Music Companies Cut Royalty Payment Times by 50% with Automation

Music companies are using automated payment systems to drastically reduce royalty processing times and improve artist relations.
A dashboard displaying automated royalty payment processing for music companies. A dashboard displaying automated royalty payment processing for music companies.

The global music industry, which generates more than $100 billion in annual revenue, processes billions of royalty streams each day. As listening fragments across multiple channels, with audio streaming accounting for 32%, video for 31%, and radio for 17%, the administrative complexity of paying artists accurately and on time has become a critical operational challenge.

Copyright issues, often stemming from improper accounting or missed payments, are cited as the cause of 55% of music industry lawsuits. For platforms and labels competing to sign and retain talent, the speed and reliability of payouts have emerged as key differentiators.

Speed as a Talent Magnet

Create Music Group, which manages approximately 25,000 artists across four continents, eliminated 36 days of manual financial work each year by automating its onboarding and payout processes. The company positions fast payments as a core recruitment advantage.

“We aim to be one of the fastest to pay in the industry. Some labels only pay quarterly or every six months. But we pay monthly. A primary benefit of joining Create is your YouTube money. We pretty much pay it out three days after we receive it.”

Zach Victor, VP of Finance at Create Music Group, said the company also provides a portal where artists can log in to check payout status and history, reducing friction and building long-term trust.

Automation Shrinks Workloads from Weeks to Minutes

Spitfire Audio, a UK-based virtual instrument sample library company, previously required four to six weeks of manual work per payment run for more than 1,500 global royalty payees. After automating its workflow, the company reduced processing time to 30 minutes, eliminating 10 weeks of manual workload annually.

“It took us four to six weeks of solid work to do all the statements and payments, whereas now, it’s 30 minutes of solid work. We were spending a long time trying to get royalty payments done, and now we’re ahead.”

Shahid Khalid, Head of Finance at Spitfire Audio, said the investment in automation freed the team to focus on strategic work rather than payment runs.

Ninja Tune, an independent UK label with a 35-year history and a global roster, achieved a 50% reduction in payment processing time. The shift allows the label to pay artists a full week earlier than before, while easing pressure on its finance team.

“With Tipalti, our royalty payments not only happen faster, but it has also helped reduce the pressure on our team and may have delayed or removed the need to increase headcount.”

Dawn Dobson, CFO of Ninja Tune, said the efficiency gains have had a direct impact on organisational capacity.

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