French Collective Management Organizations for Musicians: Who Does What?

Temps de lecture/Reading time : 2 minutes

When starting out in music, most artists focus on composing, performing, and recording—rarely on rights management. Yet without proper handling, it’s hard to earn income from your work. That’s where collective management organizations come in, playing a crucial role in music remuneration in France.

In this article, we’ll break down the key organizations every French musician, songwriter, performer, and producer should know.

Why do collective management organizations exist?

In theory, an artist could negotiate directly with every radio station, concert venue, or streaming platform to collect royalties. In practice, this is impossible: music circulates everywhere, all the time, and often on a large scale.

Collective management organizations handle this task. Their role is to:

  • license the use of works (contracts, permissions);
  • collect royalties from users (radio, TV, streaming services, concert organizers, etc.);
  • distribute income to rights holders (songwriters, performers, producers).

The main french music collective management organizations

1. For songwriters, composers, and publishers

SACEM (Société des Auteurs, Compositeurs et Éditeurs de Musique)
The most well-known CMO. It collects royalties whenever a work is publicly performed (concerts, festivals, bars, radio, TV, clubs, shops, streaming platforms, etc.).

  • Who can join? Songwriters, composers, publishers.
  • What you earn: authors’ royalties, distributed based on declared performances.

2. For performers (neighboring rights)

ADAMI
Represents featured performers: lead singers, soloists, front-line musicians, actors lending their voices.

SPEDIDAM
Represents non-featured performers: backing vocalists, orchestra musicians, accompanists, secondary actors.

Example: A track is played on the radio. The songwriter earns through SACEM, while the singers and musicians also receive royalties via ADAMI and SPEDIDAM.

3. For music producers (neighboring rights)

SCPP (Société Civile des Producteurs Phonographiques)
Mostly represents major labels (Universal, Sony, Warner) as well as some independents.

SPPF (Société des Producteurs de Phonogrammes)
Represents independent record labels.

Both organizations collect royalties due to producers when music is broadcast (radio, TV, public venues, streaming platforms).

How does it work in practice?

Let’s take a simple example: a song played on the radio.

  1. The songwriter/composer is paid by SACEM.
  2. The performers (singer, musicians) are paid via ADAMI or SPEDIDAM.
  3. The record producer is paid via SCPP or SPPF.

Each stakeholder in the music chain receives a share of the value created by the broadcast.

Current challenges

  • Streaming & transparency: revenue distribution on Spotify or Deezer is under debate. Some call for a “user-centric” model (each subscriber directly pays the artists they listen to) instead of the global “pro-rata” model.
  • Private copying levy: a significant share of income still comes from levies on blank media (CDs, USB drives, smartphones).
  • International collection: thanks to reciprocal agreements, French artists also receive royalties abroad.
  • Technology & AI: how to protect creators against AI-generated works or automated remixes?

Why is it essential for musicians?

Joining these collective management organizations allows musicians to:

  • secure their rights and earn regular royalties, even from uses they may not be aware of;
  • benefit from support schemes (grants, funding programs for creation and touring);
  • take part in collective defense of artists’ interests against broadcasters and platforms.

Of course, some criticize administrative delays or lack of transparency. But without them, much of the music industry’s revenue would never reach creators.

Conclusion

In France, musicians mainly rely on five key organizations:

  • SACEM for songwriters and composers,
  • ADAMI and SPEDIDAM for performers,
  • SCPP and SPPF for producers.

Each plays a specific role in the music value chain. Understanding them is the first step toward a better-protected and fairly-paid career.

© Xavier Boscher - All Rights Reserved