Streaming pay-outs, sync money, and the math of catalogue royalties. It's a phrase we've used internally for the better part of a year, and one we're now putting in front of the people we work with — artists, channels, partners.
The premise
Most of the rap label model assumes the label and the artist are joined at the hip — a long contract, a deep advance, and a calendar of obligations on both sides. That structure produces a lot of pressure for relatively few wins. We don't think it scales for the kind of records we like.
We sign individual records instead. A single. A mixtape. An album. The artist commits to the project, we commit to the project, the contract ends when the project's released and recouped. They're free to sign elsewhere on the next thing — and often do.
The numbers
The catalogue is twelve records deep at time of writing. Eight of those are growing month-over-month without active marketing spend. The biggest record on the label, ZINO's Lalala, has crossed 9.84M streams and is still climbing.
The catalogue compounds. The artist roster doesn't.
That's the operational logic. The catalogue is an asset that grows quietly. The roster is a vanity number that depreciates.
What changes
For artists: a faster, cleaner deal. They retain career flexibility. The release moves quickly because there's no negotiation about what comes next.
For us: every project gets full attention because we're not splitting energy across a 30-person roster. Every record we sign is one we believe should exist on its own merits.