Creators deserve agency
Control over price, rights, drops and communication should be built into the product, not negotiated after the fact.
FanFactors reframes music support as a public act of loyalty. Fans are not passive consumers. Artists are not disposable content suppliers. The marketplace gives both sides power.
FanFactors is built for a world where fans want to participate, artists want ownership and platforms need to prove that they create value instead of simply capturing it.
Control over price, rights, drops and communication should be built into the product, not negotiated after the fact.
A fan who plays, buys, shares and invites should feel the impact of that support.
Legal listening should be the default because rights are the foundation of the market.
The earliest supporters, super fans and invite leaders should be visible to the artists they help.
A song can be more than a stream count. It can be a purchase, a collectible moment, a campaign and a direct relationship.
Artists need to see how support moves, where it comes from and how it converts.
The movement page should recruit people emotionally. It is the bridge between product mechanics and the belief that music can be fairer, more exciting and more creator-powered.
“The movement is not anti-platform. It is pro-artist, pro-fan and pro-rights.”
FanFactors Manifesto
The movement is simple: stop letting music value disappear into systems that do not recognize the people creating and moving the culture.
FanFactors is designed to help fans and artists move from consumption to ownership, from attention to commerce, and from support to measurable upside.
The call-to-rebels page gives artists, fans and partners a sharper invitation to join the FanFactors ecosystem.