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
- Open browse with one primary question (“Who hears UK garage well?”).
- Open 3–5 profiles in parallel tabs.
- Kill tabs fast on mismatch; do not hoard options.
- 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.
Related reading
Browse is a directory, not a recommendation oracle. Use it quickly, save the good fits, and spend money where taste aligns.