18 October 2011

Royality Payments

Royalty Payments

Royalty payments are where they are progressed with a use of paying a payment with a third party. A payment is a royalty interest that is used in the music industry and the oil industry to ownership of the production in further details. In the conventional progress context the royalty payment is paid to the composer and record the labels for public performers so for e.g. comedian – stand up comedy, live gigs, public TV or even recording an album in the studio to record their labels for their album. Music needs to be obtaining by the performing rights license that needs to be obtained by the music societies. A licence agreement defines the word of copy right, without restricting the subject to limitation. Licence agreement can be regulated to the resources of the owner which is the government.


 http://www.writersservices.com/res/ri_adv_royalties.htm

It is better to have a royalty payment if it is an ongoing benefit for a book sale, it can be low the payment but it’s it is beneficial to have for ongoing sale for a book being published to the next step. When writing a book the publisher may come up to you, whether changing the state of the context of writing a book, that is has to be put into. Then you will have decided on whether to take the commission on a daily basis or not. An advance payment is low advanced approach on the royalty approach payments which are not refundable. It highly stated that the author fulfils there part of the contract. A payment to trade mark is a royalty thing that has it supervisory task with the franchise agreement with the trade mark. So sales for good which means being paid (royalty payments.)It has to be paid so it’s required to be paid by the royalty payments. To respect the franchise business with the element of the trademark. Book publishing can get a high standard advance of royalty payments.  An author’s royalty state is dictated by the publisher who writes the books to sell the book to the sales.   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royalties

Royality Payments examples:

Music Payments
Performance rights :
The royality payments are paid out by one of the performance rights so for e.g BMI ,ASCAP,
They have to register their songs to one of these perfromance rights, then it can be located by all the users . It then be a collection  of the pros music . The PRO's deduct money for their operating expenses and the rest goes to the songwriters and publishers. So how is royality payments divided ??? Whoever posts up work on one one of these sites above they get a share of the Writes and publisher shares that add up to100% . The publishers share can't me more than 100%. If theres agreement between the two writes and publishers , The person still gets a share of publishes but that won't be more than 200%. PRS music is £30 pay amount of an average royality payment . This came into affect in october 2006 from £1 - up to £30 . They minimise the cost and traced that  add up to a maxium of you as the person reciving maxuimum about of money .

http://www.prsformusic.com/creators/memberresources/PRSforMusicroyalties/minimumpayments/Pages/prsminimumpayments.aspx


Book royality payment

If a person so a writer writes a story about something and they publish it, If it gets check . You can get a commission from it.Bookstores get 50% 60% of the price covered and printed in the bookstore. It does depend on whethar your book is hard copy or soft back . A hard copy of the book to the author will get 10% . So the ffirst 5000 books to get sold. If you have a book selling for like £25 you will get 2 pound  fiffty of the book for the first 15000 books sold .Royality paymenst for a paper back is 10% of the cover price .  For 5.95 you would get 60  per book sold for your book . If your book reached popularity and solod loads of books like around 100.000 you would get £60.000.The rate is so much higer in  paper back is because they are mass market so they will sell more compared to hard copy books . Publishers sell books to booksellers at a discount off the published price, which can vary from 35% for small independent bookshops to 60%, 70% or even higher, for the chains, the supermarkets and online booksellers, which buy in bulk. So with a typical 50% discount on a book retailing through the bookshop chains at £20 or $20, the publisher would get £10 or $10 from the bookseller to cover all their costs, including the author’s royalties, their overheads and distribution, and the production cost of the book. Their margins really are quite tight.
http://www.schoolforchampions.com/writing/book_royalties.htm

http://www.writersservices.com/res/ri_adv_royalties.htm

Mechanical Royality payments!!

Are bascially the mechanical royality payment ... Paid to songwriters to who publish there work, that have been recoreded is then statuarotary into the right of  a songwriter mechanical royality payment .When the songwriter is completely finished into an record . The company putting out a record with that songwriter gets a mechanical payment The person responsible for the mechanial royalities is the person who makes the copy of the song. When a record label is presses an abulm they own a mechanical royality to the song writer . First, there is the calculation of mechanical royalties for writers and publishers. These royalties are paid by the record company to the publisher. The publisher then pays the writer a share of the royalty (typically split 50/50). So the peole recording these songs so the artist royalties (and contracts) are extremely complex and a hotbed of debate in the music world. From the outside, the calculation appears fairly simple. Artists are paid royalties usually somewhere between 8% and 25% of the suggested retail price of the recording. Exactly where it falls depends on the clout of the artist (a brand new artist might receive less than a well-known artist). From this percentage, a 25% deduction for packaging is taken out (even though packaging rarely costs 25% of the total price of the CD or cassette).

http://musicians.about.com/od/musiciansfaq/f/paymechanicals.htm


http://entertainment.howstuffworks.com/music-royalties4.htm

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