To make the most of a songwriting camp experience, you need to show up prepared, stay open to collaboration, and treat every session as a real professional opportunity rather than a casual creative hangout. The writers who walk away with placements and lasting industry relationships are the ones who arrive with intention and stay present throughout. Below, we break down exactly how to do that across every stage of the camp.
Before arriving at a songwriting camp, you should sharpen your strengths, identify your gaps, and come in with a clear sense of what you want to create. Preparation is not about rehearsing ideas until they feel stale — it is about arriving in a headspace where you can respond quickly, collaborate freely, and make every session count from the first hour.
Start by doing an honest audit of your catalog. Listen back to your best demos and ask yourself what they have in common. What are your strongest hooks? Where do your melodies tend to fall flat? What genres or moods do you write best in? Knowing your own creative fingerprint means you can communicate it clearly to collaborators on day one, instead of spending half the week figuring out your own voice.
Beyond self-reflection, there are a few practical steps worth taking:
Preparation is not about eliminating spontaneity. It is about removing the friction that stops you from being fully present when inspiration actually strikes.
Strong co-writing relationships at a songwriting camp are built through generosity, genuine listening, and a willingness to serve the song over your own ego. The writers who form lasting creative partnerships during camps are not necessarily the most technically skilled in the room — they are the ones who make every collaborator feel heard and valued.
The first session with a new co-writer sets the tone for everything that follows. Resist the urge to arrive with a fully formed idea and push it through. Instead, open with a question: what kind of song do you want to write today? What are you feeling? What have you been listening to? This signals that you are a real collaborator, not someone who just needs another body in the room to validate their own concept.
From there, a few habits make a measurable difference:
In environments like our songwriter camps at Wisseloord, where participants come from across Europe and beyond, you are often co-writing with people whose musical backgrounds are genuinely different from yours. That difference is the point. Lean into it rather than defaulting to the familiar.
To turn camp demos into real industry opportunities, you need to treat every rough recording as a professional submission rather than a work in progress. The songs you write during a camp do not need to be fully produced to attract attention — they need to demonstrate a strong concept, a memorable hook, and enough sonic clarity that a listener can hear the potential immediately.
The most important step happens before you leave the camp. Get clean, well-labeled audio files of every demo you recorded. Note the key, tempo, and genre for each track. If the camp registers demos in a catalog or database, make sure your metadata is accurate and complete. A great song with sloppy admin gets lost.
Once you are back home, the work continues:
At Wisseloord, all demos written during camp sessions are registered in our catalog and actively pitched to labels, managers, and artists worldwide, including directly to BMG. The listening sessions at the close of each camp bring A&R representatives into the room to evaluate the work in real time. That direct pipeline is rare, and it only works if the songs are strong enough to stand behind. Your job is to make sure they are.
The mindset that separates songwriters who break through from those who do not is a combination of professional resilience and genuine curiosity. Breakthrough writers treat rejection as information rather than a verdict, stay curious about what makes songs connect with real audiences, and consistently prioritize the quality of the work over the speed of the outcome.
One of the most common traps at a songwriting camp is the comparison spiral. You hear someone else’s hook and immediately feel like your own ideas are not good enough. That feeling is almost universal among serious writers, and it is almost always wrong. The writers who break through learn to notice that feeling and keep working anyway. Momentum is a decision, not a mood.
A few specific mindset shifts make a real difference:
If you are ready to put that mindset to work in a professional environment, explore what our upcoming camps have to offer — and come prepared to make the most of every hour in the room.
Results from a songwriting camp rarely happen overnight — most placements and industry connections take months to develop after the camp ends. The key is staying active: keep refining your strongest demos, maintain contact with your co-writers, and follow up with any A&R or publisher connections you made. Writers who treat the camp as the start of an ongoing process, rather than a single event, are the ones who eventually see tangible outcomes.
Less experienced writers can absolutely thrive at a professional songwriting camp, provided they arrive with the right attitude. Being coachable, genuinely curious, and willing to serve the song rather than protect your ego will take you further than technical polish alone. The collaborative environment is also one of the fastest ways to accelerate your craft — you will learn more in a week of intensive co-writing than you might in months of writing alone at home.
A session that feels stuck is usually a signal to change something — the concept, the key, the tempo, or even just the physical setup in the room. Try scrapping what you have and starting with a completely different emotional angle or reference track rather than forcing the original idea forward. If the chemistry genuinely isn't there, it's okay to acknowledge that openly and professionally; not every pairing produces great work, and preserving the relationship for a future session is more valuable than pushing through a bad one.
The sweet spot is arriving with raw material rather than finished ideas — think loose title concepts, emotional themes, chord progressions, or melodic fragments rather than fully written songs. Finished ideas can unintentionally close off collaboration because you already have a vision locked in, which makes it harder for a co-writer to genuinely contribute. Raw sparks, on the other hand, give everyone in the room something to build on together from the very first minute.
The most common mistake is pitching too broadly and too soon — sending every demo to every contact before the songs are ready. This can damage your credibility with the very industry professionals you met at the camp. Instead, identify your two or three strongest tracks, invest in improving their production quality if needed, and pitch them selectively through the warm introductions your camp mentors can provide. A targeted pitch with a strong song will always outperform a mass send with a mediocre one.
Always clarify splits before you leave the session — not the next day, not after the camp, but in the room while everyone is still present and aligned. A simple written agreement, even a note in a shared phone or email thread, confirming each writer's percentage and any producer points is enough to prevent disputes later. If the camp has a formal registration process for demos, make sure your name and agreed split are accurately reflected in that catalog before you depart.
The post-camp drop in momentum is real, and the best way to counter it is to schedule your next co-write before you even get home. Block dedicated writing time in your calendar for the weeks immediately following the camp, and treat those sessions with the same urgency and professionalism you brought to the camp itself. Staying in active contact with the co-writers you connected with — even just sharing references or rough voice memos — keeps the creative energy alive and often leads to your best work together.