A practical framework for where voice and event production assets can appear—and what needs a broader license.
Standard use
The final license should define whether a purchased voice asset may be used in one named podcast, event, webinar, station identity or campaign. It should clearly state term, territory, media and whether paid promotion is included.
When use expands
Broadcast advertising, large paid-media campaigns, resale templates, network-wide station use or reuse across unrelated brands may need a broader license. Ask before launch when distribution changes from the original brief.
What is not transferred
Unless agreed in writing, purchasing a finished asset should not transfer the studio’s underlying project files, production methods, unused takes or ownership of the VoiceStage name and identity.
Customers should not train, clone or synthesize a voice performance from delivered audio without a separate, explicit agreement.
Keep the record
The production checkout should generate a plain-language record of the product, named project, approved use and any extension. This gives both sides a shared reference after delivery.