To which I say, well... yes. Yes you probably do. I know many of you probably expected me to go with "delete that shit you are lying to yourself", but hear me out; yes, a lot of the reasons social media gives for needing to post there are absolutely not true, and in many cases -such as implying that it's for y'know, being social- the complete opposite of reality.
But if you want to be a (let's go with) musician who makes money from their music, and you don't have a sugar Momma/Daddy willing to finance it all? Yeah, these days you kinda need to be on social media.
Because Social Media is for Advertising
Mehret Birukrecently asked the question "What is social media for?"It's a good piece and also a relevant question to this discussion. Before signing yourself up (for well, anythingreally), it's healthy to ask "what is this for?"
For the consumer, social media is almost always for "looking at entertaining things". But why post? Facebook and Instagram say they're for sharing with friends and family. Twitter is forall your big-brain takes your friends politely ignore. TikTok is actually pretty blatant about what it's for, which is "a chance to go viral".
If you are an artist who isn't trying to sell anything, then yeah, you probably should delete that account. You are not a brand. Acting like you are, and selling yourself can only hurt you in the long run1. Social media platforms have many layers, but deep down at their cores, what they're foris advertising.
And Advertising is Work.
In the movies the way artists make money is by becoming famous. In the movies, the artist starts off as your average conventionally attractive person out there vibin' in the New York subway with an acoustic guitar, and eventually someone notices them and after a brief montage the artist is magically able to pay their rent on time every month.
But as any working artist can tell you, making a living from your art is about ten percent making art and ninety percent running a business. And running a business is work. There's a lot of "accounting" and "networking" and general "getting yourself out there". It's work.
And Work Sucks