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Who Owns What? Copyright, Licensing, and Creative Freelance Work

April 1, 2026 by AlisonP Leave a Comment

Let’s talk about ownership.

Not in the abstract, philosophical sense — in the very real, day-to-day business sense that quietly shapes your entire freelance career.

Because if you’re a creative freelancer, a few key concepts are always at play:

Copyright.
Licensing.
Trademark.

Understanding these isn’t just “nice to have.”
They answer one of the most important questions in your business:

Who owns the work you create… and who gets to use it?

Here’s the foundation:

Copyright

Copyright protects original creative work:

  • Scripts
  • Voice recordings
  • Music
  • Illustrations
  • Graphic design
  • Animation
  • Video editing
  • Game assets

If you create something original, you automatically own the copyright — unless you transfer it.

But ownership doesn’t always mean full, permanent control.

Because often, what you’re actually selling isn’t the work itself.

It’s permission to use it.

Licensing

Licensing is how that permission is defined.

It answers questions like:

  • How long can the work be used?
  • Where will it appear?
  • On which platforms?
  • Is the usage exclusive?

And this is where things get nuanced across creative fields:

  • Voiceover: The client owns the script. You license the use of your voice for a defined campaign.
  • Graphic design: You may create a logo, but the client purchases rights to use it as their brand identity.
  • Video game art: Assets you create are typically owned by the studio as part of the game.
  • Music composition: Tracks are often licensed for specific uses, durations, or platforms.

Same creativity.
Different ownership structures.

And that distinction changes everything.

Because intellectual property is how your work generates income over time.

1. Pricing isn’t about time — it’s about usage

Many freelancers undercharge because they price based on hours worked.

But creative work is rarely about time.

It’s about reach and impact.

A voiceover session might take 20 minutes.
But if that recording runs nationally for a year?

Its value is exponentially higher than a local two-week campaign.

Same with:

  • Packaging design used in one shop vs. global retail
  • Music for a YouTube video vs. a national ad campaign

Usage matters.

2. Licensing protects your future opportunities

Clear licensing terms also protect you from conflicts.

  • Voice an airline commercial? Competing airlines may not hire you during that campaign.
  • License music exclusively? You can’t resell it elsewhere.

Without clarity, you can accidentally block yourself from future work.

3. Unmanaged IP can hurt your reputation

Then there’s confidentiality.

Many freelance projects involve NDAs (non-disclosure agreements).

Which means:

  • You may not be allowed to share the work
  • Even behind-the-scenes content can be restricted
  • Violations can carry legal consequences

This is especially common in:

  • Video games
  • Advertising
  • Tech
  • Film and TV

One careless post can damage trust — or worse.

Here are a few practical habits that will immediately strengthen your business:

1. Ask about usage early

Before you quote anything, ask:

  • Where will this be used?
  • For how long?
  • On which platforms?
  • Is it exclusive?

These answers directly impact your pricing — and prevent misunderstandings later.

2. Get permission before sharing

Even if you’re proud of your work (and you should be):

Always confirm you’re allowed to share it.

  • Some clients encourage portfolio use
  • Others require approval
  • NDAs often mean “don’t share anything yet”

When in doubt: don’t post.

3. Read contracts carefully

Look specifically for:

  • Ownership transfer clauses
  • Licensing scope
  • Usage duration
  • Confidentiality terms

This isn’t just legal detail.

It’s business protection — for both you and your client.

4. Track your work

Keep records of:

  • Where your work is being used
  • How long licenses last
  • Any exclusivity agreements

This is especially important in:

  • Voiceover
  • Music licensing
  • Advertising

Because opportunities — and conflicts — can overlap quickly.

As a creative freelancer, your work isn’t just a file you deliver.

It’s intellectual property.

And understanding:

  • what belongs to you,
  • what belongs to your client,
  • and how licensing works

…allows you to:

  • Price your work properly
  • Protect your reputation
  • Build a sustainable creative business

Because what you don’t know about ownership?

Can cost you — both creatively and financially.


This article is based on an episode of my Freelance Fitness podcast, where I combine short workouts with honest conversations about building a sustainable creative freelance business. If you work in video production, audio production, or any creative field and want business advice without hustle culture nonsense, you’re in the right place.

Filed Under: Freelance Fitness Tagged With: female voice, freelance business tips, licensing for freelancers, Montreal voiceover, professional female voice talent, reelance intellectual property, Small Business Advice, VoiceActor, voiceover

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