Methodology

How we keep this accurate

Last reviewed: 4 June 2026

Learn the Music Industry is built for people who have to trust the numbers: accountants new to music clients, managers, lawyers, analysts, and the artists they work with. Every money lesson is grounded in the named bodies that govern the topic, not anonymous claims or unverifiable assertions.

Every money lesson is grounded in a named authority

Each lesson cites the actual governing bodies a professional would themselves consult: the organisations that collect, distribute, and regulate the topic, not anonymous claims. Depending on the lesson, that means:

These sources are derived from the lesson's place in our knowledge graph, so they cannot drift out of sync with the content. They appear in the Facts & sourcespanel of every episode, under “Authoritative sources”.

Verified vs Illustrative: we never blur the line

Money in music is variable, so we are explicit about what a number is. Every figure in a lesson lives in a structured facts table and carries one of two labels:

We would rather mark a number Illustrative than overstate its precision. Where reality is a range, we say so.

Education, not advice

Everything on Learn the Music Industry is for educational purposes only. Nothing here is legal, financial, tax, or accounting advice, and nothing should be relied upon as such.

We teach how the systems work, not what you personally should do with your money, contracts or catalogue. For a decision specific to your situation, consult the relevant body or a qualified professional.


Spotted something out of date? Accuracy beats coverage every time. Tell us and we will fix it.