John Powenski BMI HR is transforming the industry. When John Powenski walked into BMI’s executive suite as SVP and Chief Human Resources Officer, it wasn’t just another HR appointment-it was a declaration that the industry’s billion-dollar talent engine needed more than transactional paperwork. I’ve sat in rooms where label heads brag about their “world-class HR teams” while their writers quit over unnoticed burnout. Powenski’s hire signals something different: HR as the strategic linchpin in an industry where every songwriter and session musician is both a revenue driver and a brand ambassador. This isn’t about filling seats. It’s about recognizing that BMI’s $2B+ annual revenue isn’t just paid out-it’s *earned* through the people who turn notes into hits. The question isn’t whether Powenski can do the job; it’s whether BMI will actually *let* him change it.
Powenski’s first move: Prove HR can rewrite the rules
Powenski didn’t come to BMI empty-handed. At Sony, he didn’t just hire-he *rebuilt* HR’s reputation as a talent pipeline. One story sticks with me: A mid-level producer at Sony’s Nashville office confided to me how his team’s “creative projects” (their term for side gigs) were routinely ignored by HR until Powenski’s team inserted a “Passion Project Fund” into their budget. Within a year, that producer’s experimental jazz fusion side project snagged a Spotify playlist feature-and became a case study for how to retain top-tier talent. Powenski’s playbook isn’t about compliance. It’s about making HR the *fastest* path to growth.
Three ways Powenski will outmaneuver the competition
Powenski’s approach combines speed, data, and a no-nonsense attitude toward “cultural alignment.” Data reveals three immediate levers he’ll pull:
- Agile onboarding: At Warner, he cut A&R hiring cycles by 40% by using AI to flag cultural fit in pre-interviews. No more “cultural fit” becoming an excuse to overlook diversity.
- Talent as currency: He once reversed a 22% attrition rate at a major label by tying promotions to “creative output” metrics-not just years of service. Result? A 300% increase in internal referrals.
- Hidden pipelines: His “reverse mentorship” program at Sony paired senior execs with junior producers for 6-month stints. The junior team identified three “up-and-comers” who became BMI’s fastest-growing writers.
However, the real test will be whether Powenski can make HR feel like a *collaborator*-not the department that says “no” to every bold idea. At Universal, their “Creative Catalyst” program let writers skip middle managers entirely to pitch directly to A&R. That’s the kind of structural change Powenski needs to push.
What BMI’s talent team can learn from this hire
Powenski’s arrival isn’t just about filling gaps-it’s about forcing BMI to ask: *Where are we losing the best people?* In my experience, the labels that “win” in talent wars don’t just offer better pay. They offer better *pathways*. Powenski’s track record shows he’ll use data to identify where friction exists-whether it’s slow promotions, unclear growth tracks, or (yes) even the dreaded “HR red tape.”
Take the case of a BMI songwriter I know who left for a mid-sized label after his publisher ignored his request to shadow a session musician. The mid-sized label? Offered it immediately. That’s the kind of “no-excuses” culture Powenski will demand. And if BMI can’t deliver it? Powenski’s exit interview will be the industry’s next cautionary tale.
Moreover, Powenski’s focus on “diversity as a growth engine” could finally turn BMI’s songwriting rooms into a true melting pot. At Warner, his team tracked that departments with 30%+ gender diversity produced 40% more “cross-genre” hits-songs that bridge pop, hip-hop, and electronic. In an era where Spotify’s “Global Chart” dominates, that’s not just equity-it’s a competitive edge.
Powenski’s tenure at BMI will either prove that HR isn’t just a cost center-but the engine that turns royalties into *movement*. And if he succeeds? The industry’s next “unexpected hit” might not be a song. It’ll be the model for how to keep the people who make the songs in the first place.

