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Unless you have entered into a publishing agreement, thereby assigning your publishing rights
to someone else (i.e. a publishing company), you own the publishing rights and the
corresponding publishing income, to any song you have written or co-written. When you write a
song by yourself, you own 100% of the writer's share as well as 100% of the corresponding
publisher's share of any income that song may generate. If you have one collaborator, you each
own 50% of the writer's share and 50% of the publisher's share. Therefore, if you have written
a song and haven't published it, you are a song publisher. Maintaining your publishing rights
has two big advantages: You earn double the money and you have leverage in the event your song
is recorded. Once you have a song to represent (either one of your own compositions or another
writer's song whose publishing rights have been assigned to you), it's easy to become a
publisher. All you need to do is:
Choose a name for your company
Decide which Performing Rights Organization to join
"Clear" the name you've selected by checking with your PRO
Print up some letterheads on your computer
But owning the publishing rights and successfully exploiting the song are two very different
things. Before you decide to become your own publisher, you need to honestly assess whether
you have the necessary time, personality and resources to properly exploit your song. If your
time is limited due to the responsibilities of working as "day job", then the work you do as
your own publisher is taking valuable time away from your songwriting. To successfully publish
your own songs, on an ongoing basis, you need to:
Investigate who is looking for songs
Develop business relationships
Make tape copies
Type cover letters, J-cards and labels
Mail or deliver your packages
Follow up those pitches with phone calls
Handle administrative functions (applying for copyright registration, registering your songs with your Performing Rights Organization, keeping track of royalties, etc.)
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