‘Free Isn’t Working …
p2pnet news view | P2P | Music:- Thirty-year music industry veteran Ted Cohen (right) once told a Hong Kong audience music “as a product” was dead.
The future of music was service-based, he said, and at the time, “senior executives at EMI were outraged by my perspective”.
That was three years ago but in 2009, “I still believe it’s the future,” he says, and, “we have to embrace it.”
In the Music Void, “Over the past three years, free was supposed to be the industry`s big savior, a great value for consumers, a magnet for advertisers,” he says, continuing »»»
MySpace Music, Spotify, iMeem and others touted free, on-demand streaming as the ultimate music experience, but it hasn`t exactly played out to anyone`s expectations, so what went wrong?
The main problem centers around the minimums, the economics just don`t work. A `mea culpa`, I was a big proponent of per-track minimum rates for both paid subscription and ad-supported services when I was at EMI. I WAS WRONG!
At the time, the concept of a penny-a-play seemed like a fair price and reasonable return for a consumer`s ability to hear any song they wanted whenever they wanted, and relatively easy to explain to a CFO who needed to be assured that there was real money possible from on-demand services. This concept was combined with the three-bucket scenario that worked like this:
For each consumer, the service was obligated to pay the greater of a) a penny per play, or b) a pro-rata share per label of a percentage of subscription fees, usually north of 50%, or c) a pro-rata share per label of a percentage of advertising revenues, usually north of 60%. While terms b) and c) are reasonable, a) just doesn`t scale, isn`t financially viable, and should probably go the way of the cassette single.
As I`ve outlined in many public forums, the penny-a-play model yields a $15.00 per month obligation by a service to labels, based on a use schedule of five hours per day, five days per week, four weeks per month. This for a service, such as Rhapsody, that retails for $13.00. In this model, the service`s biggest fan is their worst nightmare, they look for ways to get them to listen less. This is counter-intuitive to the current needs of the music industry.
They want fans to be listening to as much music as possible, discovering new artists is essential to a renaissance. But services are being crushed by per-track minimums. Even though they have dropped well below the penny level, they are still unsustainable. The press is full of stories that assert that success could truly kill Spotify, that their legion of loyal fans` listening habits are draining Spotify`s coffers. This is not how this should be playing out, Spotify and the others should be thriving.
To be fair, there`s a lot of history that got us to where we are today. Ten years ago most digital streaming deals were struck on a rev-share basis, then things went very badly. While this example is hypothetical, it`s very close to reality: Allegedly, a deal was struck with a major music portal, revenues from the streaming of music through their customized radio service to be split equally between labels and the service. Sounds fair to me.
However, when the first royalty statements came in from the portal, the labels` revenue share, in total, was $0.00. When queried, the portal replied that, although there was ad revenue generated around the music, there was no advertising on the music player page, hence no revenue to split! The deals were restructured asap to include minimums, even if the music wasn`t monetized. This evolved into the three-bucket approach described above, all of this because of some bad behavior and a general lack of mutual trust.
The current situation is made more brutal by the collapse of online advertising rates. The original penny-per-play needs a $10.00 CPM to break even, at .2 cents, a $2.00 CPM, etc. These aren`t sustainable in the current economic crisis.
At the same time, to add insult to injury, there doesn`t seem to be enough advertising inventory to make the ad-supported free service sufficiently annoying, driving fans to the potentially more lucrative paid service. Spotify has smartly addressed this situation by tying their iPhone and Android apps to the paid tier only. But there still doesn`t seem to be the conversion rate that everyone was hoping for.
Rights holders and creators need to be compensated, they need dependable revenue streams, they need to embrace the possibilities. Without viable digital services, revenues will continue to shrink, this result is inevitable.
“It seems that the only way to achieve success for both the services and the rights holders in our current economic situation is through deals based on revenue-sharing that are structured with complete transparency,” says Cohen, adding:
“We need to break the cycle of mistrust, be bold, share the risk, share the reward.”
(Cheers, Ted)
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Music Void – Free Isn`t Working, What`s Next?, November 23, 2009
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November 25th, 2009 at 1:31 pm
What a moron. Playback is not a service worth paying for (except perhaps in the case of a jukebox). Why pay someone to have their computer play an mp3 file and stream the result to your PC, when you might as well get your PC to play it back in the first place (and pay yourself the penny)?
These are the services in music that are worth paying good money for:
Songwriting
Composition, Scoring (etc.)
Singing (live or studio)
Instrumentation (live or studio)
Performing (live or studio)
Production, Mixing, Recording, etc. (live or studio)
Pressing, Manufacturing, aka ‘making a material copy’ (Vinyl, CD, memory chip)
The market for digital copies (or streams) is dead, but doctor fricking Frankenstein keeps on trying to send 50 megavolts of lightning into it to re-animate it. It won’t work.
There’s now a free market in services and the middleman mafiaa that is used to creaming off 99% of all the money that changes hands can’t get ACTA to put the file-sharers back in Pandora’s box. Those days have gone. We can now all make copies for nothing, and stream music for nothing. Why pay for it? Because it’s illegal to do it yourself? Fuck that.
The market that remains is in the services I’ve just listed, and it’s now a free market thanks to the Internet. So Ted Cohen is on the right track, but he’s got to realise that selling legal copies, licensed streams, or ‘licensing copyright’ in any other way is NOT A SERVICE (no work occurs!), just as DRM is not a means of letting the punter do what they want. Selling means ‘being given money for’, and money is equivalent to work, and work is exchanged for work, not liberty (that’s a ransom). So people are only going to exchange their labour for the musician’s labour. They aren’t going to exchange it (enthusiastically) for the publisher letting them have a tiny piece of their liberty back.
‘Rights holders’ (as in ‘the bastards holding our rights’) do not have any prospect of achieving success before them, except through ever more draconian measures to reduce the people’s cultural liberty. That is not going to go down too well.
So, for heck’s sake get a clue, and get back in the business of selling services that actually live up to the definition, i.e. involve work.
So, if you’re a singer, songwriter, composer, instrumentalist, performer, production engineer, or manufacturer of material copies, there’s a market for your WORK.
If you have a state granted monopoly that suspends the public’s right to perform or make copies of a published work, throw it in the bin, it’s a dud. Try working for once.
November 25th, 2009 at 3:04 pm
I believe he is partially wrong.
Only crappy “music” such as Jackson, Britneyslut and Madonacrap kind of stuff might qualify as a service since usually people can not listen to this kind of crap for very long.
Once the few seriously brainwashed nostalgic who keep listening to this for a little while longer die all these stuffs die with them and is forgotten.
But the good music remain for centuries and people want to keep it carefully.
It is amazing to see how the quality of music went way down from the 19th to the 20th century.
Most of the good music people where listening too during the 20th century was actually produced in the previous centuries or at least strongly inspired by it.
Once you let greedy corporate parasites control the art this is what you got: Crap!
November 25th, 2009 at 3:33 pm
If you pay publishers for copies that cost them nothing to make, they will focus on maximising the number of sales of those copies, i.e. making them copies of art that appeals to the lowest common denominator audience.
If on the other hand, you stop paying for copies (make your own), and instead pay the artists you like to produce the art you like, then you will get what you want.
Until that point, you’re going to have to put up with the airwaves and commercially supported channels being flooded by LoCoDed ‘content’, aka soma.
The solution is obvious (fans paying artists), but until people realise it, it’s going to take some time arriving.
November 25th, 2009 at 9:15 pm
free works for me its called utorrent lol
November 26th, 2009 at 5:57 am
yeah emule for me and http://www.sharerector.com
November 26th, 2009 at 8:47 am
Free isn’t working because of YOU. I have an embargo against you and won’t acquire your product from sites you control even for free.