Music for Corporate Videos
Pick professional tracks for business communication

Corporate videos need music that sounds professional without pulling attention away from the message. The right track gives the edit shape, supports the speaker or visuals, and helps the company feel credible.
This page helps you choose music for business-facing videos such as company profiles, brand overview films, website videos, stakeholder updates, and corporate presentation videos. It is built for teams, freelancers, agencies, and videographers who need music that can be cleared, saved, and reused with proper license proof.
Choose music that supports the message
A corporate video usually has one job: explain what the company does and make the message feel credible.
That means the music should sit behind the story. It should not sound like a personal vlog, a loud ad, or a trailer. For company profiles and brand overview videos, steady piano, light electronic beds, warm acoustic tracks, and clean corporate pop often work well.
Pay attention to the first 10 seconds. Corporate videos often open with a logo, office footage, product shots, or a short voiceover. The track should start cleanly and give the editor space to introduce the company without a crowded hook.
A strong choice has a clear rhythm, smooth movement, and enough energy to hold attention. But it should leave room for speech, captions, and on-screen visuals.
Good fit:
- warm corporate background music
- light piano with soft pulse
- clean electronic bed
- optimistic acoustic rhythm
- calm cinematic business track
Avoid:
- aggressive drops
- heavy vocals
- dramatic trailer hits
- busy lead melodies
- tracks that change direction every few seconds
More corporate video use cases
Corporate video covers several formats, and each one needs a different kind of music. A company update, explainer, recruitment video, sales asset, and event recap may all sit under “corporate video,” but the right track depends on the goal of the edit, the audience, and where the final video will appear.
Music for Corporate Communication Videos
Corporate communication videos need music that supports the company message without competing with speech, captions, or business visuals. This category includes company culture videos, LinkedIn videos, founder stories, town halls, annual report videos, and sustainability report videos.
Choose polished background tracks with steady pacing, clean sections, and enough space for voiceover. The music should help the video feel clear, credible, and easy to follow.
Music for Business Explainer Videos
Business explainer videos need music that keeps the explanation moving. This category includes company explainers, onboarding videos, internal training videos, customer education videos, and product training videos.
Pick tracks with light movement, simple structure, and a clean rhythm. The music should support screen recordings, product shots, animated steps, captions, and narration without pulling attention away from the lesson.
Music for Marketing Videos
Marketing videos need music that fits the campaign goal and publishing channel. This category includes marketing agency videos, crowdfunding videos, sales videos, investor pitch videos, product launch campaigns, brand awareness videos, and conversion-focused videos.
Use tracks with a clear build, polished sound, and clean edit points. The music should help shape the story, support the offer, and work across social cuts, landing pages, ads, client materials, and pitch decks.
Music for Trust-Building Business Videos
Trust-building videos need music that feels calm, credible, and human. This category includes customer testimonial videos, case study videos, professional introduction videos, and client presentation videos.
Choose music that supports real voices and specific proof. A steady, restrained track often works better than a dramatic one because the customer story, client result, or professional message should stay in focus.
Music for Workforce Videos
Workforce videos need music that reflects the people behind the company. This category includes recruitment videos, employer branding videos, HR videos, and employee onboarding videos.
Pick tracks that feel warm, clear, and people-focused. The music should support team interviews, office footage, role previews, welcome messages, and internal guidance without making the video feel forced.
Music for Business Event Videos
Business event videos need music that can carry movement, crowd sound, speaker clips, and branded moments. This category includes conference recap videos, product reveal events, webinar recap videos, trade show videos, and corporate event videos.
Choose tracks with clean energy, smooth sections, and enough room for applause, room tone, and short speech clips. The music should help the edit move from arrival to key moments to closing without turning the recap into a loud promo.
Check the license before the video leaves your hands
Corporate video projects often move between people. A freelancer may edit the video. A marketing manager may upload it. A sales team may reuse it in a deck. A client may publish it later on another channel.
That is why the music choice needs proof.
Before you publish or deliver the file, save:
- the track title
- the license terms
- the purchase receipt
- the project name
- the final video title
- the date of download or purchase
This matters more when the video is for a company, client, event, sales page, public website, or branded channel.
A track from a personal playlist, in-app music library, or unclear “free music” source can create problems later because the company may not have proof for business use. A royalty-free track with a clear license gives the team a cleaner file trail.
Free Tools:
What license do I need for my company?
Music License Wizard
Best-fit recommendation
For corporate videos, the safest practical choice is a royalty-free track with a clean business tone and clear commercial-use permission.
Pick tracks that can sit under voiceover, product footage, office scenes, charts, and logo moments. Look for stable pacing, light instrumentation, and an ending that gives the editor a clean close.
Choose one primary track for the full video instead of mixing several short tracks. A single well-matched track keeps the video consistent and makes licensing proof easier to manage.
For shorter corporate edits, pick a track that works within 30 to 90 seconds. For longer company overview videos, use a track with natural sections so the editor can cut between intro, middle, and closing moments.


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