Features · beginner

Browse curators on TrackGiant: filters, cards, and how to use search

What the directory is optimized for, how categories map to intent, and how artists shortlist faster.

April 21, 20262 min readby TrackGiant Team

The Browse curators experience at /curators is TrackGiant’s discovery engine for paid feedback. It is optimized for fast comparison: avatar, price band, turnaround, category, and the first lines of a bio. This guide explains how to read cards efficiently and how curators should think about being found.

What you are looking at

Each card is a storefront preview for a curator profile. Signals that matter most:

  • Category — Artist-Curator, Music Curator, A&R, etc. See Artist or Curator? if those labels confuse you.
  • Track review price — discrete tier chosen by the curator.
  • Turnaround — 24 hours / 2–3 days / 1 week style bands.
  • Bio snippet — taste and feedback style in miniature.

Click through to the full profile before spending money — cards are intentionally shallow.

Filters and intent

Use filters to match task, not fandom:

  • Need peer-level feedback from a working artist? Filter toward Artist-Curator.
  • Need playlist culture context? Look for curators who articulate listening environments in bios.
  • Need deep arrangement help? Scan for services beyond vanilla reviews.

If filters do not exist for your exact micro-genre, use text search when available and fall back to manual bio scanning.

Shortlisting workflow

  1. Open browse with one primary question (“Who hears UK garage well?”).
  2. Open 3–5 profiles in parallel tabs.
  3. Kill tabs fast on mismatch; do not hoard options.
  4. Save finalists to My Curators.

Batch campaigns from browse

When you already picked a panel, launch a batch submission instead of repeating checkout five times.

For curators: winning browse without hacks

Titles and first sentence of your bio are SEO for humans. Lead with lanes, not adjectives.

Genre tags: narrow beats broad — mismatched traffic declines or expires submissions, which hurts levels.

Price + turnaround: keep them credible together. Premium + slow can work; premium + constant expiry cannot.

Avatar: non-negotiable — see profile that gets submissions.

Common artist mistakes

  • Sorting only by lowest price — sometimes cheap is inexperienced, not generous.
  • Ignoring services — the best help may not be the default review SKU.
  • Treating browse like Instagram Explore — here you are hiring, not entertaining yourself.

Browse is a directory, not a recommendation oracle. Use it quickly, save the good fits, and spend money where taste aligns.

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