Important Considerations for Brands and Agencies
Looking To Integrate Music In Campaigns
The right combination of brand messaging and music can lead to a compelling ad that resonates with prospective customers.With the proper packaging, advertising can provide significant value to the artist(s) involved as well.In my experience running a label, the best example of all of the pieces coming together was this Volkswagen commercial featuring the music of Nick Drake:Best Practices for Advertising With Music
I wholeheartedly believe that for musically-driven advertising to resonate with target audiences, brands and agencies MUST begin the brainstorming process with heavy consideration of the integration of music.If you get this wrong, nothing else much matters; the entire campaign will fail.Disharmony here harms the brand, the artist, and most importantly, the customers.The best campaigns address this potential discord by digging deeply into the psychographic makeup of the artists’ constituencies to determine how their fans relate – in a durable and emotional way – to the brand. And they do this from the beginning of the creative process.Brands Must Understand the Complexities Surrounding Music Licensing
Just like brand marketing, the music industry is complex and relationship-driven.Similar to how some in the music world might not fully grasp the systematic RFP process that has become second-nature to those in the agency world, the many intricacies of licensing music can often hide behind a polished final product.For example, it is rare to find a song only has one rightsholder attached to it. That is, typically, a song will have at least two parties who have some ownership claim (and therefore veto power) of a song: (1) the label and (2) the songwriter.Of course, in today’s music era, many songs have samples and multiple writers, and/or guest performers, so the number of potential rightsholders is massive. Often, in order to use the song for a commercial, each of these rightsholders must agree to its usage.In other words, this requires:- Finding everyone with ownership in a song
- Negotiating with each party, and/or convincing all of them to approve a so-called Most Favored Nations (MFN) deal, in which all parties receive the same amount/terms
- Issuing (and getting back) contracts
- Accounting to each rightsholder
You Don’t Need a “Superstar” Artist To Connect With People
As the Nick Drake example above shows, a household name is not necessarily required for a successful campaign. In fact, brands striving for authentic storytelling and the creation of deep/durable emotional connections with potential customers may do better to support emerging artists, rather than pay the large fees required to attract star power.Just because an artist is popular does not mean that their fans’ values will axiomatically align with those of a brand. In fact, our data MAX has accumulated around fans often shows the opposite is true.The musical landscape is comprised of increasingly diverse (and diffuse) talent that’s not necessarily all over Top 40 radio, and the rise of on-demand streaming has allowed brands, agencies and artists more traceable ways to reach these music fans.Advertising With Music: Three Key Takeaways
Everyone wins when the music in an advertisement leads the viewer to explore the brand’s offering AND the artist’s songs.This alchemy happens all too rarely because music is sometimes regarded as an add-on. A core mission of MAX is to increase these positive outcomes – where brands, artists, and fans all benefit – from the premises that:- Music must be integrated based on shared psychography of the brand’s customers and the artist’s fans
- Campaigns must be orchestrated transparently so music-related rightsholders and brands all understand how the music is being used and the related value propositions
- Shared value alignment, NOT simply popularity, is the key to the greatest music/brand integrations