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Visitor Experience

Your public page is designed to make a strong impression without you having to think about web design. When someone visits your URL, they get a clean, professional experience that puts your music front and centre.

Here is exactly what they see and how it works.

The page follows a simple top-to-bottom structure:

  1. Banner — your uploaded banner image (or a clean accent-colour header if you have not set one)
  2. Profile area — your name, bio, and social links
  3. Sections — your music organised into the sections you configured
  4. Contact form — a way for visitors to reach you

Everything scrolls vertically. No complex navigation, no hidden menus. Visitors scroll down and encounter your music naturally.

Just below the banner, visitors see:

  • Your name — pulled from your Producer Dashboard profile
  • Bio — the short description you wrote in settings
  • Social icons — clickable icons linking to your Instagram, SoundCloud, Spotify, and whatever else you configured

This section establishes who you are before the visitor hears a single note. Keep it concise — they are here for the music, not to read a novel.

Each section you created shows up as a titled block of tracks. The section title appears as a heading, and below it your tracks are displayed in the format you chose.

Tracks appear as a visual grid of cards. Each card shows:

  • Artwork — your uploaded cover art, prominently displayed
  • Track title — below the artwork
  • Duration — shown on the card

Visitors click a card to start playing that track. The grid works well for beat packs and sample libraries where visual browsing is natural.

Tracks appear as an ordered list. Each row shows:

  • Track number — position in the section
  • Artwork — a small thumbnail
  • Track title
  • Duration
  • Play button

The list format works well for albums and EPs where order matters and the visitor is expected to listen from top to bottom.

Every track on your public page has a waveform player. When a visitor clicks play:

  • The waveform appears with playback progress
  • They can scrub to any point in the track by clicking on the waveform
  • The current time and total duration are visible
  • Other tracks pause automatically when a new one starts

Playback is smooth and responsive. Audio streams progressively so it starts quickly even on slower connections.

If you have uploaded cover art for a track, that is what appears. If you have not, Producer Dashboard generates artwork automatically so every track has a visual representation.

The auto-generated artwork is clean and uses your accent colour. It is perfectly serviceable, but custom artwork always makes a stronger impression. If your public page is a priority, consider adding artwork to your key tracks.

At the bottom of the page, visitors find a contact form. They can enter:

  • Their name
  • Their email address
  • A message

When they submit, you receive the inquiry. This gives visitors a way to reach you for licensing, collaboration, or other opportunities without you needing to publish your email address.

The form is simple and low-friction. No account required, no sign-up process.

Your social icons appear in the profile area near the top of the page. Each icon links directly to your profile on that platform. Visitors can quickly jump to your Instagram, SoundCloud, Spotify, or wherever else you have a presence.

Icons are recognisable and standard. Visitors know exactly where each one leads.

Your public page is fully responsive. On phones and tablets:

  • The banner scales to fit the screen width
  • Sections stack vertically
  • Grid display switches to fewer columns (or a single column on small screens)
  • The waveform player stretches to full width for easy scrubbing
  • The contact form adapts to the screen size

You can share your URL knowing it works well on any device. Whether a label exec opens it on their laptop at the office or a collaborator checks it on their phone between sessions, the experience is solid.

Your public page shows only what you have chosen to share. Visitors have no access to:

  • Your full library or tracks not included in public sections
  • Tags, stages, workflow status, or internal metadata
  • Collaborator details (unless you enabled credits for a section)
  • Any private notes or comments
  • Your Producer Dashboard account or settings

The page is a curated window into your work, not a full view of your production workflow.

  • Visit your own public page in a browser to see exactly what others see. Check it on both desktop and mobile.
  • Pay attention to the first section. It is the first music visitors encounter, so make it count.
  • If you work across genres, organise your sections so visitors can quickly find what is relevant to them.
  • The contact form is one of the most valuable features. Make sure your public page is published before pitching to labels, clients, or collaborators so they have a way to respond.