Showing posts with label audit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audit. Show all posts

Sunday, November 30, 2014

The Royalty Audit: A Legal & Financial Concern

A “royalty audit” is more accurately described as a contract compliance examination, or a "contract audit." Thus, in four of five cases, the call to do a contract audit is made by a client's attorney, not its finance team.

Even in the infrequent cases when the call comes from a non-attorney, we like to involve an attorney if the client is willing to pay for it because we usually need a tolling agreement and our contract audits basically seek to quantify amounts due in connection with legal issues, so it helps to have an attorney available to consult as matters arise and in order to facilitate a settlement agreement or, rarely, file a legal complaint. Accordingly, our royalty and other contract audit work is actually expert consulting work that is a subset of our “forensic accounting” practice, all of which is for a legal purpose.

On the other hand, some attorneys see us as pure bean counters and if a client’s motivation for auditing a business partner is purely financial and it isn’t interested in paying us or an attorney to identify all breaches of the contract, just the accounting provisions, our work focuses as much as possible solely on the financial aspects of their contract.

Even in this case, a contract audit is unlike a financial audit that audits compliance with GAAP (aka an “assurance audit”), which Green Hasson Janks also performs.

One fundamental difference between an “assurance audit” and the contract audits we do: the client.  For example, if we perform a financial audit of a game publisher, the game publisher is our client. If we perform a contract audit of a game publisher, our client is typically a developer or other creator or licensor, not the game publisher, and the publisher is a counterparty to whom we are adverse.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Best of Last Week



@jimmybuffett does ask terrestrial stations to pay royalties; he is part if the @musicFIRST coalition.

9 Spotify tools for hardcore music fans


Why Apple has a good shot at killing the freemium streaming music model @jillkrasny via @Inc



Cedar Boschan at the Beverly Hills Bar Association - DVD



Need MCLE credit? Check my panel: "Royalty Income Meets Marital Dissolution Dividing, Managing and Accounting"

Molly Neuman: From Riot Grrrl Founder to Indie Label Advocate - Digital Music News


Lady Gaga's Parsippany #producer loses $7.3M suit to #songwriter




Taylor Swift's Extreme Measures to Keep "1989" From Leaking via @YouTube


Study from Pandora Touts the 'Pandora Effect' on Music Sales | Billboard #promotionaleffect


Don Henley: Record Companies 'Not Going to Roll Over' on Copyright Issue | Rolling Stone



 Duke Ellington's grandson failed to show EMI broke a 50-year-old contract by diluting his share of the legendary composer's royalties, New York's highest court ruled.

RT @musicregistry: The Million Dollar Record Label Theft, & How It Came Crashing Down


Fortune: Pandora's plans for growth


An #iTunes #contract


 YouTube Stars More Popular than Mainstream Celebs per Variety

SiriusXM Slammed Yet Again As New York Judge Rules in Turtles Lawsuit - Hollywood Reporter



# # #

For more music news, follow me @Auditrix.  For interactive games and other IP royalty, business and litigation news, you should follow me @RoyaltyExpert.

Friday, October 10, 2014

Why You Need a Better YouTube Strategy


I was recently honored to speak with an elite group of L.A.'s best business managers about how YouTube drives a recording artist's recoupment of video accounts and earnings.

According to a recent Viacom study, 91% of 13-40 year olds "listen to the song/watch the video on YouTube prior to purchasing."

Yet, YouTube cannibalizes record sales and it and Vevo - through which UMG and SONY take an extra cut - pay controversially low royalty rates.

Thus, whether independent or major, your clients are best served by a very thoughtful YouTube business strategy.

Here are four points I consider when helping business managers develop a YouTube financial plan for music clients:

Are you a business manager, attorney, personal manager or advisor?

Call me today at 
424.248.8866 to influence these and other key factors of your clients' financial success.


Wednesday, August 25, 2010

A Well Kept Secret of Powerful Attorneys







Attention attorneys:

Are you regarded as one of the most powerful attorneys in your field? For example, did the Hollywood Reporter feature you in its 2010 Power Lawyers list?

If you answered “no,” consider a well-kept-secret from many of the Hollywood Reporter’s 2010 Power Lawyers:


What do so many powerful attorneys have in common? They know that:
1. It isn’t enough to know everything about intellectual property law, or the be a suave litigator
2. To be a power attorney, you must build a reputation of getting your clients a bigger piece of the pie
3. The most powerful attorneys seek the most help - getting lots of clients a bigger piece of the pie is not something you can do alone
To whom do powerful attorneys turn to gain leverage? The well-kept secret is a trusted auditor.

I know, since I am the auditor trusted by attorneys on many a “Power" list, including The Hollywood Reporter's:


However, few attorneys besides the upper echelon understand the power of knowledge that an auditor can provide. Those attorneys who appreciate the value of a compliance inspection typically have no idea that the decision to advise a client to audit rests squarely on their shoulders. (Often, if an attorney does not suggest an audit, nobody will - not even a business manager, unless the business manager happens to do audits... which presents a conflict of interest, incidentally.) Finally, when an attorney does realize that the decision to audit is largely hers, she may hesitate to advise a client to audit due to a fear of the unknown – unknown costs, unknown impact on business relationships and unknown recoveries.

This is why, if you represent someone who receives contingent compensation, it is crucial that you find at least one auditor you trust, who will:
· Help you figure out which cases require audits and which do not
· Advise you during negotiations of accounting clauses and definitions
· Take the stand and testify in the event of a royalty dispute that enters a litigation phase
· Perform due diligence and valuations of intellectual property
· Consult on bankruptcy and divorce cases that involve intellectual property
· Prepare royalty statements
· Conduct audits to:
o Recover your client's unpaid royalties or profits
o Ascertain compliance with marketing restrictions
o Identify breaches of contract
o Gain leverage for negotiation purposes
Building your team of experts now will give you the power to secure your clients royalty and profit entitlements and lay the foundation for your rise to powerful deal making and victories. Don't delay!


Monday, September 28, 2009

Film, TV and Music Audit Rights Discussion at the Beverly Hills Bar Association

My business partner Matthew A. Hurewitz, CPA appeared September 16, 2009 at The Beverly Hills Bar Association's Entertainment Section luncheon. Hurewitz told "The Truth About Net Profits and Audits" with other auditors and litigators Neville L. Johnson, Esq. and Miles J. Feldman, Esq.


Author Moses Avalon covered some aspects of the discussion on his blog here, and I will post below some video footage of Hurewitz's comments, when we shorten it to less than ten minutes.


You may still be able to earn 1.5 MCLE credits if you pay $105 to view the complete panel discussion at West LegalEdCenter.


The posts on this blog confer no rights or warranties. The opinions expressed on this site are my own and may not represent those of my firm. © 2009, Cedar Boschan. To request permission to reproduce, please contact boschan@royaltyauditors.com.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Will your audit damage your business relationship?

Australians fear that audits may damage their business relationships. Do you?

In this case, answer the following question: "Why is my licensee reluctant to allow me to verify its calculations?"

Remember, it's business as usual for big licensees to submit to audits. Transparency, power to renegotiate and recovery of cash are the most common outcomes.

Consider what you and your business partners can learn by reviewing past production, design, distribution, quality control and cost information, etc.

The posts on this blog confer no rights or warranties. The opinions expressed on this site are my own and may not represent those of my firm. © 2009, Cedar Boschan. To request permission to reproduce, please contact boschan@royaltyauditors.com.