---
name: rights-request-letter-writer
description: "Drafts a formal letter requesting permission to use a specific piece of third-party content — archive footage, a photograph, a piece of music, a written extract, or any other copyright-protected material — in a named production."
status: stable
category: pre-production
subcategory: pre-production
version: 1.0
eval_score: 4.2
tags: [rights, clearance, archive, permissions, letter, documentary, broadcast]
---
# Rights Request Letter Writer

## What This Skill Does
Drafts a formal letter requesting permission to use a specific piece of third-party content — archive footage, a photograph, a piece of music, a written extract, or any other copyright-protected material — in a named production.

## When To Use This Skill
- When you have identified archive or third-party content you want to licence and need to contact the rights holder for the first time
- When a broadcaster or distributor requires written evidence that you have sought clearance for all materials in a programme
- When you need to approach multiple rights holders quickly and need a consistent, professional letter format
- When an initial verbal approach has been made and you now need to confirm the request formally in writing

## What You Need To Provide
**Required:**
- Description of the content you want to use (e.g., "a 45-second clip from the 1987 news broadcast titled X," "a photograph taken by [photographer name] published in [publication]")
- Name of the rights holder or organisation you are writing to
- Your production company name and project title (working title is fine)
- Intended use — broadcast television, streaming, film festival, online, educational
- Proposed duration of use or excerpt length
- Whether use is commercial or non-commercial

**Optional:**
- Fee you are prepared to offer, or a note that you are requesting a quote
- Specific territories and duration of licence sought
- Whether you need exclusivity
- Deadline by which you need a response (e.g., picture lock date)
- Contact details for your production's rights coordinator

## How the Assistant Approaches This
1. Opens with a concise, professional introduction: who is writing, what production they represent, and a one-sentence description of the project so the rights holder immediately understands the context
2. Describes the specific content being requested with enough detail to be unambiguous — title, date, duration, format — and explains precisely how it will be used in the production
3. Proposes licence terms in plain language (territory, duration, media, exclusivity), offers a fee or requests a quote, and closes with a clear call to action and a named contact for the reply

## Output Format
A formal business letter, ready to send on production company letterhead. Structured as:
- Date and addressee block
- Subject line (e.g., "Licence Request — [Content Title] — [Production Title]")
- Opening paragraph: who you are and what the project is
- Body paragraph 1: exact description of the content and proposed use
- Body paragraph 2: licence terms being requested and fee offer or quote request
- Closing paragraph: deadline, next steps, and named contact
- Complimentary close and signature block

Tone is professional and courteous — firm enough to signal serious intent, warm enough not to cause the rights holder to refuse before reading the terms. Length: one page maximum.

## Quality Criteria
- [ ] Content being requested is described with enough specificity to be legally actionable (title, date, duration or excerpt length)
- [ ] Intended use is stated clearly — medium, territory, duration of licence
- [ ] Letter is no longer than one page
- [ ] No real production name, broadcaster, or rights holder appears in the example
- [ ] A specific deadline or response window is included
- [ ] Fee or quote-request language is present — the letter does not leave the financial basis entirely open

## Example

### Input
Content: a 30-second clip from a television news broadcast dated 14 March 1993, showing the opening of a city waterfront development. Held by a national broadcaster's archive division.
Rights holder: Meridian Archive Licensing, Archive Licensing Department
Production company: Tidal Gate Productions
Project: "The Changing Harbour" — a 60-minute documentary about urban waterfront regeneration
Intended use: broadcast on a public television network, worldwide, in perpetuity
Commercial use: yes
Fee: requesting a quote
Deadline: picture lock in eight weeks

### Output

---

19 March 2026

Archive Licensing Department
Meridian Archive Licensing

**Subject: Licence Request — News Broadcast Clip, 14 March 1993 — *The Changing Harbour***

Dear Licensing Team,

I am writing on behalf of Tidal Gate Productions to request a licence for a short clip from your archive. We are currently in post-production on *The Changing Harbour*, a 60-minute documentary exploring the history and social impact of urban waterfront regeneration, intended for broadcast on a public television network.

**Content requested**
We wish to licence approximately 30 seconds of footage from your news broadcast of 14 March 1993, specifically the sequence showing the opening ceremony of a city waterfront development. We intend to use this clip as illustrative archive material during a section of the documentary examining the period's regeneration policy. The clip would appear once, in its original broadcast form, without alteration beyond colour grading to match the surrounding sequence.

**Proposed licence terms**
We are seeking a non-exclusive broadcast licence covering all media (including streaming and on-demand catch-up), worldwide, in perpetuity, for use in *The Changing Harbour* and in promotional materials for the documentary (trailers and clips of no more than three minutes). We do not require exclusivity. We would welcome your standard licence fee for this type of use, and can provide a copy of our production's errors and omissions insurance upon request.

We are working to a picture-lock deadline of approximately eight weeks from the date of this letter and would be grateful for a response within three weeks if possible.

Please direct your reply to:

**[Rights Coordinator Name]**
Tidal Gate Productions
[Address]
[Email]
[Phone]

Thank you for considering this request. We look forward to hearing from you.

Yours sincerely,

[Producer Name]
[Title]
Tidal Gate Productions

---

## Known Limitations
- This letter establishes formal contact and proposes terms; it does not constitute a binding agreement. Any licence granted must be documented in a separate signed agreement reviewed by a qualified lawyer.
- The skill cannot verify whether the rights holder you have identified actually controls the rights to the material — always confirm the correct rights holder before sending.
- For music rights, separate licences are typically required for the master recording and the underlying composition (sync and master), which this single letter format does not cover in split form.
- Response times and fee structures vary enormously between rights holders. The letter cannot predict or negotiate the outcome.

## Related Skills
- [release-form-writer](../../media-business/legal/release-form-writer/SKILL.md)
- [rights-clearance-checklist](../../media-business/legal/rights-clearance-checklist/SKILL.md)
- [defamation-risk-checker](../../magazine-journalism/legal/libel-check-brief/SKILL.md)
