Welcome to p2pnet.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
REGISTER | LOGIN
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
Reviews
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Products
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Scroogle Search: 
Search
 
Web p2pnet   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
    Sponsored by
Frostwire
 
p2pnet
 


mp3rocket
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code

Vivendi’s answer to file sharing

p2p news / p2pnet: France’s Vivendi Universal, the world’s largest record label and a member of the Big Four Organized Music gang, believes it has at least a partial answer to p2p file sharing:

Get music lovers to buy more CDs by pricing back-catalogue CDs like download versions.

Starting in September, Vivendi ’s Universal Music Group is, “rolling out three new tiers of CD packaging in Europe, ranging from lush deluxe editions down to bare-bones cardboard sleeves that are designed to compete with albums sold online,” says Reuters.

“Despite the hype about online music stores like iTunes, the huge majority of music is still sold on CDs, usually inside the ‘jewel boxes’ that have been around for decades.”

Indeed, CD collections are still the primary source of content with music downloaders, says a recent study which states:

“Nearly half (44%) of the content stored on MP3 players is ripped from the owner`s personal CD collection, and another 6% is ripped from others` CD collections.”

The most significant change in Vivendi’s latest marketing scheme, “is the introduction of a ‘basic’ CD for older recordings”. The company will, “wrap the album in a card case with no sleeve notes,” says The Guardian Unlimited.

“Universal expects the basic CDs, which it calls the record equivalent of paperbacks, to sell for €9.99 (£6.92, about $18.38) – in line with the average cost of a chart album download. More than 3m ‘basic’ albums were sold when Universal tested the format on European markets last year.”

The story has Max Hole, executive vp of marketing and A&R at Universal’s international division, saying, “There are lots of really good signs that the industry has a future thanks to digital, but we must not lose sight of the fact that 90% of what we sell is physical goods. For over 20 years we have been selling the same standard package.”

Vivendi expects the “deluxe CDs” to sell for an average of 19.99 euros ($25.61), “the standard for 14.99 euros and the basic for 9.99 euros,” says Reuters, adding:

“The basic package will be used to stimulate sales for catalog albums that have been on sale for a while, ’similar to a paperback book,’ Hole said.

“Universal Music expects digital sales to double to about 10 percent of its sales this year, with digital making up 25 percent of revenues by 2010.”

Does this mean Vivendi will soon drop out of the Organized Music cartel and abandon the practice of trying to sue its own customers into buying grossly over-priced, low quality digital downloads?

And will it now sell CDs which aren’t polluted with Customer Control DRM systems?

Don’t hold your breath.

Also See:
ReutersCD format gets a “reboot” from Universal Music, July 5, 2006
recent studyCD rips main mp3 player content, June 29, 2006
The Guardian UnlimitedUniversal prices CDs to match downloads, July 5, 2006


p2pnet newsfeeds for your site.
rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss
Mobile – http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php

HOME

2 Responses to “Vivendi’s answer to file sharing”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    Oh, I thought is was gonna be like 5 bucks. This sounds like more over-priced hype to me.

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    I haven’t bought a CD in over a year, it looks like prices have gone up as from what I recall CD’s sold for $10-$18 in the music store, with most averaging out around 12 or 13 bucks.
    “Vivendi expects the “deluxe CDs” to sell for an average of 19.99 euros ($25.61)”
    What exactly is a “deluxe” CD? 25 bucks seems like a lot of money. If CD prices have gone up maybe that is a contributing factor in the music industry’s “declining sales” campaign. I don’t think a couple of bucks discount and a crappy package(why can’t they just discount the price?) is going to get anyone running to buy cds. I wonder what kind of crack those guys are smoking?

Leave a Reply

ONLY items referencing the post at hand, please. No links to personal sites, no personal attacks, trolling, freebie advertising, or off-topic posts. Thanks. And Cheers!

    Sponsored by
tek savvy