What does Greenroom actually show?
The dashboard surfaces the metrics Beatport kept to itself. Once a profile is claimed and approved, an artist or label sees downloads, DJ streams, DJ followers, chart positions and where their tracks have been featured, pulled from across Beatport's ecosystem. It also folds in the housekeeping: bios, artist and label images, logos, and a team-access system so a manager, publicist or label assistant can log in with the right permissions instead of sharing one password. Artists can attach Beatport Tickets events to their profile, so a fan reading the catalogue can buy a ticket in the same place.
Why did this take so long?
Beatport has run the underground's most-watched sales and chart infrastructure for two decades, yet the people making the records had almost no native way to read it. Producers reverse-engineered their own support from screenshots, DJ chart shout-outs and third-party services; labels chased the same numbers by hand. Greenroom closes that gap by giving away, for free, the first-party view only Beatport can see: who is buying, streaming, following and charting a record, and which DJs are driving it.
On the store that defines the underground chart, the artists chasing those charts finally get to see the scoreboard.
What is Beatport really building?
Greenroom is the shop window on a bigger move. It sits inside Beatport for Artists & Labels, the services stack Beatport laid out in late 2025 that reaches into distribution, publishing, royalty accounting, editorial pitching, remix competitions and demo management, the same territory occupied by distributors and label-services companies. Free analytics is how Beatport pulls artists and labels into that ecosystem: once your team, your profile and your numbers live in Greenroom, the paid services around it have somewhere to plug in.



