Spotify's editorial operation is organized by genre desks and regional teams. When you pitch a track, your genre selections determine which team reviews your submission. Understanding this structure helps explain why accurate metadata matters and how pitches succeed or fail.
Genre Desks
Spotify's editorial is divided by genre specialization. Each desk is responsible for curating playlists within their domain:
Major desks include:
- Pop:
Today's Top Hits,Pop Rising,Mood Booster - Hip-Hop/Rap:
RapCaviar,Most Necessary,Get Turnt - Rock:
Rock This,All New Rock,Punk Essentials - Electronic/Dance:
mint,Dance Rising,Altar - R&B:
Are & Be,R&B Rising,Neo Soul - Latin:
Viva Latino,Baila Reggaeton,La Reina - Country:
Hot Country,New Boots,Wild Country - Indie/Alternative:
Lorem,Pollen,Indie Pop
Each desk has editors who specialize in that sound. They know the genre's history, current trends, and audience expectations.
How Routing Works
When you submit a pitch:
- Genre tags determine routing. Your selected genres send your pitch to the corresponding desk.
- Editors within the desk review. The specific editor may be assigned randomly or by workload.
- Decision is made. Accept, reject, or hold for consideration.
- No cross-desk visibility. If you tagged "Pop" but your song is actually "Indie Rock," the Pop desk sees it, not the Indie desk.
Why This Matters
Mislabeling your genre = wrong desk = almost certain rejection.
A hip-hop editor receiving a country song won't forward it to the country team. They'll skip it. Your pitch effectively disappears.
Regional Teams
Beyond genre, Spotify operates regional editorial teams covering major markets: United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Brazil, Mexico, Nordic countries, and Australia.
Regional teams are responsible for curating market-specific playlists (like New Music Friday UK), identifying local talent, and understanding cultural context for their market.
Regional Pitching Advantage
The Editorial Process
What happens after you submit:
Stage 1: Intake
Pitches enter a queue organized by genre and release date. With ~20,000+ daily submissions, not every pitch receives detailed review.
Stage 2: Initial Screening
Editors scan pitches looking for accurate genre fit, credibility signals (metrics, collaborators, marketing plans), and release timing alignment with editorial calendar. Many pitches are filtered at this stage without a full listen.
Stage 3: Listen and Evaluate
For pitches that pass screening, editors listen and assess quality of production, fit with specific playlists, audience potential, and current playlist needs.
Stage 4: Decision
Three possible outcomes: Accept (track is slated for one or more playlists), Reject (track is not added, no feedback provided), or Hold (track is saved for potential future consideration, which is rare).
Stage 5: Scheduling
Accepted tracks are scheduled for playlist adds, often coordinated with release dates and playlist refresh cycles.
What Editors Look For
Based on industry interviews and artist reports, editors evaluate:
Sound quality: Production values that meet playlist standards.
Playlist fit: Does the track match the vibe of playlists they curate?
Artist trajectory: Is the artist building momentum? Previous performance matters.
Marketing support: Will the artist drive listeners to the playlist?
Timing: Does the track fit current cultural moments or editorial themes?
What Editors Claim Doesn't Matter
Spotify has stated that these factors don't influence decisions:
- Follower count or monthly listeners
- Label affiliation
- Previous radio or blog coverage
Whether these claims reflect actual practice is debated. Credibility signals clearly help pitches stand out in a crowded queue.
Communicating With Editors
There is no direct line to Spotify editors for pitching purposes. Emailing Spotify staff, reaching out on social media, and trying to find editor contact information doesn't work.
What does work: submitting strong pitches through official channels, building a track record of good releases, and generating organic momentum that gets noticed. Some artists with significant traction develop informal relationships with editors over time, but this isn't a strategy for most independents.
The Scale Problem
Spotify receives approximately 20,000+ pitch submissions daily. Even a large editorial team cannot thoroughly review every submission, provide feedback on rejections, or consider tracks that don't immediately fit current needs.

