Why ad-hoc delivery breaks at scale
Sending five files to five people by hand hides process gaps. Sending two hundred unique copies exposes every weak step: wrong metadata, missing license language, duplicate recipient IDs, or a watermark method that dies on the first re-upload.
A checklist does not slow you down once it becomes default. It prevents the expensive kind of slow: retractions, replacements, and public damage control.
The four gates
1. Metadata hygiene
Confirm GPS, device identifiers, and unintended artist fields are stripped or intentionally set. Spot-check both the master and at least one exported copy.
2. Watermark strategy
Decide what is visible on previews vs invisible on subscriber files. Match the invisible method to how your audience actually shares (chat apps, forums, cloud drives, social platforms).
3. License notice
Ship clear usage language with the files: what subscribers may do, what they may not do, and how attribution works. Consistent notices reduce disputes later.
4. Recipient list integrity
Validate IDs, catch duplicates, and preview output filenames with the free Subscriber CSV Validator (or manual review) before importing the list into Foddo Distribution mode. A bad row in a CSV becomes a wrong file attached to the wrong person.
Score before you send
You can run these gates informally or track them in a single readiness score. The goal is not perfection on paper. It is knowing which gate is red before click-send.
Tip: Store the checklist result with the release name. When a leak happens months later, you will remember which protections were active for that drop.
After the checklist
When every release repeats the same four gates, moving the workflow into Foddo Distribution mode and Inspect is the natural upgrade, not a different product category, just the same gates at scale. If you later add scheduled jobs or watch folders, Foddo's automation audit logs cover those pipelines; manual Compression-tab runs are not recorded there.