Routing a tour is mostly a math problem with one big assumption baked in: that you can convince a venue you've never met to take a risk on you. Most cold emails get this assumption exactly backwards. Here's the shape of one that works.
The two questions a venue is asking
When a booker reads a pitch from a band they don't know, they're running through two questions in this order:
- Will they show up? Will the date hold? Will they drive 14 hours in February and pull up at load-in like adults?
- Will they bring anyone? Even a few. Friends, family, blog readers, tagged followers. Anything that isn't entirely on the venue's regulars.
Notice what isn't in there: your sound, your record, your reviews. A venue's booker assumes you're competent — they already filtered to your genre. What they're trying to protect against is the band that ghosts the week before, or the band that draws three people and a confused bartender.
The pitch, in plain shape
- Where you're from and where you're going. Not the whole tour route — the two dates flanking the one you're asking for. “We have a confirmed Friday at The Empty Bottle in Chicago and we're driving to Pittsburgh Sunday — we're looking for a Saturday on the way.”
- Why this venue. One sentence. Not a paragraph of flattery — a real reason. Mention an act they've hosted that overlaps your sound. If you've been there before, say so.
- What you bring. Your last attendance number that you can defend with a screenshot, what cities pull for you, any local connection (a friend who's asked about it, a roommate in town).
- Two videos and a one-liner about who you sound like. The booker is not a critic. They'll trust a 30-second listen and a comparison.
- The ask, plainly. “Looking for a slot in the $200–$400 range, can do support or co-headline.”
Three things people get wrong
The mass send. Booker inboxes have a sixth sense for “Hi [VENUE_NAME],” even when you remembered to swap in the name. Personalize one line — a recent show, a band they hosted, the regular night they run. It's 30 seconds and it's the only reason your email gets read.
The press wall. A pitch with eight blog quotes underneath the ask reads as performative. A pitch with one line — “Stereogum called us ‘a road band’ in March” — reads as a working artist.
The vague date. “Anything in June would be great” is dead on arrival. Bookers are filling a calendar; they don't want to do the routing for you. Pitch one date with a backup, period.
A note about ShareTheStage specifically
We built this platform with the cold-pitch in mind. When you apply to a gig here, the venue gets your verified profile, your live videos, your past gig list, and your routing context — all without you having to staple any of it together yourself. The pitch field is the place to say the one thing those other fields can't: why this venue, this date.
Keep that one paragraph short and specific. The rest of your profile is doing the work.
