Quote – Digital Media Digest
September 28, 2008 at 6:56 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a CommentTags: Digest, digital, Industry, Media, Music, Quote
“Just surviving the storm isn’t good enough. We must build a better ship.”
Nashville Isn’t Future-Proofing
September 28, 2008 at 6:50 pm | In Music Business | Leave a CommentTags: digital, employ, employment, Industry, job, Music, nashville
I just checked the Digital Music News “Job Board”. As a resident of the Middle Tennessee area and a music industry employee, I thought it might be nice to have a Plan-B as the companies around me shrink. There were no jobs on the Digital Music News Job Board that were located in Nashville. There are 20 jobs posted…most in LA and NY, but also in Boston and Seattle, Canada and Dubai.
CANADA & DUBAI!????
This brings me to my 1 obvious conclusion and the end of this blog.
Nashville is so concerned about survival right now that they aren’t preparing for the future. There is no growth or investment into the inevitable future of the Music Business. I see this stubbornness first hand every day around the office and it’s disappointing. Nashville will hold tighter to what they have, but as they do, it will sift through their fingers like sand and as the industry and the consumers move forward, they will leave Music City a ghost-town.
Quote – Dennis Hopper
July 27, 2008 at 10:18 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a CommentTags: Dennis Hopper, Industry, Music, Quote
“Just because it happened to you, doesn’t mean it’s interesting”
(also how I feel about most blogs)
Quote – Tom Silverman
July 27, 2008 at 10:15 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a CommentTags: Industry, Music, Quote, Tom Silverman
“Independent labels take nothing and make something out of it. Major labels buy that something, and try to make more out of it.”
- Tom Silverman, Tommy Boy Records CEO
Quote – Digital Media Digest
July 20, 2008 at 7:09 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a CommentTags: business, Digest, digital, free, illegal, Industry, label, Media, Music, p2p, Quote
“There will always be Freeloaders, but it is the labels’ prerogative and responsibility to get the music to the fans without encouraging any illegal activity.”
Quote – Hunter S. Thompson
July 20, 2008 at 6:08 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a CommentTags: business, Hunter S. Thompson, Industry, Music, Quote
“The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There’s also a negative side.”
No Profit in Downloads
July 14, 2008 at 8:45 pm | In Music Business | Leave a CommentTags: 99, apple, business, download, Industry, iTunes, label, margin, Marketing, Mastercard, mechanicals, merch, Music, Napster, profit, Rhapsody, royalty, strategy, Visa, Zune
Let’s face it, the Labels are going to take 70% and that’s fair. What? It’s Not? Of course it is…They spent the thousands in studio and production cost, not to mention manufacturing and distribution, only to have the artist sell more T-shirts and stickers at their merch table because all of their fans are hooked up via BitTorrent. It’s not like they pocket the 70% anyway. There’s overhead, mechanicals, and other royalties that have to be paid, not to mention someone who has to sit down and sift through the data so the auditors don’t pitch a fit.
The question is…Can you be profitable with the other 30% and the answer so far is an overwhelming NO!
You may think you’ve struck gold when you find that company that allows you to setup your own storefront for 10 or 20 bucks, pull in the titles you want to sell and then let’s you make 10 to 15 cents per tracks sold, but the reality is that noone shops at these stores. iTunes and Amazon are satisfying 95% of the digital consumers out there and Rhapsody, Napster, Zune, Passalong, and many other reputable brands are fighting for the loose change already.
After you realize this doesn’t work, you can try building your own store from scratch and licensing in the labels in order to keep more of the profit. The reality of that is that in order to be your own retailer, you have to engage with Visa and Mastercard who are going to take 15 cents per transaction and then another 2 or 3 percent of everything you make leaving you with the same 10 to 15 cents you had in the first scenario. It forces you into developing a marketing strategy around bundling and encouraging larger purchases and that’s where you lose touch with your consumer. They don’t want to spend more than 99 cents and if you make them, they will still find what they want and buy it…just NOT from you.
The economics just aren’t there. They just don’t work. It’s barely worked for iTunes and the dream of selling digital music is driving company after company into the ground. It’s not worth the hassle and if you are looking to be entertained with your money, you’d be better off buying lots of fireworks or just flushing it down the toilet.
Quote – Hamlet (Act IV, Scene V)
June 26, 2008 at 8:29 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a CommentTags: business, EMI, gross, Hamlet, Industry, loss, margin, Music, Quote, revenue
“When Sorrows Come, They Come Not Single Spies, But In Battalions.”
Hamlet – On EMI Layoffs and the Recording Industry
Earlier this week, EMI Group posted gargantuan losses of 757 million pounds ($1.2 billion) for the year ending March 31st. Elsewhere, Warner Music Group is now suffering on Wall Street, though its quarterly report comes November 25th. Warner recently sold its stake in Front Line Management to Ticketmaster for $123 million. – Read More (Digital Music News)
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