Resource guide

Sync licensing agents: who to know & how to pitch.

A curated directory of reputable sync agents and a step-by-step pitching guide built from 2,000+ real placements.

What does a sync agent do?

A sync licensing agent represents your catalog to music supervisors, ad agencies, film studios, and game publishers. They pitch your tracks for specific scenes, negotiate license fees, and handle the paperwork — so you can focus on making music.

Good agents have direct relationships with supervisors at Netflix, HBO, Disney, Paramount, and major brands. They know what briefs are coming before they hit public listings. That early access is worth the commission they take — typically 20–30% of the gross license fee.

Not every artist needs an agent. But if your catalog is growing and you want consistent, higher-dollar placements, the right agent becomes a force multiplier.

Directory

Reputable sync agents

Research each before submitting. Every agent has a different sound, format, and submission process.

Catch 22 Music

Los Angeles

Trailers, film, major brands

Strong in epic/trailer cues. Known for fast turnaround on tight deadlines.

Cymbal Music

New York

TV, indie film, streamers

Great for hip-hop and indie rock. Works closely with MTV, Hulu, and A24-style projects.

The Orchard / Film & TV

Global

Sync + distribution bundle

If you're already distributed through The Orchard, their sync team can cross-pitch your catalog automatically.

Marmoset Music

Portland

Ads, branded content

Curated roster. Excellent for producers with unique, boutique sounds and full stem packs.

Songtradr (Creative Licensing)

Global

Film, TV, gaming, UGC

Hybrid platform — algorithmic matching + human pitching. Good for volume and data-backed targeting.

Extreme Music

London / Santa Monica

Trailers, sports, promos

High-energy catalog focus. Strong placements with ESPN, NFL, and major trailer houses.

Pitching

How to pitch a sync agent

This is the exact system CEOGreg teaches inside the bootcamp. Follow it and you'll stand out from 90% of cold submissions.

1

Get your catalog ready first

Agents don't want demos — they want fully mixed, mastered, and metadata-tagged tracks. Have clean instrumental versions, stems, and a one-sheet ready before you reach out.

2

Research the agent's roster

Listen to what they already represent. If you sound nothing like their current catalog, you're wasting their time and yours. Match your sound to their strengths.

3

Write a short, specific email

Subject line should be your genre + a placement credential (even a small one). Body: 3 sentences max. Attach a private SoundCloud link or a clean Dropbox folder — not a Google Drive wall.

4

Follow up once — then move on

If you don't hear back in 2–3 weeks, send one polite follow-up. No response after that means it's a no for now. Keep building and re-pitch in 6 months with new material.

5

Be ready for the ask

If they reply, they'll want exclusivity terms, a percentage split, and sometimes a commitment period. Read every contract. If you don't understand master vs. publishing splits, learn before you sign.

Agent vs. direct: when to go which route

Go direct if…

  • You have fewer than 20 release-ready tracks
  • You enjoy the business side and have time to pitch weekly
  • You already have supervisor contacts
  • You want to keep 100% of every license fee

Get an agent if…

  • Your catalog is deep and consistently high quality
  • You want access to bigger-budget briefs
  • You don't have time to pitch and negotiate deals yourself
  • You're ready to give up 20–30% for volume and higher fees
FAQ

Common questions

Quick answers about sync agents, fees, and getting started.

Want the full system?

The bootcamp covers catalog prep, pitching, deal reading, and live feedback from a sync agent with 2,000+ placements.

Atlanta, GA · August 8 · 20 seats only