If you’re a producer in 2025, you’ve probably asked yourself this more than once:
Should I focus on BeatStars, YouTube-type beats, or my own beat store?
The truth is, it’s the wrong question.
Instead of picking just one, the most successful producers treat each platform as a different step in the same funnel:
BeatStars helps you get discovered inside a marketplace.
YouTube brings long-term organic traffic and type beat searches.
Your own site is the hub where serious artists buy, build relationships, and come back.
When all three point to one central home base – your own beat store – you get the best of each world without being dependent on any single platform.
For example, on Tellingbeatzz, that hub is a focused, well-structured catalog:
All beats & instrumentals: https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
BeatStars is like a digital shopping mall for beats. Rappers and singers go there with the clear intention to find instrumentals and licenses. That’s powerful.
What BeatStars is great for:
Built-in audience already looking for beats
Easy upload, tagging, and store setup
Social proof through plays, likes, comments, and charts
Collabs and networking with other producers
But there’s a catch: on a marketplace, you’re one of thousands. No matter how dope your beats are, you’re always surrounded by other producers competing for the same attention. You don’t completely control:
How your page is laid out
What distractions does your potential buyer see
Which producers appear next to your beats
So BeatStars works best when you view it as an entry point – a place where new artists discover you for the first time, not the place where your entire brand lives.
YouTube is where artists hang out daily, not just when they’re shopping. Rappers search for:
“NF type beat 2025”
“Sad piano rap beat”
“Mac Miller type beat chill”
“Hard aggressive Eminem type beat”
If you upload regularly, optimize your titles, descriptions, and tags, and stay consistent with your sound, YouTube sends you free traffic every single day. One video can pull plays for years.
Why YouTube is essential:
Huge search engine – people find you through keywords
An algorithm can recommend your beats to similar listeners
Visuals (artwork, animations, lyrics on screen) strengthen your brand
Great for building trust and personality over time
But again, there’s a limit: YouTube is not a great place to explain licensing, upsell bundles, or present a clean, distraction-free catalog. Comments and suggested videos are everywhere. Any artist watching your beat can be pulled away to another channel in one click.
That’s why every YouTube description should clearly tell artists:
“If you want to browse all my beats, bundles, and deals, visit my website.”
For example, a link like this in your description:
Browse all beats & instrumentals: https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
BeatStars and YouTube are rented spaces. Your own site is owned land.
On your own beat store, you control:
The design and branding
The catalog structure (genres, moods, artist types, tags)
How you present licenses, bundles, and custom offers
Where the visitor’s attention goes – and where it doesn’t
This is where your serious buyers should always end up.
A Tellingbeatzz-style shop does exactly that: it doesn’t just show a random list of beats, it presents a clear, scrollable catalog with filters, moods, and helpful info that makes it easy for artists to find what they need.
Instead of sending people to a noisy marketplace, you send them to your curated universe, starting here:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
On your own site, you can:
Create special offers (e.g., 2-for-1, 5-for-1, 10-for-1 packs)
Add a clear Beat Licensing Explained page
Offer free beats in exchange for email signups
Host extra resources (guides, checklists, songwriting help)
All of this is almost impossible to do properly if you only rely on BeatStars or YouTube.
The modern beat selling strategy isn’t “BeatStars vs YouTube vs your site”.
It’s BeatStars + YouTube → Your Site → Long-Term Clients.
Here’s how that funnel can look:
Discovery on BeatStars
An artist finds your beat through charts or search.
They like your sound and click on your profile.
In your bio and individual beat descriptions, you clearly link to your website.
Discovery on YouTube
Another artist searches “Drake type beat” or “sad emotional type beat”.
Your video pops up, they vibe with it.
Your description and pinned comment invite them to “browse all beats on my website”.
Conversion on Your Site
Both artists land on your catalog page.
They see all your beats in one place, with consistent tags, clear pricing, and straightforward licenses.
They can easily compare beats, add multiple instrumentals to their cart, and check out smoothly.
Example hub page:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
Retention and Relationship
On your site, you can capture their email via free beats or a discount.
Next time they need beats, they don’t search BeatStars or YouTube first – they go straight to you.
Over time, they may order custom beats or bigger bundles and become repeat clients.
BeatStars and YouTube bring people in, but your site turns them into fans and customers.
If you only rely on BeatStars or only on YouTube, you’re taking a big risk:
Algorithms can change.
Policies and fees can change.
Your account can be limited, demonetized, or even banned.
If that happens and you never built your own hub, your audience disappears overnight.
But if you’ve trained your listeners and buyers to go through your website – the place where all your beats live – you’re much more resilient. You can:
Move to a different player or checkout system if necessary
Change hosting or providers while keeping the same domain
Continue emailing your list, whether or not the platforms are happy
Your website is where your brand survives, even if a third-party platform doesn’t.
A strong independent beat store does more than just embed a player. It:
Groups beats by genre and mood so artists can quickly find what fits their idea
Offers transparent licensing so buyers know exactly what they’re getting
Provides professional product pages that inspire confidence
Feels like a serious brand, not just a random page on a big marketplace
When a rapper browses a page like:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
they’re not distracted by other producers, ads, or unrelated videos. They’re inside your world. That’s the whole point of making your site the hub.
Here’s a simple way to implement this modern beat selling strategy:
Keep uploading to BeatStars
Treat it as a marketplace where new people can find you.
Always link back to your website in your profile and descriptions.
Stay consistent on YouTube with type beats
Use clear, searchable titles and custom thumbnails.
Add your website link and a strong call-to-action in every description and pinned comment.
Make your website the strongest part of your brand
Keep your catalog updated and well-organized.
Make it easy to browse and buy multiple beats.
Explain your licenses clearly and professionally.
Start with a clean, central catalog page as your main hub:
https://tellingbeatzz.com/beats-instrumentals/
In 2025 and beyond, it’s not about choosing BeatStars vs YouTube vs your own site.
It’s about letting BeatStars and YouTube feed your own site, and letting your own site turn that traffic into a real, long-term music business.
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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