How to collect all your music revenue sources

Do you know all the ways your music can generate income?

Royalties. Earnings. Income. Revenue. Scratch. Bones. Loot. Notes. Moolah. Dough.

There are a lot of words for money.

And there are also a lot of ways for musicians to get paid.

Independent artists now have access to more revenue-generating opportunities than ever before.

That doesn’t mean it’s EASY to earn money as a musician, but it does mean you have more options to explore, more ways of aligning your talents with an income stream, and more ways of putting your recordings, songs, performances, and merch to work.

CD Baby makes this easy, helping you monetize your music across multiple channels.

Here are the most common sources of music revenue today.

1. Streaming revenue from your sound recordings

What are streaming royalties?

This is money you’re owed whenever your recordings — whether you’re the label, the artist, or both — are streamed on platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, or Deezer. This royalty is sometimes called the “streaming license fee.”

How to collect streaming revenue?

With CD Baby as your distributor, we’ll deliver your music to all the important digital platforms, collect the money you’re owed, and add it to your account with detailed reports on your streaming activity across all platforms.

2. Download revenue

What is download revenue?

If you’re an artist or a label, you’re probably owed money whenever you sell a download (on iTunes, Amazon, etc).

[If you wrote/composed the music, you’re also owed publishing royalties, but we’ll get into that more in depth later.]

For now, we’re talking about the royalty you’re owed for the digital sale of a sound recording.

How to collect sound recording royalties for downloads?

This one is simple — CD Baby collects this money from download stores such as iTunes and Amazon and we pay it to you. We also provide a full accounting of all download activity, plus daily trending reports.

Kinto Sol testimonial about music earnings

3. Social video monetization

What is Social Video Monetization?

You’re owed money for the usage of your music in video content that appears on popular platforms like YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Triller, and more. Those platforms take a “sonic fingerprint” of your recording, and any time your music appears anywhere in their ecosystem, it’s monetized on your behalf.

How to collect social video revenue?

CD Baby’s social video monetization service is INCLUDED at no extra cost with all CD Baby distribution, though it’s a separate opt-in so be sure to check that box! We work with the social video platforms to deliver your songs so they’ll be properly ID’d — as well as available for use in music catalogs like the one in Instagram Stories and Instagram Reels; then claims are placed on any video that uses your music. Related revenue is collected by CD Baby and paid to you!

4. YouTube Partner Program revenue

What is the YouTube Partner Program?

YouTube gives eligible channels a way to earn ad revenue on their videos via the Partner Program.

How to collect YPP revenue?

First, do you qualify for the YouTube Partner Program? If you meet those channel requirements, sweet! YouTube will pay ya.

Note: The Partner Program is different from CD Baby’s YouTube monetization service. Even if you don’t qualify for the Partner Program directly, CD Baby will still monetize your music wherever possible through Content ID.

5. Physical CD and vinyl sales

What are “physical” music sales?

Wow. Hopefully we’re not so far into the streaming age that we forgot about physical music formats!

This would be money earned by selling:

  • CD
  • vinyl
  • cassette
  • USB flash drive
  • and more

How to collect sales revenue from physical media?

  • At shows: If you’re selling discs at shows, you can put the cash in your pocket or run cards on a system such as the Square Reader or PayPal’s Chip & Swipe Reader. Ecommerce solutions such as Shopify also have tools that help you sell product, manage inventory, and collect customer data at live shows. Shopify even integrates with Facebook and Instagram for an easy way to sell merch on social.
  • From record stores and Amazon: If you’re using CD Baby as a physical distributor to get your CDs and vinyl into thousands of record stores and websites around the world, you set your wholesale price and CD Baby will pay you whenever there’s a sale.
  • For your own ecommerce efforts: Lastly, if you’re doing your own order fulfillment for physical sales (meaning you’re going to run to the post office whenever you sell something), you can use services like Bandzoogle, Bandcamp, or Shopify to create an online store, and payments would be processed via something like PayPal or Stripe, then deposited to you via ACH.

6. Mechanical royalties

What are mechanical royalties?

Mechanical royalties are a kind of publishing royalty (money owed to publishers and songwriters for the usage of a composition, as opposed to a particular recording).

If you’re a songwriter, composer, or producer who creates original music, you’re owed a mechanical royalty for the “reproduction” of your composition. In the physical world, this meant mechanical reproduction in the form of CDs or vinyl. In the digital world, both downloads and streams are considered virtual mechanical reproductions. You’re owed money for all of it!

How to collect mechanical royalties?

First, it should be stated that collecting mechanical royalties on your own can be VERY difficult. It requires a lot of paperwork, striking up relationships with royalty collection societies around the world, and potentially even managing communications in dozens of languages. Possible, but why spend so much energy on something that already has an easy solution? You keep making music; let CD Baby Pro Publishing handle the rest.

Even if you are affiliated with a mechanical collection society, there are benefits to working with CD Baby Pro Publishing — which offers global, comprehensive, and often speedier publishing administration.

7. Performance royalties

What are performance royalties?

Performance royalties are another form of publishing royalty, owed to publishers and songwriters when their compositions are played on the radio, performed in public, and more.

How to collect performance royalties?

With CD Baby Pro Publishing, we’ll work in conjunction with Performing Rights Organizations around the world (including ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, SOCAN, PRS, and many more) to make sure you’re earning ALL your performance royalties.

Just don’t forget to file your set lists when you perform live, because you’re owed songwriter royalties for those shows too!

8. Non-interactive streaming royalties (a form of Neighboring Rights)

What are non-interactive royalties?

In the USA, these are royalties generated from non-interactive streaming on internet and satellite radio services. Non-interactive streams are passive plays that happen when a user is NOT choosing exactly what they want to hear — like on Pandora Radio. Unlike publishing royalties, which are owed to publishers and songwriters for the usage of a composition, these royalties are paid for the usage of a sound recording. They’re owed to the featured artist(s), the session players, and the label that helped create the recording.

Internationally, these royalties for the reproduction of a sound recording are more broad, including not just non-interactive streaming, but also TV and terrestrial radio royalties. In the USA, radio play over the airwaves only generates money for songwriters and publishers, NOT artists and labels.

How to collect non-interactive streaming royalties?

  • The label portion: With CD Baby as your distributor, we’ll help you collect the label portion of these royalties for non-interactive streams on services like Pandora.
  • The featured artist portion: You should register directly with SoundExchange, and they will pay you the artist share of these royalties.
  • The session-player portion: If you played on a certain track that sees non-interactive streaming activity, you’re owed something too, and you can collect by affiliating with an organization such as the American Federation of Musicians (AFM), the Screen Actors Guild, or the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA).

9. Fees for session, production, arranging, or remixing work

What are session fees?

As a musician, you probably do OTHER work outside of your own music-making. You play on a friend’s record. You help arrange or produce a track for someone in your scene. You remix a song by an artist halfway around the world. Sometimes you’ll work for free or as a favor for a friend, and sometimes — most times — you should get paid for these efforts.

How to collect music session fees?

This area is a little more nebulous, as terms are usually negotiable. For instance, should a producer get songwriting credit or just get points?

One thing is certain: Get your agreement in writing before you collaborate. Determine if this is a work-for-hire situation where you’re contributing your talents for an upfront fee ONLY, or if you deserve some ownership stake or ongoing royalty split.

10. Live performance income

What is live revenue?

The money you make from playing live! Could be the door charge. Could be ticket sales. Could be a guarantee. Minus house expenses, “catering” (cheap beer and chips), and “promotion” (your name in tiny font at the bottom of a monthly calendar in the local rag). ; )

How to collect concert money?

With live revenue, there’s no one answer. You could get paid by the talent buyer before the gig, by the bartender or bouncer at the end of the night, by a promoter stuffing a bloody envelope with crumpled bills weeks afterwards, or with an instant transfer of funds from a ticketing platform.

However the money is due, good luck!

And remember to file your setlists with your Performing Rights Organization if you’re playing original material, as that opens up additional royalties beyond what the venue or promoter initially pays you.

11. Sync licensing revenue

What is music sync revenue?

Synchronization” is the act of pairing audio with moving images. It’s the act of placing music in film, TV, commercials, video games, corporate presentations, etc.

Whenever a song is used in this manner, the songwriter(s), publisher(s), and label must all be paid! Not only that, those rights holders get to set the terms for the sync usage, set the monetary amount of the license, and always have the ability to say “No, go to hell.”

How to collect sync licensing fees?

You can handle your own sync licensing, negotiating with music supervisors yourself, or you can use a sync licensing service such as CD Baby — which is included at NO EXTRA COST with all our distribution. We’ve gotten big placements for artists on HBO, Showtime, NBC, FX, MTV, and many more.

Important: CD Baby’s sync licensing service is NON-exclusive, meaning you’re free to use other sync agencies as well.

Just remember, 50% of the sync fee is owed to the label and the other 50% goes to the publisher(s)/songwriter(s). Hopefully you’re all three! If so, you’ll also be set up to collect performance royalties for things like ongoing TV usages, thanks to CD Baby Pro Publishing and your Performing Rights Organization.

12. Merch sales

What are merch sales?

Sales. Of merch.

This is when you make money by selling OTHER products besides your recorded music: posters, t-shirts, hats, mugs, sheet music,…

How to collect merch revenue?

Similar to the CD and vinyl sales mentioned above, you might have an online store you’ve set up yourself, employed an existing ecommerce solution like Shopify, or you just sell these things at gigs. If you’re putting dollars right in your pocket, be sure to keep track of the payments, monitor your inventory, and be ready to stock up again when supply gets low.


Be prepared to collect ALL the music revenue you’re owed.

As you can see, there are lots of ways to put your music to work these days. You can’t always predict when a song will hit, or how it’ll make you money. So you want to set yourself up correctly from the start.

With CD Baby you’ll capture revenue in almost all the places your music sees traction:

  • Streaming platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, and more
  • Download platforms like iTunes and Amazon
  • Physical distribution
  • YouTube
  • Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Triller
  • TV shows, commercials, films, and video games
  • Radio play
  • And more

FULLY MONETIZE YOUR MUSIC

The post How to collect all your music revenue sources appeared first on DIY Musician.

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