Music for Corporate Communication Videos
Choose background music that fits the company’s messages

Corporate communication videos need music that supports the message without pulling attention away from it. A CEO update, town hall recap, annual report video, or sustainability report has a clear job. It needs to sound polished, calm, and credible.
The wrong track can make a serious message feel too casual. A track with too much energy can distract from leadership, data, or employee updates.
Choose music that supports the message
Corporate communication videos often carry information that people need to understand fast. The music should make the video feel finished, but it should not compete with the speaker or the script.
For leadership updates, use a steady and confident track. Avoid dramatic builds that make the message feel forced. For internal announcements, use something warm and focused. For company-wide updates, choose music that gives the edit structure without sounding like an ad.
A good test is simple. Play the track under the voice at a low level. The words should still feel clear. The music should add pace, not pressure.
This is especially useful for HR teams, internal comms teams, brand teams, and agencies making repeat company updates.
Use different music choices for different company messages
Use different music choices for different company messages
A single corporate sound will not fit every communication video. A leadership update, LinkedIn post, founder story, town hall, annual report, and sustainability report each need a different level of energy, structure, and restraint.
Music for Company Culture Video
Company culture videos need music that feels warm, natural, and people-focused. Choose tracks that fit team footage, office moments, employee interviews, behind-the-scenes clips, and internal celebrations.
The music should make the company feel human without turning the video into a glossy ad.
Music for LinkedIn Videos
LinkedIn videos need music that supports the message fast. People may watch with captions first, so the track should work at low volume and stay clear under text, voiceover, or quick edits.
Use clean, direct music for company announcements, leadership clips, product updates, hiring posts, and short internal news videos.
Music for Founder Story Videos
Founder story videos need music that feels composed, personal, and credible. The track should support the speaker’s voice, early company footage, milestones, and mission-driven moments.
Avoid music that feels too dramatic. The founder’s story should carry the emotion.
Music for Town Hall Videos
Town hall videos need music that works under speaker clips, agenda slides, Q&A moments, employee updates, and closing remarks.
Pick a steady instrumental track with clean sections. The editor should be able to cut around pauses, transitions, and speaker changes without the music feeling awkward.
Music for Annual Report Videos
Annual report videos need music with a clear structure. Use tracks with light progression so the edit can move from results to milestones to future plans.
The best choices feel steady, positive, and professional. They should support charts, financial highlights, leadership narration, and branded closing slides.
Music for Sustainability Report Videos
Sustainability report videos often need a natural, grounded tone. Acoustic textures, soft piano, or gentle electronic movement can work well when the message focuses on people, progress, and responsibility.
Choose music that feels calm and sincere. The track should support proof, not oversell the message.
Audiodrome’s picks for corporate communication videos
Match the track to the publishing path
A corporate communication video can live in several places. The same edit might appear in an internal meeting, on LinkedIn, in an investor update, on a company website, or inside a client presentation.
That means the music source has to fit the publishing path. A track cleared for one channel is not proof that the same track works for another channel. A company video may also move from private use to public use later.
Before publishing, keep three details in one place:
- track name
- receipt or purchase record
- license terms
Audiodrome’s License covers commercial and non-commercial video, corporate videos, e-learning, social content, client projects, and business use, provided the music remains embedded in the finished project. It also allows editing, looping, fading, and exporting the finished project to the allowed channels.

