Music: Its Very Own Loss Leader

June 23, 2009 at 1:07 am | In Marketing, Music Business | Leave a Comment
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Consumers want songs.  There are exceptions when it comes to artists like Pink Floyd, but the main reason that consumers bought albums for years is because they had to.  It was the only way to get the song they wanted and there were no easy technological workarounds.  The music industry is fooling itself if it thinks the consumer will ever go back to buying albums or that bundling records up as digital Album Only purchases will actually help.

Pandora’s box has been opened.

It was essentially a race to zero.  The labels began streaming early on.  They could get around publishing fees that way and still expose their artists.  Then there was the “Free Download”, as if that was going to curb the appetite for P2P use.  After the free download, it was the free EP because intuition, or insecurity rather,  said that “One song just wasn’t enough,” and now we have successfully moved to giving away the full album.  From Radiohead to Nine Inch Nails, to Coldplay, and beyond.  These high profile stunts have trained consumers to expect free or at least deep discounted products and to bypass anything at full price.  Each of these stunts were loss leaders for tickets, merch, or future premium products which directly benefited those artists.  The problem is that most labels don’t benefit from tickets, merch, or in some cases premium products.  They only own the content so treating it like a loss leader is counterproductive.

When you go to Wal-mart to grab a deep discounted CD (or loss leader), Wal-mart is banking on you buying a plunger and a toothbrush before you leave.  When you buy an album at a deep discount, the label hopes that you will tell your friends so they go buy it, pack mom’s minivan with friends headed to the show where you all come home wearing the t-shirt.

The reality is that you won’t tell your friends, you’ll just burn them a copy, and the label won’t make a dime off of the ticket sales or merch.  The reality is that you can’t be your own loss leader.  It’s either time for the labels to successfully invest in plungers and toothbrushes (figuratively speaking), or time for management and booking agencies to begin participating in recording costs.  In the meantime, the labels need to be doing everything they can to stop devaluing their lifeline – recorded music.

Newspapers – Daily Circulation Strangulation

May 4, 2009 at 2:57 am | In Media Business | Leave a Comment
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We saw this coming years ago.  At least those of us in the music industry.  Misery loves company I guess.  So it’s no surprise when newspaper daily circulation reports show this depth of decline over the past six months.  The question is whether or not the Internet, the Economy, or a mixture of reasons is to blame.

daily-circulation

I’m out of the print loop, but I’d love to hear any opinions regarding Wall Street Journal’s ability to show an increased daily circulation over the past 6 months or any examples of newspapers re-inventing themselves for the future.

TurnItUpMedia: Ad-Model with a Purpose

April 19, 2009 at 2:39 am | In Marketing, Music Business | Leave a Comment
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I could play the cynic and tell you there’s yet another digital music retailer out there that won’t make it.  I could tell you that because it’s an ad-based model it’s doomed from the start.  I could tell you that consumers have found a home at iTunes and Amazon, but the truth is that we never really know what is or isn’t going to work.  TurnItUpMedia.com has a new twist to the ad model and this is the time to test everything.

TurnItUpMedia has three things going for it.

  • Targeted Advertising:  You choose the ad you want to watch from a selection of ad screenshots.  The selection of ads presented to the consumer is based on certain interests, preferences, and demographic information selected in the account registration process.
  • Rewards:  Each ad watched accumulates credits.  Credits can be redeemed for music.  Credits can also be purchased.
  • Breadth of Catalog:  All major label content available.

Give it a spin.  Be sure to leave your feedback here.

Q1 2009 – Media Industry Shrinkage Recap

April 17, 2009 at 2:37 pm | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
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According to this TechCrunch graph, the loss of jobs in media and electronics seems to be slowing, but a large number of layoffs comes standard with a new calendar year in a down economy.  Looking forward, Q2 doesn’t offer much relief, and has already claimed 2 major music industry victims (Passalong Networks and Echo).

picture-11

Highlighted media companies who experienced layoffs in Q1 2009:

Jan 8:  Dell – 1900

Jan 14:  Google – 100

Jan 17:  Circuit City – 34,000

Jan 20:  Warner Brothers – 800

Jan 20:  Clear Channel – 1850

Jan 21:  Bose – 1000

Jan 22:  Microsoft – 5000

Jan 22:  Digg – 7

Jan 31:  eBaum’s World – 13

Feb 20:  Best Buy – 250

March 11:  Sony Pictures – 350

March 25:  iMeem – 6

March 26:  Google – 200

March 26:  Amazon – 210

Q4 2008 – Media Industry Shrinkage Recap

December 31, 2008 at 2:42 am | In Music Business | Leave a Comment
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This list is compiled mostly from Digital Music News headlines and Tech Crunch.  I wanted to put together a very quick time-line on the state of media/web industry shrinkage in Q4 2008.  While there was growth in small doses, the economy fallout served as an overarching force of destruction industry-wide.  These selections are ones that stuck out to me.  For a more complete list, try the links above.

  • Dec. 20 – Electronic Arts (EA) lays off 1,000.  Plans to shut down nine of its 50 facilities
  • Dec. 19 – Circuit City vacates 154 leases on stores earmarked for shutdown
  • Dec. 18 – Equity Music Group shuts down
  • Dec. 17 – Best Buy offers voluntary layoffs
  • Dec. 15 – Layoffs at Sandisk
  • Dec. 12 – Last.fm reaches 20% reduction (20 employees)
  • Dec. 10 – NPR downsizes 7% (64 jobs)
  • Dec. 9 – Layoffs at Sony (8000)
  • Dec. 9 – Fusion enters Bankruptcy
  • Dec. 8 – Alliance Entertainment announces downsizing
  • Dec. 5 – Real Networks (130) and Viacom (859) downsizing
  • Dec. 4 – NBC lays off 500
  • Dec. 4 – Pinnacle Distribution (UK) enters into Administration (Bankruptcy)
  • Dec. 3 – Brightcove lays off 15 (25%)
  • Dec. 2 – Borders reduces floorspace
  • Nov. 30 – Woolworths (UK entertainment distribution) finds itself in Administration (Bankruptcy)
  • Nov. 26 – Warner Music Group announces a “sell” stock rating  with little chance of recovery in the near future
  • Nov. 26 – Altantic records hits 51% digital.  Evidence of a deteriorating physical revenue stream
  • Nov. 26 – Radio Revenues slip 9%
  • Nov. 25 – Sirius XM stocks continue to plummet
  • Nov. 25 – Year-over-year album sales in Oct 2008 down 19.4%
  • Nov. 23 – Layoffs at Buzznet
  • Nov. 20 – First iPod sales decline projected
  • Nov. 20 – Live Nation stocks hit all-time low
  • Nov. 18 – Warner Music Group stocks hit all-time low
  • Nov. 16 – Layoffs at Siriux XM
  • Nov. 14 – Layoffs at Thumbplay (15 employees/20%)
  • Nov. 11 – Ticketmaster Earnings Down
  • Nov. 11 – Wired.com lays of 12
  • Nov. 11 – Virgin Mobile lays off 2200
  • Nov. 10 – Circuit City declares Bankruptcy
  • Nov. 10 – More layoffs at Sandisk and Sirius XM
  • Nov. 10 – Dell shelves it’s $100 mp3 player due to economic reasons
  • Nov. 9 – BitTorrent cuts 18 more employees (50% of workforce)
  • Nov. 7 – Circuit City lays off 800
  • Nov. 6 – EMI looks to outsource physical distribution after a disastrous quarter
  • Nov. 5 – Tweeter announces store closings
  • Nov. 4 – Plunging automobile sales produce less demand for Sirius XM dashboard models
  • Nov. 4 – Walmart threatens more shelf space shringage
  • Nov. 3 – Circuit City sheds 155 stores
  • Oct. – EA lays off 600
  • Oct. 30 – EMI posts annualized loss of 757 million pounds
  • Oct. 30 – Layoffs at eMusic
  • Oct. 29 – SonyBMG posts $57 million loss in Q2
  • Oct. 23 – Layoffs reach highest level since 2001
  • Oct. 22 – Ticketmaster Lays off 300 (5% of global workforce)
  • Oct. 22 – Layoffs at iMeem
  • Oct. 22 – Dell lays off 8900 (10%)
  • Oct 21 – Yahoo Lays off 1500
  • Oct 21 – Worldspace files for Bankruptcy
  • Oct 19 – Pandora lays off 14%
  • Oct. 16 – Sirius XM lays off 50
  • Oct. 14 – Layoff Documents emerge at Sirius XM
  • Oct. 3 – Ebay lays off 1300
  • Oct. 1 – Sony Ericson starts Layoffs (2000K jobs)

Web 2.0 New Marketing 4Ps

November 6, 2008 at 1:53 am | In Marketing, Music Business | Leave a Comment
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Just Passing this Along.  Another Wikidiscovery

Wikipedia Link

1.  Personalization:  Consumer customization of the product or service.  Opportunities expand and evolve with technology.

2.  Participation:  Consumer plays a role in the direction of the brand, product, service and is a by-product of the democratization of information.

3.  Peer-to-Peer:  “Active Consumer Communities” replacing “Passive Consumer Bases”.

4.  Predictive Modeling – Implementing algorithms that limit risk, maximize potential, and eliminate known problems.

4’s Company, 7’s a Crowd (Service Marketing)

November 5, 2008 at 3:41 am | In Marketing, Music Business | Leave a Comment
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I ran across these today as I was researching.  I’m sure this has been around a while, but it’s new to me, so I thought I’d throw it in.  Turns out Service Marketing (over Product Marketing) requires a few extra P’s.

Wikipedia Link

1.  People – mostly referring to people who come in contact with customers and how they can positively or negatively influence the situation

2.  Process – The actual process of providing a service or “How you go about providing your service”.  This immediately makes me think of the old Krispy Kreme stores where you are in an out very quick, but if you do get stuck waiting, your stuck salivating over the hot donuts rolling through the assembly.  Which Wich also comes to mind with there very unique way of taking orders and processing them

3.  Physical Evidence – Turning the Intangible service into something tangible or concrete.  Providing evidence of the service is important.  Wiki notes case studies, testimonials, and demonstrations.

Let’s apply this very quickly to the last blog entry about Digital Service Providers.  It’s more than just Product and it’s certainly more than Price.  These companies like Amazon are providing a service and execution of these 3 P’s will most likely determine their level of ultimate success.

Quote – Digital Media Digest

September 28, 2008 at 6:56 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a Comment
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“Just surviving the storm isn’t good enough.  We must build a better ship.”

Quote – Digital Media Digest

July 20, 2008 at 7:09 pm | In ...And I Quote | Leave a Comment
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“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.”

New Music Landscape – Good, Bad or Depends?

June 17, 2008 at 10:21 pm | In Music Business | Leave a Comment
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We all know the music industry landscape is changing. For better or for worse? Depends on who you ask, of course.

Ask the Fans?

The fans have it better than ever. There’s a multitude of free music outlets or quasi-free music outlets like the following, that are willing to eat the cost or risk involved to aggressively pursue customer acquisition.

Even the A La Carte storefronts like iTunes are giving away tens of thousands of downloads a week on the homepage and various genre pages in order lure in the fans under the ruse of music discovery. For some, like Lala, the price of admission is an email address; for Myspace, the price you pay is having to endure ridiculous advertising and a cluster of irritating templates because no one really knows how to program a myspace page and even the ones who do steer far away from the format; with iTunes, it’s upsell: A movie rental, A radio single, The latest Album or Music Video, and the latest have-to-have early release.

Ask the Artists?

The Artists have new distribution channels opened up to them on a daily basis. They can interact directly with their fans from their mobile phones. They can immediately upload footage from the road to their web real-estate. They can manage their own album sales through major vendors like iTunes via companies like CDBaby or TuneCore. They can even sell directly to their fans from their social network of choice (iMeem, Myspace, etc.).

Ask the Digital Retailers?

Of those mentioned above, it’s hard to say what the digital retailers would say about the new landscape other than the fact that opportunity is rampant and there is a ton of fight left in all of the major digital retailers. Even though iTunes just crossed their 5 Billion Song benchmark and it would be easy to say that Apple has seen windfall profits because of it, let’s back-step for a few seconds. iTunes is the only profitable, legitimate music retailer that exists right now and even while controlling roughly 90% of the market-share, they still seem to be struggling to make a profit at all. Who’s really making the profits? Who would say that the music industry has benefited them the most? The Credit Card Companies. Let’s run the numbers:

  • Single Song Download – $0.99
  • Label Wholesale Rate – 68 to 72 Percent
  • iTunes Estimated Revenue/Track – $0.29
  • Credit Card Company – 15 cents/transaction + 2 to 3 percent
  • iTunes Estimated Net Income/track – $0.11

11 cents/track is still Topline. Even with crafty accounting, and careful management of micro payments, it’s still not going to be much more than that and they haven’t paid the Label Relations staff, the Programmers, the IT team, the suits, or the electric bills…much less travel expenses and other necessary expenditures. It’s common knowledge that Apple makes it’s money on the hardware (the iPod), but what about companies like Napster, Passalong, Amazon, or Rhapsody who don’t have a successful hardware device and haven’t sold 5 Billion songs. Try to make a successful business from that. In spite of the challenges, it seems that all the players are still willing to duke it out until the very last blow. A few casualties of war, like SonyConnect, have already been taken to their grave, but the rest are still rounding up funding from somewhere and continue to press on.

Ask the Physical CD Retail Stores?

Ask them how in the world they plan on selling CDs that aren’t on the shelf. It only takes one consumer, one time to go into a store an come out empty handed before iTunes starts to look really good (especially considering gas prices). It’s a vicious cycle, where lack of innovation in a timely manner has caused much pain for the retailers and for the labels over the past 2 or 3 years. Protectionism has brought them nothing but further failures and a full recovery is out of the question at this point. Physical CD Sales are down 11% from this time last year and Digital is up 33%. Digital never could offset the drop of physical product and now that Digital Product gains are slowing down it’s looking more an more like the Industry as a whole will plateau at a point that is so much lower than ever expected…and this brings us to the labels…

Ask the Labels?

The labels have already suffered major blows to the headcount in 2008 and it doesn’t seem like the hemorrhaging will stop anytime soon. EMI is looking toward more shrinkage by the end of 2008, BMG wants out the Music Industry all of a sudden, and Sony, Universal, and Warner sure haven’t had it easy. In some ways, the loss of headcount is not necessarily bad. The labels have to trim the fat when and where necessary, and Digital Departments are able to pull in more revenue from more accounts with less people manning the ship, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that they shouldn’t ramp up the headcount in those areas, Most labels are struggling with quantifying the need and the value of Digital Employees. How many do you need? How effective are they? How much revenue or promotional value is coming from them versus the value being brought in by the Long Tail?  These are all valid concerns coming from the suits but the ones who are willing to invest the money right now will reap what they sow in the future when it comes to brand recognition, impact of catalog, and marketshare.

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