The matchmaker for music and brands

Every musician has fans that brands want to reach.

SyncDeal analyzes social media audience data to find the overlap between a musician's followers and a brand's ideal customers. Then it predicts the sales impact and brokers the deal.

$40B+
Influencer market (2026)
63%
Trust creator recs over ads
4 in 5
Brands increasing spend
How it works

From audience data to signed deal, fully automated.

01

Analyze audience overlap

We ingest social media follower data from musicians and cross-reference it against brand customer profiles. The overlap reveals which partnerships will actually resonate.

02

Predict the sales impact

Historical data powers our prediction engine. Before anyone shakes hands, both sides see the projected sales lift and fair market price for the partnership.

03

Invite the brand

We send the brand a data-backed proposal: here's your match, here's the projected ROI, here's the price. No cold pitching. Pure signal.

04

Broker the deal

Brand says yes, we extend the offer to the musician. Both sides agree on terms, and the sponsorship deal is locked. No agents, no endless email threads.

Brand deals shouldn't require a record label.

The music industry has democratized distribution. An artist can put their song on Spotify in minutes. But brand partnerships? Those still run on handshakes, connections, and guesswork. We're fixing that with data.

For Musicians

Stop leaving revenue on the table. Your audience has buying power that brands will pay to access. SyncDeal finds those brands and brings them to you with a real offer, not a DM.

For Brands

Stop guessing which creator will move product. Audience overlap data tells you exactly which musician's followers are your customers. Predicted sales numbers, not vibes.

For the Industry

Music-brand partnerships are a $40B+ opportunity being served by enterprise platforms and manual processes. The mid-market, independent artists, growing brands, needs a self-serve solution.

The right fan data. The right brand match. The right deal.

Built by a musician who became an engineer, because this problem shouldn't still exist.