The operating record for music rights workflows.
Music rights operations break when agreements, releases, revenue, and settlement live in disconnected systems. SplitGraf keeps the record continuous as work, money, and questions move through it.
Two products, one operating record.
SplitGraf is one platform exposed as multiple products. Each one solves a specific operational problem. Both share the same underlying record, so the work that starts in one product stays traceable, verifiable, and continuous when it surfaces in the other.
SplitGraf Collaboration Releases
The collaboration workflow runs through WhatsApp, DocuSign, split sheets, and your distributor portal. It works until money shows up and three people remember the deal three different ways. SplitGraf gives you one structured workflow, from invite to locked split to release handoff, so the agreement still holds months later when royalties, questions, or disputes arrive.
Explore Collaboration ReleasesSplitGraf Settlements (Beta)
Quarterly cycles burn through VLOOKUP. CSVs from a dozen platforms get matched against catalog spreadsheets that haven't been audited in years. SplitGraf ingests revenue reports, matches every row deterministically, applies your locked splits, and produces statements that are traceable back to the agreements underneath them.
Explore SettlementsWhy this matters now.
Three forces are converging on music rights operations. They share one root cause: the absence of an operating record that connects agreement, release, revenue, and settlement into one continuous chain.
Derivatives have become a meaningful share of revenue.
Remix releases, official covers, sample-based productions, TikTok-driven UGC. Derivative work now generates real money. The systems built for static recordings weren't designed for it.
Catalog has become a financial instrument.
Institutional capital requires auditable income streams. You cannot securitise what you cannot verify.
Reconciliation pressure compounds quarterly.
Distributors send more CSVs, in more formats, across more platforms. Royalty administrators and finance teams are absorbing this with spreadsheets that fail slowly, not catastrophically.
How SplitGraf works.
Every operational event in SplitGraf produces a structured record. The records stay connected across products, cycles, and workflows. The chain holds across the months between agreement and revenue.
Agreement record.
When a collaboration is created, a deal closed, or a split locked, the agreement is captured as a versioned snapshot. New versions don't overwrite old ones, they layer on top, preserving history.
Release record.
When a release is prepared, the operating record from agreement through derivative approval through metadata follows it into the handoff. Your distributor receives a release-ready package, not a fragmented set of documents.
Revenue record.
When a revenue report arrives, every row is matched against canonical assets and connected to the split snapshot active at the time of earning. Historical accuracy is preserved.
Settlement record.
When statements are generated, the chain from raw CSV through asset match through applied split through statement line is preserved as a record that can be audited later, defended against questions, and exported to external systems.
Records that hold.
Every record in SplitGraf is append-only. Versions are preserved. Nothing gets silently overwritten. The history of what was agreed, what was released, what was earned, and what was paid is continuous and traceable.
See how trust worksWhen a split changes, the previous version stays.
When a derivative is approved, the agreement history travels with it.
When revenue is matched, ambiguous rows route to review rather than getting silently guessed at.
When a statement is generated, the chain back to the source CSV and source agreement is part of the record.
Built for the operations carrying real weight.
SplitGraf is designed for teams running music rights as core operational work. We do not build for individual artists. The price tolerance, support model, and product depth are wrong for that segment.
Indie labels and managers
Collaboration-heavy release workflows: remix programs, feature-driven projects, and multi-collaborator productions where every release involves agreements with multiple people.
Royalty administration firms
Statement processing across multiple label and publisher clients, where format variation, matching scale, and defensible audit trails are the daily challenge.
Mid-market and major-adjacent publishers
Distributor reports, sub-publisher statements, and platform-direct revenue across multi-territory catalogs.
Catalog funds and rights holders
Income from acquired portfolios where the underlying agreements are sometimes inherited, rarely clean, and always being questioned.
Start where the record currently breaks.
Most music rights operations run on records that were never designed for the volume, complexity, or value they now carry. The workflow holds until value shows up, then questions reveal the record didn't survive the months between agreement and revenue.
SplitGraf is expanding into catalog integrity, AI provenance, and inter-organisational verification infrastructure.