What are you trying to achieve with your music?

Whether you are creating trance music, or composing classical works, it is important to consider who you are doing this for, and what results you would like to achieve from your work.

By The Employability & Enterprise team at Leeds Conservatoire

Whether you are creating trance music, or composing classical works, it is important to consider who you are doing this for, and what results you would like to achieve from your work.

As the music industry is, as it suggests, a business, treating your music/project as a product can be really useful to help clarify your aims, goals and overall aspirations for your music. For example, if you were to launch a new vacuum cleaner, careful consideration, design, product development and market research would be required before any aspect of it was manufactured or sold.

Below are some points and questions that will hopefully help focus your project/music/ideas, and potentially create a set of guidelines, benchmarks and parameters for everything you do.

This can keep you driven and motivated. You should certainly set your sights high, but remember there is a difference between ambition and arrogance. Balancing realism and optimism is key to the success of this task.

Mission statement

List artists whose success you would like to emulate and why

Aims/aspirations that contribute to your mission statement

What’s your key target audience?

What other artists do your target audience listen to?


These questions are all just examples; you can always go much further with your analysis, and this may happen as your project begins to take shape. Your initial set of answers may also change over time as your project develops, but you can always update them to reflect new ambitions or parameters.

By The Employability & Enterprise team at Leeds Conservatoire
4 January 2020