From Corporate Law to Sonic Branding: A Conversation with David Courtier-Dutton – Part 1
15 April 2026

From Corporate Law to Sonic Branding: A Conversation with David Courtier-Dutton – Part 1

Audio Branding

About

When you hand it to the composer in sonic branding, at that point, it becomes an art, because the job of the composer, of course, is to translate those desired emotions into music. And it’s not [the] music that the composer feels, it is what it makes the audience feel when they hear it, and that is almost pure art. We have done some science around it, and we know what might help in terms of instrumentation and timbre and pitch and all that sort of stuff, but, at the bottom line, the sonic logo is only going to be as good as the composer. They are the most important person in a sonic branding project, bar none.” – David Courtier-Dutton

This episode’s guest is the founder and CEO of SoundOut, and he’s on a mission to prove that sound isn’t just art – it’s strategy. From building the world’s largest music testing platform to decoding how sonic logos tap straight into our memory and emotions, he’s turned the science of sound into a tool that brands can’t ignore, and he’s worked with such brands as Amazon, TikTok, Netflix, Sky, and Target to help optimize their sonic branding and marketing.

His name is David Courtier-Dutton, and we’ll be talking about what makes audio unforgettable, how data reveals our hidden reactions to music, and where the future of audio branding might be headed.

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(00:00) – David’s Earliest Memories of Sound

Our discussion starts off with a pivotal moment in David’s childhood, and in the years that followed, that taught him the power of sound. “It seared that moment in my brain,” he says, recalling George Harrison’s song “Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth), “of all the very few memories you have when you’re six, seven years old. It just stuck with me. And I lost the song for probably about thirty years or so. And then when I heard it again, I was straight back in that little car, absolutely transfixed by the radio at that point.” We talk about his journey from corporate law to sonic branding, and how it coincided with the dramatic changes that MySpace and social media brought to the music industry. “The industry appeared to be facing existential moments,” David recalls. “So I thought, ‘well, wouldn’t it be great, if the industry is going to go away and fans can connect with the bands, why don’t we create a business that enables the fans to invest in the bands themselves and actually finance them?”

(15:00) – Understanding the Role of Sonic Branding

David shares his observations on audio branding and the mistakes that can derail an agency’s search for the right sonic logo. “They get really attached to the sounds,” he explains, “and they start reading things into the options and the logos that perhaps don’t exist. They forget that this sonic logo will just be pinged out across the airwaves and listened to fleetingly by consumers, and you can really overthink it.” He tells us about SoundOut’s pioneering brand study, its methodology, and what it’s revealed so far about successful sonic branding. “From that historic data,” he says, “the key data point was that if you have your [brand] name in your sonic logo, then people were twice as likely to attribute it to the brand as if it wasn’t in. So that’s powerful. That’s a good argument for putting the name in.”

(23:00) – Insights from the SoundOut Index

As the first half of our conversation wraps up, David offers more insights from the SoudOut study and what they tell us about successful sonic branding. “If you’ve got three seconds or two seconds to create a logo,” he notes, “you’re not going to create something that has a hook as strong as Katy Perry or whatever it may be. It’s always going to be a short snippet of a melody.” We discuss the surprising gap the index revealed between what consumers think they know and what they actually know when it comes to brand recognition, and the advantage sound has over other, more traditional marketing. “People can’t block their ears,” David tells us. “They can look away, they can be doing something else at the same time, but you can’t close off your ears [or] your ability to listen and for those connections to be made. So it’s a very subversive way of marketing, but highly effective.”

Episode Summary

    David shares his journey from a London law firm to music and marketing.How traditional branding can lead agencies astray when it comes to sonic logos.David discusses SoundOut’s five-year study of audio branding and recognition.

Tune in for next week’s episode as we talk about the unique audio branding challenge companies like Visa and Mastercard face, what role human creatives might play in a market that’s increasingly giving way to AI, and how audio branding can help companies rise above the algorithmic noise.

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