How Major Labels Plan a Music Release

There’s a reason certain albums feel like events and others feel like they just appeared one Friday morning without warning. The difference, almost always, is strategy. Major labels have spent decades refining the art of the music release into a precise, multi-phase operation that begins months before a single note reaches the public, and understanding how it works gives every artist — independent or otherwise — a clearer picture of what actually moves the needle.

It Starts Way Earlier Than You Think

The industry moves in seasons. A lot of projects that started months ago are ready now, and artists want music out early to support summer touring, festivals, and award consideration. Major labels are thinking about a release six to twelve months before it happens, sometimes longer. Recording wraps, then mixing and mastering, then manufacturing (if physical product is involved), then the entire commercial apparatus has to be built around the music before anyone hears it. Submitting a release four to six weeks in advance ensures it’s properly ingested on DSPs and reduces the chance of delivery errors, and improves the chances of landing on playlists or editorial features. For a major label, that four-to-six-week minimum is just the final sprint. The real work started much earlier.

The Single Strategy: Building to the Album

Many artists release up to three singles over a six-month period to preview their upcoming album. This keeps them top of mind and is a valuable tool to drive interest in live shows. The singles strategy at a major label is not random. Each track is chosen for a specific purpose: the first single establishes the sonic identity of the new era, the second goes after radio or streaming playlists, and the third often targets a different demographic or mood to broaden the audience before the album lands. Traditionally, artists would go a long time between album projects, disappear, and then come back as a big event. In this day and age, labels try to keep things flowing so artists almost never go away, because fans want to be engaged constantly. The era of the mysterious disappearing act is largely over. Sustained presence is the new model.

The Release Date Is a Strategic Decision

Major labels tend to release on Fridays, which aligns with the global release day standard and maximises the first-week chart tracking window. But the choice of which Friday matters enormously. Labels map the competitive landscape months in advance, looking for windows where their artist won’t be going head-to-head with another major release that targets the same audience. Albums released between August and the end of the year line up with Grammy eligibility windows, which makes that stretch of the calendar particularly competitive. A label releasing a prestige album knows that Grammy consideration is part of the conversation from the very beginning, and the release date is chosen to maximise that window. Season matters too. How does the music align with the themes and energy of a particular time of year? Summer music goes out in late spring. Introspective albums lean toward autumn. None of this is accidental.

Pitching to DSPs and Press

Several weeks before release, the label’s team begins pitching the music simultaneously to digital service providers and to press. Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon Music editorial teams all receive advance pitches for playlist consideration, and the timing of these pitches is carefully coordinated. A private streaming link for songs being pitched to journalists, especially for exclusive premieres, is standard practice. Exclusive premieres at major publications are themselves strategic decisions — a premiere at a tastemaker publication signals credibility and generates a first wave of coverage that the rest of the press cycle builds on. Radio promo, where relevant, runs on its own parallel timeline, with servicing to programme directors beginning weeks in advance of the public release.

Pre-Saves, Pre-Orders, and Building Anticipation

Driving pre-saves and pre-adds engages streaming platform algorithms and boosts a music’s visibility to fans, as well as the likelihood of being placed on a playlist. At a major label, the pre-save campaign is a coordinated effort across social media, email, SMS, and sometimes advertising, designed to generate a surge of activity the moment the track goes live. Timing matters, and spacing out content and promotions builds hype, engages the fanbase, and gives the campaign room to breathe. A pre-save announcement, a snippet, a behind-the-scenes clip, a lyric video, a music video, a performance clip — each piece of content is a planned beat in a carefully sequenced rollout, not a spontaneous moment.

The Launch Week and Beyond

Release day is not the end of the campaign. It’s the beginning of a new phase. Major labels push heavily in the first week because chart positions — particularly on the Billboard Hot 100 and album charts — are calculated on a weekly basis and the first-week number sets the narrative. Releasing music should feel exciting, not overwhelming, but without a clear plan you risk stunting your success. Strategy is about laying out all the necessary materials, tactics, and goals to maximise engagement. After launch week, the focus shifts to sustaining momentum: more press, late night television performances, radio sessions, additional music videos, and the live tour that was announced alongside the record and that keeps the album in conversation for months.

What Independent Artists Can Learn From It

For labels juggling multiple artists, strategies need to be finely tuned to the needs of individual artists. Each artist will need their own strategy, and the best advice is to try a strategy, see if it works or not, adjust, and quickly try again. The major label model isn’t something independent artists can replicate dollar for dollar, but the underlying logic is entirely transferable. Plan further ahead than feels necessary. Release singles before the album. Pitch to playlists and press simultaneously. Drive pre-saves. Treat release day as the beginning of the campaign, not the culmination. You need to show up like a small media company, not like someone tossing a track into the ocean and hoping it washes up on the right shore. The labels figured that out a long time ago. Now you know too.