to:
Your main beat catalog: https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
Your licensing info: https://tellingbeatzz.com/beat-licensing-explained/
Your special deals or bundles (like 10-for-1 or custom packs)
That way, SoundClick becomes a funnel that feeds listeners into a system you completely control.
No matter how you feel about SoundClick, one thing is clear in 2025:
If you’re serious about your music career, you need your own home base.
A dedicated beat store or artist website does things no third-party platform can fully replace:
You control the design, branding and messaging
You decide how to structure your offers and bundles
You can create your own beat packs and custom services
For example, instead of only sending artists to a generic SoundClick page, you can send them to a custom beat pack offer like this:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/custom-beat-pack/
Or you can promote a 10-for-1 beat deal that is exclusive to your website visitors:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/10-2/
These kinds of focused offers are difficult to present properly on a shared platform. On your own site, you can highlight them with clear copy, visuals and trust elements.
On top of that, your own website lets you:
Build an email list of artists who download your free beats
Offer free beat packs in exchange for contact info
Share extra resources for artists, like guides and tutorials
Rappers visiting your site can also grab free beats and explore your catalog without the distractions of a crowded platform:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/free-beats/
And if you want to go even further, you can create an entire Artist Resource Hub, which gives real value beyond just selling instrumentals:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/artist-resource-hub/
A major reason to move beyond just SoundClick is licensing clarity. Many artists are still confused about:
What they’re allowed to do with a leased beat
How many streams or sales a license covers
Whether they keep royalties
What happens if the beat gets bought exclusively
Most shared platforms don’t explain this in-depth, and buyers often skip the fine print. On your own site, you can send artists to a clear explanation page, for example:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/beat-licensing-explained/
This builds trust and reduces problems later. When rappers see that you care enough to break everything down in detail, they’re more likely to buy, return and recommend you.
In 2025, SoundClick is not dead, but it’s also not enough on its own.
It’s worth using if:
You treat it as one traffic source among many
You send that traffic to your own beat site
You focus on your brand, not just the platform
You use it to test which styles, moods and artist types resonate most
It’s not worth it if:
You rely on it as your only home
You ignore your own branding, website and email list
You expect it to carry your entire career like it might have in the past
The modern, realistic strategy for rappers and producers looks like this:
Use platforms like SoundClick, YouTube, DSPs and social media to get discovered
Use your own website (like Tellingbeatzz.com) to convert listeners into long-term fans and clients
Use clear licensing, strong offers and helpful resources to keep people coming back
In other words: SoundClick can still be part of your toolkit in 2025 – but your career should never depend on a single platform.
Check out my extensive catalog of more than 500 custom-made beats and instrumentals, available for free download or licensing.
To download your free version of please enter your name and email address and the download link will be emailed to you
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