Sonic Identity Micro‑Studio: Monetize TryMusic + Murf with Jingle & Voice Packs

Category: Monetization Guide

Excerpt:

Use TryMusic and Murf to run a “Sonic Identity Micro‑Studio” for small brands, podcasters and YouTubers. This guide starts from real audio branding pains and walks through a detailed, step‑by‑step process to design custom music, add pro voiceovers, package assets, and charge realistically—without promising viral hits or overnight riches.

Last Updated: February 5, 2026 | Stack Focus: TryMusic.ai (AI song generator) + Murf (AI voiceover & TTS) | Monetization Angle: Done‑for‑you jingles & sonic identity packs for small brands

Sonic Identity Micro‑Studio TryMusic = custom tracks from text Murf = pro voiceovers on top

Your clients’ brand sounds like silence—or stock music. You give them a voice and a jingle they actually own.

I’ve seen this over and over: a serious business with a shaky phone intro on their podcast, a YouTube channel using the same free track as everyone else, a local brand whose “jingle” is three notes from a cheap template. Nobody is proud of it. Everyone says they’ll “fix it later”.

Meanwhile, TryMusic can turn plain text into original, royalty‑free songs in seconds, and Murf can add studio‑quality voiceovers in almost any style. This guide is about turning that combo into a small, honest business: a Sonic Identity Micro‑Studio that creates custom music + voice packs for people who can’t hire an agency—but still care how they sound.

The outcome you sell is simple: “In 7–10 days, you’ll have a short jingle, a clean voice tagline, and a few ready‑to‑use audio snippets that sound like your brand, not a stock library.”
What you’re really building, in plain language

A micro‑studio that makes brands sound like they exist: a 3–5 second sonic logo, a 10–30 second jingle, a clean voice line, and a handful of cut‑downs. You won’t be Hans Zimmer. You’ll be the person who stops them from using elevator music forever.

“Our brand has a logo, a font, a color… but no sound.”

I’ve listened to more small‑brand audio than I’d like to admit. Common patterns:

  • Podcast intros that sound like a random stock track thrown under a rushed voice recording.
  • Reels and TikToks using whatever trending audio is popular that week, zero brand consistency.
  • YouTube channels with five different intro songs because “we just grabbed what felt okay”.

The teams behind these brands are not clueless. They’re just out of time. Audio sits below design, copy, product, operations… so it never really gets done properly. And when they finally go looking for help, they’re hit with agency quotes that feel insane for a 5‑second sound.

Translate their complaints into what you actually fix
  • “We never know what track to use.” → They need a tiny library of owned music.
  • “Our intros sound amateur.” → They need a clean voice line + balanced levels.
  • “Licensing scares me.” → They need simple, royalty‑free rights they understand.
  • “We can’t brief a composer.” → They need someone to translate vibe into sound.

Your studio is not a giant agency. It’s a small, sharp service that says: “I’ll build your basic audio identity so you stop winging it.”

Offer: A 7‑Day “Jingle & Voice Pack” for one brand

Name it like a product, not like a capability.

Working name: Sonic Jingle & Voice Pack (7 days)

Best clients:

  • Small brands with podcasts, YouTube channels, or paid ads.
  • Solo creators who want intros/outros that aren’t copy‑pasted from templates.
  • Coaches and course creators building cohesive video/audio experiences.

What you deliver in one pack:

  • 1 short sonic logo (2–4 seconds).
  • 1 primary jingle (10–20 seconds) + 1 extended version (20–30 seconds).
  • 1–2 Murf‑generated voice lines (taglines, intros, outros).
  • Audio cut‑downs (for Reels/TikTok/ads) in ready‑to‑use formats.
  • A simple usage guide (“when to use which version”).
How to describe this without sounding like an AI ad

Skip: “I’ll use generative AI music and TTS to build your sonic branding layer.”

Try something like:

“You send me a short brand description and a few reference tracks you like. In a week, I’ll send back a short jingle, a clean voice line, and a few audio snippets you can drop into your podcast, YouTube intros, or ads—no editing on your side.”

What you’re really promising is: fewer awkward intros, clearer sound, and no more guessing “which song should we use?” every week.

Two tools, two clear jobs: TryMusic makes music, Murf speaks

TryMusic: AI song generator you control with text

TryMusic is a browser‑based AI song generator. In practice, that means:

  • You enter a description or lyrics and generate original tracks in seconds.
  • You can choose modes (instrumental, public/private) and tweak style/mood.
  • Tracks come with a commercial license and can be downloaded as WAV/MP3.

In your studio, you’ll use TryMusic to:

  • Generate base jingles from brand descriptions.
  • Create variants (short/long, calm/energetic) from similar prompts.
  • Produce stems or instrumentals for intros, outros, and ads.
Murf: lifelike voiceovers from simple scripts

Murf is an AI voice generator and studio. For you, that translates into:

  • 200+ realistic voices across many languages and accents.
  • Fine control over speed, pitch, emphasis, pauses, and tone.
  • Easy export of clean voice tracks to layer on top of music.

In your studio, Murf is how you:

  • Record brand taglines without hiring a voice actor.
  • Create multiple language versions of the same line if needed.
  • Keep sound consistent even when the client’s team changes.
Rights note: both platforms currently offer commercial usage for generated content, but you should still read their latest terms and make it clear to clients that they are responsible for not feeding in infringing lyrics, scripts, or brand names they don’t own.

A 7‑day build‑and‑deliver tutorial for your first Sonic Pack

Do this once for yourself or a friendly brand first. After that, you’ll know what feels heavy, what clients care about, and how to price honestly.

Day 1 – Intake: understand how they want to sound, not just what they do
  1. Ask for:
    • Brand description in 3–5 sentences (what they do, who they serve).
    • 3 adjectives for ideal sound (warm, energetic, minimalist, playful, etc.).
    • Links to 2–3 pieces of audio they like (jingles, intros, ads—even from other brands).
    • Where audio will be used first (podcast, YouTube, paid ads, events, app, etc.).
  2. Capture constraints:
    • Any genres or instruments to avoid (no heavy metal, no EDM drops, etc.).
    • Legal notes (no sound‑alikes of famous jingles, no parody tracks).
  3. Draft 1–2 key sentences that describe the target sound for yourself. Example:
    “Calm but confident, modern electronic + soft piano, no vocals, friendly not goofy,
    should work under spoken voice without fighting it.”
Day 2 – Generate base tracks in TryMusic from real brand language

Instead of writing abstract music prompts, steal the client’s own words.

  1. Go to TryMusic and start with a short, descriptive prompt, e.g.:
    “Friendly, modern jingle for a [industry] brand that helps [audience].
    No lyrics, just instrumental. Tempo medium-fast, upbeat but not cheesy.
    Think light synths + soft drums + simple melody that sticks in 3 notes.”
  2. Generate 2–4 tracks:
    • One more energetic, one more relaxed.
    • Try a version closer to their reference tracks, and one slightly different.
  3. Listen with the brand website or visual identity open. Ask yourself:
    • Does this sound like them, or like some random app?
    • Would I recognize this track as “theirs” after hearing it a few times?
Day 3 – Trim tracks down into a logo, a main jingle, and an extended cut

You don’t need a giant DAW; even simple editors work. The goal is variety, not complexity.

  1. Pick the strongest TryMusic track as your “theme”. Then create:
    • Sonic logo – crop the most distinctive 2–4 seconds (often the hook or last bar).
    • Main jingle – 10–15 seconds with a clear start and natural end.
    • Extended version – 20–30 seconds for ads or intros that need more space.
  2. Make sure:
    • Volumes aren’t clipping.
    • There’s a clear “in” and “out” point (no awkward cuts mid‑beat).
    • The track isn’t so busy that a voice can’t sit on top.
Day 4 – Write and record clean voice lines in Murf

Good scripting beats fancy mixing. Short, clear lines win.

  1. Draft 2–4 short scripts, for example:
    • Brand tagline only (4–7 words).
    • Podcast intro (“You’re listening to…” up to 10 seconds).
    • Ad CTA (“Visit…”, “Download…”, etc.).
  2. In Murf Studio:
    • Choose a voice that matches brand personality (age, accent, energy).
    • Set speed slightly slower than normal conversation for clarity.
    • Add pauses before and after the line so you can place it over music easily.
  3. Export clean WAV/MP3 files for each line:
    /audio/voice/[brand]_tagline_murf.wav
    /audio/voice/[brand]_podcast_intro_murf.wav
Day 5 – Layer Murf voice onto TryMusic jingles and create a few variants

Here’s where it becomes a “pack” instead of a single file.

  1. In any simple audio editor:
    • Place the sonic logo, then drop the tagline slightly after the first beat.
    • Lower music volume 3–6 dB while the voice speaks, bring it back up after.
    • Make sure nothing sounds harsh on laptop or phone speakers.
  2. Export:
    • Music‑only versions.
    • Music + voice versions.
    • At least one super‑short version (3–5 seconds) for bumpers or reels.
Day 6 – Package everything so a non‑audio person can find the right file in 5 seconds

This is where most people drop the ball. Clear naming is worth real money.

  1. Use a simple structure:
    /[Brand]_SonicPack
      /Music
        [brand]_logo_3s_music_only.wav
        [brand]_jingle_12s_music_only.wav
        [brand]_jingle_25s_music_only.wav
      /Voice
        [brand]_tagline_murf.wav
        [brand]_intro_murf.wav
      /Mixed
        [brand]_logo+tagline_5s.wav
        [brand]_jingle+intro_15s.wav
      usage_guide.pdf
  2. In the usage guide (1–2 pages), write in plain English:
    • Which file to use for podcast intros, which for ads, which for reels.
    • Basic volume advice (“don’t push above X dB” / “avoid stacking these two together”).
    • License note: they can use the pack in their own content, but not resell tracks to others.
Day 7 – Walk through, gather reactions, and lock your own checklist

A 20–30 minute call here is worth more than another 3 hours of tweaking on your own.

  1. On a call, play:
    • Music‑only logo, then logo+voice.
    • Main jingle with and without voice.
    • One short cut‑down for social.
  2. Ask:
    • “Which one feels most like your brand?”
    • “Is there anything here you’d be embarrassed to use?”
    • “If I improved just one detail, what should it be?”
  3. Update your internal checklist based on this first client:
    • Typical time spent in TryMusic vs Murf vs editing.
    • What they cared about (often: voice choice, not tiny EQ tweaks).
    • Anything that surprised you (for example, they wanted slower tempo than you expected).

Pricing: steady, realistic retainers—not “sell one jingle and retire”

This is the kind of service that can realistically add a few hundred to maybe a couple of thousand dollars a month across several clients if you’re consistent. It is not a get‑rich‑quick scheme.

OfferWhat’s included (concrete)Best forExample range (USD)
Mini Intro Pack One 3–5 second sonic logo, one 10–15 second jingle, and one Murf voice line mixed on top, plus a very short usage note. No cut‑downs, no extra variants. New podcasters, small channels, freelancers who just want “something better than silence”. Roughly $80–$200 one‑time
Full Sonic Jingle & Voice Pack (7‑day sprint) Everything from the Mini Pack plus: extended 20–30s version, multiple cut‑downs (for social/ads), 2–3 Murf voice lines, structured folder, and a 1–2 page usage guide. One revision round included. Brands with ongoing content (YouTube, podcast, ads) who want a basic sonic identity they can use everywhere. Roughly $220–$600 per pack, depending on complexity and your experience
Monthly Sonic Companion 1 new jingle or variation per month (seasonal, campaign‑specific), up to 2 new Murf voice scripts, light mixing help on 2–4 pieces of content (balancing voice+music), and small tweaks to the pack as the brand evolves. Strict hours / deliverables so scope doesn’t explode. Brands running frequent campaigns or content who like having “their sound person” on call. Around $180–$500 per month to start

These ranges are examples, not promises. Your actual rates will depend on your skills, niche, location, and how deep you go for each client. The key is to charge for the pack and the ongoing clarity, not for “two hours of AI prompting”.

In every proposal, be straight: you are not guaranteeing ad performance, listener numbers, or sales. You’re promising more professional, consistent sound with clear rights—and less time wasted fiddling with audio.

Who actually pays for this, and what they say when they’re ready

Look for people saying things like:

  • “I hate our podcast intro but we don’t have time to fix it.”
  • “All our videos sound different; there’s no consistency.”
  • “I’m scared of getting copyright‑claimed on YouTube.”
  • “Audio isn’t my thing, I just want it handled.”

You’ll usually find them:

  • On LinkedIn or X posting podcast clips or YouTube links.
  • In creator / founder communities talking about content or ads.
  • In podcasting or YouTube subreddits asking for intro music help.
  • Among local businesses already spending money on video, but silent about audio.
A DM / email you can adapt
Subject: Giving [Brand] a simple, ownable sound

Hey [Name],

I’ve been watching your [podcast / YouTube / ads] for [brand].
The content is solid, but the intros/outros feel a bit “stock”
(which is where most of us start).

I run a small “sonic identity” studio where I:
- use TryMusic to create original, royalty-free jingles
- use Murf to record clean voice lines with the tone you want
- package everything into a simple folder + guide you can drop
  straight into your editor

The result is a short jingle, a tagline, and a few cut-downs
you can reuse across episodes, ads, and social—without worrying
about copyright or fiddling with audio tools.

If you’re curious, send me:
1) a link to your current intro, and
2) 3 words for how you *wish* your brand sounded.

I can reply with a simple idea for what your first “sonic pack”
might look like and a flat price, so you can decide if it’s worth it.

No pressure either way,
[Your name]
Set expectations so “AI audio” doesn’t turn into “studio on demand”
Just to be super clear:

TryMusic + Murf won't give you a full film score
or replace human musicians overnight.

What I'm offering is:
- a small set of brand-safe, royalty-free tracks,
- clean, consistent voice lines,
- and a simple way to reuse them across your content.

You still decide what to say and where to use it.
My job is to make sure it sounds intentional,
not accidental.
A 7‑day launch plan for you, before you scale
  1. Day 1: Build a full Sonic Pack for your own project (or a fake brand) using the workflow above.
  2. Day 2: Use it for a week in your own content; note what you actually reuse vs. ignore.
  3. Day 3: Clean up your folder structure and usage guide based on your own confusion.
  4. Day 4: Post a short “before/after” audio clip online with the story of why you built this.
  5. Day 5: DM or email 5–10 people you already know who create content, offering a discounted first pack.
  6. Day 6: Deliver one paid (or heavily discounted) pack very carefully. Track how long each step actually takes.
  7. Day 7: Adjust your scope and prices based on reality, not on other people’s screenshots.

Two or three good projects and a handful of audio examples will do more for your studio than any number of AI buzzwords.

You’re not selling AI. You’re selling the feeling of “we finally sound like ourselves”.

If you’ve ever cringed at your own intro music or voiceover, you already understand why this matters. You’re just offering that relief to other people: one less thing for them to feel behind on.

TryMusic gives you original, royalty‑free music in minutes. Murf gives you consistent, professional voiceovers without hunting for voice talent. The value in between is your taste, your structure, and your willingness to do the boring work of packaging, naming, and explaining.

Start tiny. One brand, one pack, one week. Fix the clumsy parts. By the time you’ve done this a few times, you won’t just “use some AI tools”—you’ll run a Sonic Identity Micro‑Studio that quietly upgrades how people hear the brands they already like.

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