“Your song is intellectual property the moment you create it. But getting PAID for it requires understanding a system of rights, royalties, and organizations that nobody teaches in music school.”
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
Music publishing is one of the most complex corners of the creative business world. Multiple types of royalties, multiple organizations that collect them, and a system that was designed before the internet existed and has been awkwardly retrofitted ever since.
Types of Music Royalties
| Royalty Type | What It Pays For | Who Collects It |
| Performance Royalties | When your song is played publicly (radio, live, streaming). | PROs: BMI, ASCAP, SESAC. |
| Mechanical Royalties | When your song is reproduced (CDs, vinyl, downloads, streams). | Harry Fox Agency or distributor. |
| Sync Royalties | When your song is used in TV, film, ads, or video games. | Negotiated per deal. No standard rate. |
| Print Royalties | When your sheet music is sold. | Publisher, if applicable. |
| Digital Performance | Streaming-specific royalties. | SoundExchange (for non-interactive streams). |
Protecting Your Music
- Register with a PRO. BMI, ASCAP, or SESAC. This is how you get paid for public performances.
- Copyright your songs. Register with the Copyright Office. It’s your legal protection.
- Understand co-writing splits. If you co-write, agree on ownership percentages BEFORE the song is released.
- Consider a publishing deal. A music publisher pitches your songs for sync placements, covers, and licensing. They take a percentage.
- Keep detailed records. Every song, every collaborator, every registration. Organization is protection.
Your Move, Creative
If you’re a songwriter who hasn’t registered with a PRO, do it today. It’s free for BMI and affordable for ASCAP. This is the first step to getting paid for your creative work.
Stop letting your stories stay stuck.