MidnightRabbit wrote: ↑Wed Feb 23, 2022 10:29 am
I noticed that just a few briefs let us know how much are they paying, most of them just talk about percentages. So we can not have the data to make a deep analysis, of our investment (TIME, MONEY) .
I'll jump in on the instrumental cue side of it , Casey can tell you more about songs.
So generally the way it works is you give the Library the music Gratis ( i.e. for free ) and in return they take it into their catalogue to offer to their clients. if you're lucky it winds up on TV at some later point in time which might be a few months or a few years down the line or never.
Then somewhere between 6-24 months after it's been on TV you'll get some performance royalties via your PRO based on a very complex formula that nobody knows except for the PRO's but it involves the amount of airtime, the network , time of day etc. My range of earnings from a single cue is from a few pence up to about £450 ( which took a couple of years to trickle in )
If you're very lucky there are times when you might get a one off payment for someone to use your cue in say an advert or a video game or even a movie. This is called a Sync Fee but this depends on the library and their clients, as a lot of libraries charge a blanket fees so their clients can use the music on an all you can eat buffet type deal and there are no sync fees to be had, only the backend royalties.
If you need money 'now' my advice would be go find something else that pays by the hour as in the short term it's a lot of work for not much return. Some times in the medium to longer term it's a lot of work for not much return

I have a day job so music is my hobby / side hustle whatever you want to call it.
I estimate I've put around 6 - 7k hours into production music and I've recently made my 500th track. I haven't made much money yet, in fact the money I have earned has been more than swallowed up by my costs but I have written an update each year for the past few years laying out my Sync Music journey.
six-year-update-t148673.html
There are folks from Taxi that have done way better , way faster than me but there are also a lot more that can't produce the goods and don't really get anywhere. So it depends how good you are to start with and how fast you can learn , plus a little luck along the way as to which LIbraries you end up in.
All in all the whole thing is highly variable, and slow moving. You have to give it 2-3 yrs at least before you can start seeing any traction or income and when it does come it's a trickle at first.