From Sold-Out Shows to Starting Over: Mark Roberge of Prospect Hill | SMP 83 episode artwork

EPISODE · May 17, 2026 · 34 MIN

From Sold-Out Shows to Starting Over: Mark Roberge of Prospect Hill | SMP 83

from Successful Musicians · host Jason Tonioli

He built a band from scratch, sold out shows, landed radio play, and still watched everything fall apart overnight.Mark Roberge has lived on both sides of the music industry. The highs of momentum and the crash that follows when things go wrong. What makes this conversation different is that he didn’t stop there. He stepped back, studied what actually works, and built systems to help artists succeed long-term.This episode is not about theory. It is about what happens when you take control of your career and treat music like a real business.To read the complete transcript and watch the podcast video, visit the ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠episode blog⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.⁠What You’ll Learn- Why great music alone is not enough to succeed- How Mark built a regional band into a major force using strategy- What actually went wrong when signing a record deal- Why no one will care about your project as much as you do- How to think about music as a system, not just creativity- Why owning your fan data is critical for long-term success- How to turn listeners into real fans instead of losing them on platforms- The importance of consistency in releases and marketing- Why most artists struggle with marketing and how to fix it- How to build a team without losing control of your visionTopics Covered in This Episode- Starting a band from scratch and building a local following- Using MySpace strategically to grow an audience early on- Selling out shows and building momentum independently- Landing radio play, licensing deals, and national exposure- The reality of signing a record deal and losing control- How one failed deal derailed momentum- Transitioning into producing and helping other artists- The three pillars: product, branding, and marketing- Why most artists ignore fan capture and lose their audience- Building systems to grow fans consistently- Lessons from years in both artist and business rolesWho This Episode Is For- Independent artists trying to grow their audience- Musicians frustrated with lack of traction- Artists who want to understand the business side of music- Creators struggling with marketing and consistency- Musicians considering signing a record deal- Artists who want to build a long-term career, not just short-term successConnect with Mark RobergeCommunity WebsiteTech PlatformBand websiteLinkedInInstagramYouTubeSpotifyApple MusicConnect with Jason TonioliWebsite FacebookYouTube InstagramSpotifyPandoraAmazon MusicApple Music

He built a band from scratch, sold out shows, landed radio play, and still watched everything fall apart overnight.Mark Roberge has lived on both sides of the music industry. The highs of momentum and the crash that follows when things go wrong. What makes this conversation different is that he didn’t stop there. He stepped back, studied what actually works, and built systems to help artists succeed long-term.This episode is not about theory. It is about what happens when you take control of your career and treat music like a real business.To read the complete transcript and watch the podcast video, visit the ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠episode blog⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.⁠What You’ll Learn- Why great music alone is not enough to succeed- How Mark built a regional band into a major force using strategy- What actually went wrong when signing a record deal- Why no one will care about your project as much as you do- How to think about music as a system, not just creativity- Why owning your fan data is critical for long-term success- How to turn listeners into real fans instead of losing them on platforms- The importance of consistency in releases and marketing- Why most artists struggle with marketing and how to fix it- How to build a team without losing control of your visionTopics Covered in This Episode- Starting a band from scratch and building a local following- Using MySpace strategically to grow an audience early on- Selling out shows and building momentum independently- Landing radio play, licensing deals, and national exposure- The reality of signing a record deal and losing control- How one failed deal derailed momentum- Transitioning into producing and helping other artists- The three pillars: product, branding, and marketing- Why most artists ignore fan capture and lose their audience- Building systems to grow fans consistently- Lessons from years in both artist and business rolesWho This Episode Is For- Independent artists trying to grow their audience- Musicians frustrated with lack of traction- Artists who want to understand the business side of music- Creators struggling with marketing and consistency- Musicians considering signing a record deal- Artists who want to build a long-term career, not just short-term successConnect with Mark RobergeCommunity WebsiteTech PlatformBand websiteLinkedInInstagramYouTubeSpotifyApple MusicConnect with Jason TonioliWebsite FacebookYouTube InstagramSpotifyPandoraAmazon MusicApple Music

NOW PLAYING

From Sold-Out Shows to Starting Over: Mark Roberge of Prospect Hill | SMP 83

0:00 34:29

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

No similar episodes found.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Successful Musicians?

This episode is 34 minutes long.

When was this Successful Musicians episode published?

This episode was published on May 17, 2026.

What is this episode about?

He built a band from scratch, sold out shows, landed radio play, and still watched everything fall apart overnight.Mark Roberge has lived on both sides of the music industry. The highs of momentum and the crash that follows when things go wrong....

Can I download this Successful Musicians episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!