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Join artists and venues on the UK's peer-to-peer live music marketplace.
Three things make you discoverable to artists: a What's On page on your website, a Google Business profile with live-music attribute, and a booking platform profile (GigXchange). Facebook alone is no longer enough.
Cost: almost nothing. Benefit: artists actively searching for gigs in your town find you. Try GigXchange for venues.
Most grassroots venues in the UK have a website. Some have an Instagram. A few have a Facebook page that gets updated regularly. But almost none have a booking presence — a place where working artists can see that the venue hosts live music and enquire about playing there.
That's a missed opportunity — and at a moment when grassroots venues are under real financial pressure, being invisible to the artists who could fill your room is a self-inflicted wound. This piece is for venue owners, bookers, and promoters who know they should be more discoverable but aren't sure where to start. You don't need a booking system. You need a presence.
Grassroots venues in the UK have been closing at a worrying rate. The Music Venue Trust tracks grassroots venue closures and publishes an annual state-of-the-sector report — their figures consistently show net losses, with venues closing faster than new ones open. The causes are multiple: energy costs, rising rents, noise complaints, and the post-COVID shift in audience habits.
There's a quieter cause that's rarely discussed: booking inefficiency. When artists can't find you, you can't book them. When you can't book good acts, your nights underperform. When nights underperform, margins thin. When margins thin, you close.
The venues that survive this decade will be the ones that make themselves easy to find — and easy to book.
When an artist is looking for gig opportunities, they search. They Google "live music venues in [city]." They check platform listings. They ask their peers. If your venue doesn't show up in those searches — or shows up but doesn't clearly say "we book live music" — you're invisible to everyone outside your existing network.
That network matters. But it shrinks over time. Musicians quit. Bands break up. The circle of people who knew your venue booked live music in 2019 doesn't automatically include the 18-year-old songwriter who moved to your town last month — the exact artist who could bring a new crowd through your door.
We go into this dynamic more in how to book live music for your pub or bar and what venues get wrong about booking live music. The short version: inbound is a compounding asset, and invisibility kills it at the source.
It doesn't mean building a booking system from scratch. Nobody's asking you to code a marketplace. It means having somewhere online that answers three questions clearly:
You'd be surprised how many venues host live music every week but have zero mention of it on their homepage. "Live music every Thursday" is such a small sentence, and yet most venue sites don't include it.
And here's what happens when they do: artists find them. Their booking inbox starts to fill. They go from chasing bookings to choosing between them.
Here's what we'd do this week if we ran a grassroots venue and wanted to get serious about inbound bookings. It's low-effort and free. Nothing here should take more than a couple of hours.
Even a single paragraph. "We book live music every Thursday. Folk, indie, and acoustic sets. Typical slot is 45 minutes for £80–£150 depending on the night. Get in touch via [contact form]." That's it. You've just answered all three questions above.
Add "Live Music Venue" as a category on your Google Business Profile. Post your upcoming live events as Google Posts. Upload photos from recent nights. This is free and directly impacts local search visibility — when someone Googles "live music near me," Google Business Profile listings sit above organic results.
We built GigXchange for this. A free venue profile lists your venue with capacity, genres booked, typical fees, and makes you searchable by every artist on the platform. Artists can enquire directly. You're no longer dependent on the people who already know you exist. Whatever platform you use — ours or another — this should take minutes, not weeks.
Even just "Jenny Carter plays here Thursday 8pm, free entry." Two things happen: punters come, and artists see that you're actively booking. Artists scroll Instagram for opportunities — if they see your venue posting gigs weekly, you're on their shortlist.
Your website should link to your Instagram. Your Instagram bio should link to your booking platform profile. Your Google Business Profile should link to your website's "Live Music" page. Each page should link to the next — both because it helps artists navigate, and because search engines read internal linking as a signal of an active, coherent site.
Even a free Google Form is better than "email us at info@venue.co.uk." Useful fields: name, band name, genre, links (Spotify / YouTube / Instagram), typical fee, preferred dates. Takes ten minutes to set up and dramatically raises the quality of the enquiries you receive.
The fastest way to destroy all the above is to ignore the enquiries it generates. Set a calendar reminder twice a week to go through your booking inbox. Even a "thanks, not right for us" reply keeps you in the artist's good books — and they talk. For more on pricing enquiries fairly, see how much should you pay a live band.
A few sources worth bookmarking if you want to stay informed on the sector you're operating in:
None of these bodies will book an act for you. But they define the baseline industry context — and they're the sources artists cite when they're deciding which venues are worth engaging with.
Every artist who discovers your venue online and has a good experience tells other artists. Reviews build up. Your venue's reputation grows beyond your local circle. Over time, the quality of inbound enquiries improves because good artists want to play venues that other good artists have reviewed well.
It's a flywheel. The first few spins are hard — you won't see much in month one or two. By month six, the inbox starts to look different. By year one, you're turning acts away.
The most common mistake we see from venue owners isn't lack of effort — it's misplaced effort. Most venues spend hours curating their event posters and zero minutes on their booking presence. The posters are for the people already coming. The booking presence is for the ones who could.
You don't need a sophisticated booking system. You just need to be findable. GigXchange is one way to do that — a free profile that puts your venue in front of every artist on the platform. But whatever you use, the principle is the same: if artists can't find you, they can't book you.
The venues closing this year aren't failing because of the music. They're failing because the pipeline of artists who know to approach them is drying up. Fix the pipeline and the rest follows.
Related reading: what venues get wrong about booking live music, how to promote a live music night, why UK pubs are bringing back live music in 2026, and the complete hire-a-musician 2026 guide.
Join artists and venues on the UK's peer-to-peer live music marketplace.