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Andy Lykens

Innovating and operating through growth

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Why Every Brand Should Follow McDonald’s Golden Example In Music Publishing.

February 28, 2014 by Andy

McDLogo

I used to think music publishers were just big music companies that owned songs. Then I found out McDonald’s is a music publisher and things got interesting…

Everyone knows there’s money to be had with placing music in advertising, but many people may not know exactly why it’s such a boon.

Including the very brands that pay for the music in the first place.

It’s key to realize that the owners of a song get paid every single time a song airs on television or the radio. This is called a performance royalty.

What does this mean for brands?

You may be surprised to find out that many brands are already setup to collect these performance royalties. And not just small players – brands like McDonald’s, Nestlé and Unilever all collect performance royalties when songs air on TV.

But how do they do this?

It’s simple actually – a lot of advertising work is done as work-for-hire. Therefore the brand owns everything that’s created for their commercials, including the music.

A brand can simply sub-contract a “real” music publisher, or even small royalties shop, to setup a publishing entity, collect, track and manage the royalty income on their behalf.

Fees for setup are reasonable, especially compared to the amount of money the brand will earn back from performance royalties (out of which the music publisher will take an administrative cut).

The resulting income for any given spot depends on many variables.

The PRO’s certainly aren’t very open about their tracking formula – much of it is mystery sauce with a pinch of fairy-dust. Despite there being VERY reliable computer tracking services available this seems to be more of a thorn in the side of the PROs than a welcome new tool.

That means it’s tough to tell exactly how much money one spot brings in.

However, they could make enough in performance royalty income to pay themselves back for the expense of the music creation in the first place in many cases.

Is this bad business for the musicians that write the music?

In fact it’s often a better situation for the musicians. If brands don’t register their compositions that are works-for-hire it can be tough for Bill G. Songerton to collect his performance royalties.

But attach a big brand name to a small publisher, and you’ve got an entity that commands respect at the PRO’s (and not to mention one that registers works with all relevant data needed for tracking).

If a brand uses bespoke music for ads that air on TV or radio but isn’t setup to collect performance royalties, they’re missing out on creating a way to offset the cost of music, while also helping out the composers of the song at the same time.

This can all be managed by setting up a simple 3rd party music publisher that can run all of the administration for the brand and literally just cut a check once every quarter.

Let me know what you think about this in the comments – brands, does your agency have you setup to own your works-for-hire? Songwriters – what’s it like to collect performance royalties if your ad-work isn’t registered at a PRO?

Filed Under: Advertising Music, Brand, Music, music business, music business development, music industry, Music Licensing

Brands Want The Latest Hit, But Are Any Brave Enough Find It?

February 18, 2014 by Andy

Last year the music publisher I worked at got lucky.

We landed the new Daft Punk album.

EVERYONE wanted “Get Lucky.” We had so many requests pouring in for this song, so many brands and agencies went after this thing (or something that sounds like it) you just wouldn’t believe it.

All of them were turned down.

You see here’s the thing that a lot of brands do – they try to piggy back on the next new musical thing. They’ll throw obscene amounts of money at it (or sometimes laughable amounts of money if they don’t have much music licensing experience). But they can’t get it.

By the time the latest hit is a hit, it’s got too much clout. It’s too popular. They can’t afford it.

Why not try to FIND the next new thing?

Every label, every publisher, every indie artist that’s clamoring to get their song somewhere, ANYWHERE, is willing to let you listen.

Why not do the hard, low-risky work of curating the music as a brand project?

Some brands do this (or outsource it at least) – Mt. Dew (Green Label) and Red Bull are two obvious examples – and have seen some pretty cool results.

The problem with transactional music licensing is you often end up not getting what you pay for…what is it you’re paying for anyway?

Like anything, the more real effort you put into something the more positively it will reflect on the brand.

You don’t even have to do it with in-house employees or your agency – you can hire tastemakers to do this on your behalf (ahem, the contact me form on my blog is real easy to fill out by the way).

Let’s not forget to mention the service you’re doing for artists and for music in general. A whole new outlet for music.

What a great thing for everyone.

Filed Under: Advertising Music, Brand, Music, music business, music business development, Music Licensing

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