By Payusnomind · Apr 23, 2026
Free
Let's talk about Record Deals 2.0 and Record Companies 2.0.
Record companies assumed a lot of risk. They invested in artists and music with no proof of profit. Artists got signed off of viral YouTube videos and TikTok trends, not cash flow. To justify the risk, artists got 80/20 deals in the record company’s favor. Advances with recoupment rates, which were basically debt. 360 deals that ensured the record company a piece of the entire pie.
In the new model, businesses assume almost no risk. They invest in songs, not artists. And only songs with a proven track record of revenue. They’re purchasing equity stakes and buying catalogs outright, so there’s no debt. Splits are based on the percentage of royalties you choose to sell, which also determines the amount you’re offered.
A catalog earning $1,000 per month might be offered $120,000 or $240,000 for 100% ownership, or $60,000 to $120,000 for a 50% ownership stake - depending on the multiple. The artist decides how much or how little to sell based on how much money they want, or the level of control they’d like to maintain.
Traditional record companies won’t make money if they fail to increase the value of your music. Your music may have had no monetary value when they bought it. If they did nothing, they not only got nothing, but they also lost money.
New record companies have far better risk management. Their offers factor in things like the rate of decline in streaming performance over time. For them to lose money would mean their projections were wrong or a catalog deviated far from its trend. All unlikely occurrences, but not impossible. If they give you a 10-year payout, they’re in profit after 11 years, and they own it for at least 35. But their goal isn’t to wait 11 years or more to turn a profit. They have systems that maximize the value of the catalogs they buy into or acquire.
New record companies have infrastructure designed to optimize performance in the streaming era.
Streaming changed the business of music. It made it systematic and less of a gamble. You can't guarantee a record will sell. But you can guarantee it will get streams. If I have a playlist that generates half a million streams a week, every song on the list could get up to half a million streams a week. Some people might skip a few tracks or jump songs in the list, but there’s going to be data that informs me of the minimum. Maybe that’s 50,000 - 100,000 streams. Bottom line, I can guarantee a degree of significant streaming activity. It's like being a record company that owns a popular radio station. So, you have a minimum. But there's no maximum.
You know, at a minimum, you could get a song 50,000 streams a week. From there, that song could get added to editorial, go viral, land in a TV show or film, and 50,000 streams could turn into 5 million.
Traditional record companies have the same system, but they’re in the business of making stars, not just maximizing catalogs. Creating stardom is unpredictable and far less reliable. At the same time, it takes a much larger investment and a greater level of risk. Because record companies invest in creating stardom, they seek to benefit from the creation of said stardom. That’s what drives 360 deals that lead to revenue sharing across the board: touring, merchandising, sponsorships, etc.
360 deals are incompatible with the new record companies. Not only are they not interested in revenue from touring or merchandising, but they often don’t care about any revenue driven from anything outside of their system. Vinyl, CD, Cassette, direct digital downloads on Bandcamp - all yours to keep. It would cost them more to track and police those royalties than they would be worth.
It’s not just a new type of record deal. It’s a shift in how music is valued.
From potential… to performance.
From artists… to assets.
From bets… to models.
And the question isn’t whether one is better than the other. It’s this:
Do you want to bet on what your music could become… Or get paid based on what it already is?
Because that’s the trade.
You’re not just selling royalties. You’re selling future upside in exchange for present certainty.
If you’re considering one of these deals, don’t guess. Run the numbers.
→ Use the Catalog Valuation tool to estimate what your music is actually worth
→ Compare that against real-world offers
→ Model what happens if your catalog grows, stays flat, or declines
Then ask yourself:
If you want to understand what you’re actually giving up:
→ Read: Selling the Rights to Your Music: What You’re Actually Giving Up
If you want to see how these companies operate:
→ Explore our breakdowns of the companies leading this model
If you want to find alternatives:
→ Use the Funding Finder to compare catalog sales vs advances, loans, and other funding options