You made the work. You posted the work. The algorithm showed it to eleven people and a bot. Sound familiar? The problem was never your art — it’s that you’re renting visibility from platforms designed to starve you of it.
A viral post is weather; infrastructure is climate. Creatives don’t need another ninety seconds of attention — they need places where their work lives, gets experienced, and converts into bookings, sales, and relationships. That requires physical space and a network, not a better posting schedule.
Look around: the creatives winning right now are plugging into ecosystems — collectives, residencies, curated spaces — where discovery happens through experience instead of scroll velocity. A person who stands in front of your work for a week beats ten thousand who flick past it.
Placement in real houses where guests live with your work. Bookings through the app for dinners, events, and programming. A network that travels across five cities. And a customer who chose to be in the room — the warmest audience that exists.
“A viral post is weather. Infrastructure is climate.”
Your craft deserves infrastructure, not just exposure. Build your profile on the RAP App →