Why a social bio link isn't enough anymore
A Linktree or Instagram bio can't be found by Google, can't carry a real gig calendar, and disappears the moment the platform changes its algorithm or its rules. A real website is the one piece of your online presence you actually own — no platform can take it down, throttle its reach, or bury it behind an algorithm you don't control. For a working or emerging musician, that's the difference between a fan or booker finding you reliably and hoping a social post surfaces at the right moment.
It also matters increasingly for AI-assisted discovery: when someone asks an AI assistant "who is [you]" or "when is [you] playing next," a real website with structured data behind it is what lets that assistant answer correctly — a social bio link gives it nothing to work with.
No calls, no Zoom, no builder to learn
The entire process is one questionnaire — about twenty minutes, covering your bio, genre, photos, gig dates, and style preferences — and payment comes at the end, not upfront. From there we build the site, send you three design variants to pick from and revise, and you're live in five business days. There's no drag-and-drop editor to learn afterward, and no recurring subscription required to keep the site online.
Everything a first site actually needs
Hero, bio, a gig calendar (even a short one), a way for people to contact you, and search-engine and AI-search schema markup baked in from day one — the same technical foundation our most established touring-act builds ship with, just scaled to a first site rather than a full press-kit operation. There's no "starter" version that's missing the parts that actually matter.
What it costs, and what it doesn't
A solo build is $249 one-time; a band or group build is $499. Both include two revision rounds and live deployment to your own free Cloudflare account, which you own outright — no ongoing fee to us unless you choose to opt into a maintenance plan later, and most first-time site owners don't need one right away.