MONROVIA & MELBOURNE — Genius Tunez, a music promotion and talent management platform built on two continents, is officially live at geniustunez.com. The mission printed across the top of the site doesn't hedge: where African talent goes global.
The platform arrives with a pointed answer to the problem every emerging African artist knows too well — promotion services that promise the world, deliver bots, and disappear after payment. Genius Tunez publishes every campaign's deliverables in writing before payment, signs a contract for every engagement, and — in a move no competitor has matched — publishes campaign results publicly on its Receipts page, real numbers included, whatever they turn out to be.
Campaigns start at $50 for a one-week Spotlight and scale to the month-long Breakout launch. In between sits the platform's signature product: the Crossover, which pairs a musician's release with content creators from the platform's own roster, who carry the song to their audiences through skits, dances, and reaction content. Musicians get authentic momentum ads can't buy; creators get paid work.
First on the roster is Jeff Myers — the streamer, content creator, and brand influencer with more than 97,000 followers and one of Liberia's most devoted fanbases, the Jeffians — now crossing over into Afrobeats with debut releases on the way.
The platform is open to submissions now: music talents and content creators can submit two links and a bio at geniustunez.com/join, and every submission receives a free one-page mini-strategy within 24 hours — before any payment.
The launch campaign itself is being run through the platform's own engine and tracked publicly as Receipt #001 — targets published in advance, results to follow. Receipts or it didn't happen.
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