Why it matters
Why should creators keep Creative Records?
Real creative work moves fast — through messages, folders, sessions, links, and early drafts. This page explains the thinking behind a simple professional habit worth building into that process.
Record your work the moment it's created, before it leaves your hands.
This is not a slogan. It is the professional habit Lyricsmit exists to encourage — one small, consistent action that pays off the longer you keep doing it.
Why documenting your work matters
Most creative work is shared long before it is formally documented anywhere. By the time a project becomes public, the first clear record of the early version can be buried, lost, or missing entirely. A quick habit of documenting work as it's made closes that gap.
Why independent proof-of-existence matters
A record you can point to — created independently, at the time the work existed — carries more weight than your word alone. It doesn't decide ownership or authorship. It simply confirms that a specific file existed at a specific moment, verifiable by anyone.
Why documenting early becomes valuable later
Context is hardest to prove after the fact. A record made in the moment — before a pitch, before a share, before a collaboration — quietly preserves that context, so it's already there if it's ever needed months or years down the line.
Why an archive grows more valuable over time
One record is useful. A consistent history of records is more useful still — a private, chronological map of your creative output that gets more valuable the longer you keep it, and that no single platform or collaborator controls.
Across every creative field
A songwriter records a demo before sending it to a collaborator in another city.
A screenwriter documents a first draft before pitching it around a room.
A photographer records a shoot before sending proofs to a client.
A developer documents an early build before opening it up to a team.
A product designer records a concept before sharing it in a review.
Different fields, same habit: document the work early, before it leaves your hands.
A witness you can trust.
Lyricsmit doesn't claim you own your work. It gives you a trusted timestamp and cryptographic fingerprint you can point to later — simple proof, independent verification.
Every record you create builds your Creative Record Archive — a private, growing history of your work over time. Lyricsmit stores the cryptographic fingerprint, trusted timestamp, and verification record — never your original file. Start with 10 free Creative Records every month.