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The Remix: Key Takeaways from ARIA Innovator 2026

April 1, 2026
4
min read
01.04.2026

4 Shifts from the ARIA Innovator Conference – QSIC
Nikki Wishart
Nikki Wishart
Music Curator, QSIC · 5 min read

I recently stepped out of the State Library NSW after a day at the ARIA Innovator Conference feeling that rare mix of inspired and slightly intimidated. The consensus was clear: the Australian music industry isn't just evolving — it's being fundamentally re-coded.

ARIA Innovator Conference — State Library NSW

Here are the four shifts that will define how we build careers and businesses in the coming years.

1

Community is the New Currency

The Betoota Advocate · Margaret Zhang, Filmmaker & Creative Director

We've spent a decade obsessing over "audience," but the Betoota Advocate team and Margaret Zhang made a vital distinction: Audiences are passive; communities are participants.

The Shift: Moving away from chasing "likes" and toward fostering "belonging."

The Reality: In an era of infinite content, the artists who thrive will be those who facilitate real connection. Connection doesn't require a massive budget, but it does require radical authenticity.

2

Gaming: The Great Untapped Frontier

Cathy Hackl, Tech & Gaming Executive

Cathy Hackl dropped a truth bomb: Gaming isn't just a "sync" opportunity for your latest track; it's a native ecosystem where music lives and breathes.

The Gap

While we optimise for Spotify playlists, an entire generation is discovering their favourite artists through Fortnite and Roblox.

The Goal

We need to stop "inserting" music into games and start designing music for gaming contexts. Australia needs the infrastructure to help artists play in this sandbox.

3

Strategy > Hype

Jonathan Dworkin, UMG · Dom Price, Atlassian

In an industry that feels like it's five minutes away from irrelevance, Jonathan Dworkin (UMG) and Dom Price (Atlassian) gave us a much-needed reality check: You don't have to chase every shiny object.

The Rule: Don't let the tech wag the dog. Whether it's AI, the Metaverse, or Web3, these are just tools — not necessarily the destination. If a new platform doesn't help an artist tell their story or reach their specific goals, it's okay to not incorporate it. Technology should serve the creative vision, not dictate it.

The Mindset: Fail "Smart." We often treat a failed project like a disaster. Instead, we should treat it as data.

Technology-led evolution of the music industry — ARIA Innovator Conference

Technology-led evolution of the music industry — as presented at ARIA Innovator 2025

The Old Way

Dumping your whole budget into a trend because you're scared of missing out (FOMO).

The Smart Way

Running small, cheap "pilots." If they don't work, you haven't lost — you've just learned exactly what your fans don't want.

4

Looking Outside the "Music Bubble"

Meng Ru Kuok · Fashion, Tech & Supply Chain Perspectives

The most profound insights didn't come from music execs, but from fashion, tech, and physical supply chain experts like Meng Ru Kuok.

The Lesson: Our challenges — disruption, changing consumption, and sustainability — are not unique. By looking at how fashion manages cultural leadership or how tech frameworks handle scaling, we can skip the "trial and error" phase and move straight to execution.

The Bottom Line

The ARIA Innovator Conference surfaced themes that travel well beyond the music industry: authenticity over scale, context over volume, and technology that serves outcomes rather than chases hype. At QSIC, these aren't new ideas — they're the principles behind how we think about music curation. Sound works hardest when it's intentional and built for the environment it's actually in. The best ideas have always moved across industries.

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