Breaking Down A Record Label By Department
Information is
king when trying to get a brand new independent record label off the
ground. The first step towards running your own Independent Record Label has to be understanding what departments are found within
a typical record label. I have put together a "family tree" in order to illustrate who does what, and who reports to who within the record label
structure. This description is based on a major record label structure. The
only difference between your independent record label and that
of a major record label is that you will most likely have one person
responsible for several departments at one time. Your job is to figure
out who to place in what position so that the situation fits within their
capabilities.
The following is a description of each record label department within a record label:
CEO
A
CEO/President/Owner of a record label wears many hats. His or her main
duty is focusing on the overall direction of the record label itself... what
type of artists to sign, methods of music marketing, and basically having the
final say and approval over each departments' day-to-day operations as
reported by the Vice President. A CEO in a major record label is more
responsible for the politics "behind the scene," than say an owner of a
small independent record label. An independent record label CEO might be more
involved with day-to-day operations, banking, music marketing, and networking. (Click Here for Additional Detailed Article on Record Label CEO)
Vice President
The
Vice President of a record label is directly responsible for
implementing the direction as given from the CEO. The
Vice President will hold daily meetings to get updates and plan future
endeavors with record label department heads. In addition, the Vice President is,
most likely, directly responsible for distribution negotiations, media
buys, and generally "making things happen" when a department head is
having difficulties with a resistant outside vendor. (Click Here for Additional Detailed Article on Record Label Vice President)
Accounting
In
some record labels this is actually titled business affairs, or the
Business Department. This is the department within a record label directly responsible for
accounting, banking, taxes, and the handling of all artist royalties.
Accounting reports directly to the CEO.
Legal
This
department is pretty straight forward. Each record label will have a team of
attorneys to handle all of its legal affairs - to include: contract
negotiations with artists, vendors, and all other contractual
obligations of the record label. In many cases, CEO's are attorneys
themselves. However, record labels still have a huge legal department to
handle day-to-day legal obligations of the corporation.
A&R
The
A&R (artists and repertoire) department is often considered the
partying department at a record label. A&R is in charge of finding
talent, setting up a production team to work with the new artist, and
is the label's liaison between the artist and record label. Main duties
include: assisting with song selection, signing a producer to produce
the artist's album, and negotiations with recording studios, video
houses, etc.; that will ultimately record the artists' creativity. As
you can imagine, going to clubs, scouting new talent, chatting it up
with recording studios, superstar producers, and the such, makes this
one of the most sought after jobs in the recording industry.
JR A&R
A
Jr A&R rep is a street savvy person with a keen ability to get into
the coolest parties, hottest clubs, and basically knows the who's who
of the city they reside in. An A&R department might have 100 Jr.
A&R guys stationed around the country, or world, finding the
talent. They report directly to the A&R head and are the folks on
the street making things happen.
Production
This
person is responsible for any audio/video production of the record
label. They are to make sure artists are at studios on time, studios
have the proper files to work with, masters are delivered to A&R,
etc. They report and work directly with the A&R department to
ensure the production aspect of making an artist are handled in a
timely manner.
Artist Development
I have
included this here because it's needed. Major record labels
have basically stopped funding Artist Development - Rather, they are
now searching out artists that already have a total package - so little
investment is needed to get the artist to market. Many Industry
Analysts have made it very clear that this is the wrong direction for
any record label to take. In the past, an artist was developed over a number
of years. And, in most cases, an artist's 2nd or 3rd album would
finally be seen as a success. Then through artist development an
artist's career would ultimately go up and up. Typically, an artist development department would be responsible for turning an everyday
person into their own music marketing machine. Interviewing skills, stage
presence, image, and choreography are only a few of the roles an Artist
Development Department would handle for a record label.
Marketing
Music Marketing
Departments of the past were pretty straight forward. They would handle
all print, broadcast, and in-store marketing duties. There would be
several departments specializing in each of these sections. Today,
however, marketing must take on a whole new approach altogether.
Marketing includes: Street Teams, Online SEO Experts, Social Networking
Staff, and Traditional Broadcasting and Online Broadcasting. The
Marketing Department is also in charge of art. This includes anything
made for the Marketing Department to use as promotional matierial: CD
covers, posters, flats, in-store banners, etc.
Street Teams
The
Street Team Department is directly responsible for the "Word on the
Street." They work cities. They hang posters, pass out fliers, talk
with folks at malls, call radio stations to request songs, get local
clubs to host parties for artists, obtain guest appearance slots on
local radio, and a whole lot more. They ARE the word on the street.
Online
This
department is responsible for an Artist's online image. This is
accomplished through custom music websites, search engine optimizations, banner
ads, site reskinning, and basic music marketing on the web. In today's record
label this is most likely the single most important department after
A&R. An active online department will have many workers and
sub-departments including design, seo, ppc managers, social networking,
and programming.
Art
The Art Department
handles all marketing materials and graphic design for a Record Label to include:
Graphics, Audio Clips, Video Promos, Flats, Fliers, Posters, One
Sheets, etc. This is the department that "Creates the Image." An Art
Department takes direction directly form the Marketing Department Head.
Publicity
A
lot of folks confuse Marketing with Publicity, or think it's the same
machine. It is not. Marketing is basically paid advertising. Whether it
be paying a street team to pass out fliers, or buying an in-store
listening station at a retail record store. Publicity, on the other
hand, is taking advantage of "earned" press. A Publicist's job is to
get you coverage in the media - No matter if it's, radio, print, or
news agencies. In addition, a Publicist is responsible for putting a
positive spin on bad press received and getting the most out of a good
news event being reported. A Publicist's job is to get artists invited
to parties, events, and news worthy situations, to then get media
coverage for that artist being at that party, event or news worthy
location.
Publicity Video
This department
works directly with Publicity. It is this department's job to locate
all video recorded of the artist. I am not talking about music videos.
Rather, I am talking about news or media coverage. This department is
responsible for locating any media that has quality video clips
included, to further exploit through internal publicity measures.
Publicity Radio
As
we have all heard, Radio DJs love to gossip and talk about Artists. The
Publicity Radio Department's main function is to find out what radio is
saying about Artist to further exploit, or curb anything being talked
about.
Sales
The Sales Department is
responsible for just that, Sales of an Artist's offerings. This can
include: duplicated CDs, DVD videos, Mechandise, or Appearances. The sales
department is who brokers deals with manufacturers, distributors, and
vendors. Sales is also the department who takes orders from marketing
to obtain in-store listening stations, light board buys, billboard
buys, etc. The sales Department may have upto 100 employees in a Major
Label Operation.
Sales Distribution
This
Department is responsible for making sure sales outlets get the product
they are to sale. They work one on one with distributors to ensure
Marketing matierials are in store at the time CD arrives, works with
retail to ensure front self support, and basically is the labor force
behind the Sales Department.
Conclusion:
Now,
this is only a list of the major positions and departments in a record label. There are many more and this list can be broken down into
several if not a hundred sub departments within departments. A record
label is as big as it's end of year earnings. Think of it this way...
If
you can do better business with more folks, do it. If you do not have
the management in place to handle running a 100 person operation do not
do it. Management is the #1 killer of a good idea. Can your idea be
implemented in a timely manor? Do you have the man power to ensure
everyone is doing their assigned job? Do you have the money to run so
many departments with so many employees? Most Independent Record Labels run very effectively with only a hand full of people wearing
many, many hats. As your sales increase then finding additional
employees is easy. Managing those employees is the hard part. Hire for
management, not labor. By hiring managers you open yourself up to a
company that can run itself. Let your newly hired managers hire their
own employees, with your approval. This will ensure that your managers
are happy and feel as if they actually have some sort of control of
their future. This will increase your chance of success.
Putting
the right person in the job, feeding their ego, and managing their
efforts will give you more time, more money, and more satisfaction from
your Independent Record Label.
Peace,
Jai
“Love the Music in Yourself, Not Yourself in the Music!”
©2009 Jai Hutcherson. All Rights Reserved.
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