WORK WITH BOOK MORE WOMEN
UPDATED SEPTEMBER 15, 2025
GUEST CONTRIBUTORS
Pitch your writing or other content to be shared with our audiences across our socials, Substack, website, and more. Learn more here.
VOLUNTEERS
Volunteer your skills as we expand our work for gender equity in music. We are looking for support in basic data and research and social media content creation. Learn more here.
How to Support Book More Women
Book More Women has been working towards gender equity in music since 2018, independently and without funding. We have big plans for the future, but we need your help to get there. If you are able, here are some ways you can support us and contribute to the mission:
Like, Comment, Share!
First: It’s free! Like and comment on our posts so the algorithm knows you want to see them and share to spread the word to your friends!
Subscribe to Our Substack Newsletter!
We started a Substack newsletter to share more in-depth content on music festivals and the music industry. There will be recurring festival features, personal essays, and deeper dives into specific topics. Most stories are free currently.
Check Out Our Merch!
We’ve designed some basic shirts and stickers that allow you to directly support us while wearing the mission and representing everywhere! Every purchase helps us keep doing the work.
Sponsorship / Partnership
We’d love to work with aligned brands or companies and share your service or product with our unique, passionate audience.
Contact Us With Your Ideas!
Have another idea for us? Contact Book More Women anytime here:
“It’s so amazing. It’s gently shown a light...on the way that mainstream festivals are in a bit of a dark period in excluding women right now.”
- Brandi Carlile / Artist
“Sometimes you think you’re hitting all your diversity…goals, but you might not be. I never really thought about what the actual end number was on a given show and I think that Book More Women was kind of a reality check.”
- Huston Powell / C3 / Lollapalooza
“We appreciate what Book More Women has done as far as industry visibility and accountability. When [their post] came out, we saw it that day, and it was an honor to be applauded by them for our efforts.”
- Peter Boyd / Boston Calling
“For her to put our poster out there the way she did really made it clear that there was a lack of representation,”
- Stephanie Mezzano / AEG / Firefly
“This visual representation...highlights the issue in a way that we hadn’t seen before. They are providing our industry, and the public, with a tool to reference and call out gender discrepancies with just a glance.”
- Mary Allen / UTA