Music execs stressed over free streaming

Free music streaming services have replaced piracy as the chief concern for the ever-struggling music industry

By Joab Jackson, IDG News Service |  Business, streaming music 14 comments

Free streaming services are replacing piracy as the chief culprit of music industry revenue loss in the minds of fiscally frustrated executives, if a number of panel discussions at a New York digital music conference are any indication.

People are listening to more music than ever before, but they are paying less for it, noted Russ Crupnick, a president at the analyst firm NPD Group, speaking at the Digital Music Forum East conference, held Thursday in New York.

Crupnick noted that the average consumer listened to music 19.7 hours a week in 2010, up from 18.5 hours per week in 2009. But at the same time, consumers have been buying less music. In 2010, only 50 percent of consumers purchased music, by either buying a CD or paying for a downloadable music track, down from 70 percent in 2006.

"We have lost 20 million buyers in just five years," Crupnick said. Moreover, only about 14 percent of buyers account for 56 percent of revenue for the recording industry.

"Consumers have flipped us the bird," Crupnick concluded, adding that the lost sales has thus far not been made up yet by other forms of revenue, such as concerts or merchandise sales.

The music industry has long expected that sales of music CDs would decline, as consumers move their libraries to computers and portable listening devices. Digital sales, however, have not made up for the shortfall on CD sales over the past decade. Last year, digital sales accounted for about 23 percent of all music sales, which is up only modestly from 14 percent in 2006, Crupnick said.

"We never really made the digital transformation," he said.

The reasons behind this sales decline have been routinely debated at this conference over the past decade, the panelists noted. In years past, music executives put the blame on digital music piracy -- the easy and free sharing of music with Internet software like BitTorrent -- for eroding sales of recorded music.

At this year's conference, however, concern centered on the growing influence of free streaming Internet services, such as Pandora, MySpace, Spotify and even YouTube. Music listeners deploy YouTube as a streaming service, picking the songs they want to hear and minimizing the browser window, noted Eric Garland, who is the CEO and founder of BigChampagne, a media tracking company.

"We've given consumers an awful lot of options for free music, which they've certainly taken advantage of," Crupnick said.

While recording companies do get some revenue from free streaming services, it is a fraction of what they get from selling a digital track. Garland estimated that a record company gets only US$.0001 for each time a user plays one of its songs, which is far less than the average of $1.00 a track that is collected when a digital copy of a song is sold.

And while users seem to have gravitated towards free streaming services, such as the online streams offered by their local radio stations, they aren't willing to pay $10.00 or $15.00 a month for a paid streaming service, such as Rhapsody's ad-free paid subscription.

In the U.S. only about 2 million users pay for streaming music services, said Ted Cohen, who is a managing partner for digital entertainment consulting firm Tag Strategic. And the number of paid subscriptions has largely been flat over the past few years, with about 5 percent of the Internet users worldwide paying for a streaming service, Crupnick added.

Microsoft offers a streaming music service for its xBox users priced at $14.99 a month, including 10 free MP3 tracks a month. Customer interest, however, "hasn't been what we hoped for," said Christina Calio, who is a director of music relationships at Microsoft.

"I think we need to demand more from consumers," Crupnick said. "Why are we being so liberal? Why aren't we talking about asking for more money for the product?"

The music industry could take a lesson from Hollywood, Crupnick suggested. He noted how the Hollywood studios have deliberately withheld their products in certain formats to spur revenue. He held up a DVD package of the 2010 movie "Inception," explaining that consumers could either purchase a deluxe Blu-ray packaged edition of the movie for $75, purchase a DVD for around $14.99, or watch it as a pay-per-view or rent it from a video store for about $4. Consumers, however, could not watch it for free on an existing Netflix streaming service. He encouraged the music industry to create a similar form of "artificial scarcity."

14 comments

    Anonymous 1 year ago
    I was tired of the current fad, now 20+ years old, so started writing my own music. I know what I like, and its not the current offerings. Though there is still college radio. Nobody misses steamships and the Pony Express. Do they?
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    These corporate slugs have been milking us for decades all while riding the gravy train and they wonder why we are giving them the "middle finger". Perhaps if they want to stay in business then they will seek out legitimate talent that stands on own merit instead.As it stands now... almost all the "big time" musicians that I want to see live are either dead or have retired and the remaining quality artists live lives of obscurity.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    People with the bad habit of humming a song should take the blame too. I mean would you go buy a song once you heard some one badly trying to reproduce it in a subway or pub?
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    I also think that Napster and the music industry could have saved themselves if Napster had taken the simple step of adding a "buy album" link to their interface that opened a link to the album's page on amazon.com.If they had done that, then anyone wanting to buy an album (say as a gift for example), would reflexively go to Napster to listen to it, then click to amazon when they decided to purchase it. The result would have been that by the time the music industry went to shut Napster down, a majority of all music sales in the world would have been click-throughs from Napster. It would have been incredibly glaringly obvious where all industry sales were originating from, and if they did shut down Napster, they would have seen their sales collapse in direct proportion to the eliminated click-throughs. They might have been afraid to do it, and both might have continued to prosper.This was a missed opportunity on Napster's part.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    These bastards did it to themselves when they went after and killed Napster. Everyone and their mother was using Napster to DL songs, and instead of co-opting it, and setting up a subscription service or charging 50 cents a song, they killed it, dispersing the audience, and setting into the minds off consumers that music should be "free". When looking for someone to blame, look into the mirror.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    Record companies are going away. What exactly are they doing to deserve their overwhelming cut of the pie? Advertising? When bands can record and market themselves via the internet, what is the RIAA bringing to the table? The ability to sue their customers.Really?????That is the best idea all of your executives could come up with????Really????If so, your business needs to die a long and painful death. I only buy CD's from the band at live shows. They get a much bigger cut of the price. Fvck the RIAA!!
    Anonymous 1 year ago in reply to Anonymous
    All corporations and business model markets have a life cycle.First a company is run by creatives and innovators who invent the productThen a company is run by sales and marketing who grow the market for the productThen a company is run by accountants because the limit to growth is cost when the market can't grow any more.Then in the terminal, near-death phase, a company is run by lawyers and politicians because NONE OF THEIR PRODUCTS HAS ENOUGH VALUE TO BE SOLD LEGITIMATELY ON THEIR OWN MERITS AT ANY PRICE IMAGINE OR NEEDED FOR CORPORATE SURVIVAL and it becomes necessary to shift the playing field through law and politics to coerce sales via lawyers and politicians, or, best case, using lawyers to liquidate and eliminate the business model and those anachronistically obsessed with it from the face of the economy for good (riddance).It is plainly obvious that >90% of the RIAA by volume or revenue is in this terminal phase. They are the undead zombie businesses who don't even know they are already dead and as a result are mostly the problem rather than any part of the solution.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    On top of the obvious dirth of decent music there has also been a complete lack of coordination with the retailers.Where I live, second largest city in the country, there is almost no shops left selling music titles. I used to occasionally look around the ones that did exist but never found much I liked so only ever purchase a few titles in ten years of looking - 1990's.If there was a system of browsing *all* titles and being able to get the CD from the local shop the next day I would have made great use of that.Sadly, even now, Amazon, iTunes, whatever, nothing has that complete list. And, worse, I can't get the uncompressed version without waiting for international postage that usually ends with a smashed CD.I still have the old stuff on CD but nothing new for a long time now.Signed,Long since stopped buying/acquiring any music.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    What's the core business of the music exec? Blaming the customer. Whadda dey gonna do, sue youtube now?They haven't been doing what they should be doing, so I won't shed a single tear to see them all fired and their corporations bankrupt.They haven't been innovating, not in how they deliver music, and not in the music itself. What did they do for technology innovation? Sue napster out of existence. They haven't been investing in new talent, but kept on rehashing old acts and one-shots covering old songs. This was bound to bite them in the ass. They knew this would happen at least a decade ago, but nobody dared do anything about it. Rather reap some more golden eggs and complain they really can't afford the goose feed. Shyeah right. NO SYMPATHY FROM ME.
    Anonymous 1 year ago in reply to Anonymous
    Suing a grandmother dancing with a baby?! Chased me to find and support local artists. Haven't looked back.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    Music execs somehow cannot see the simplest of facts. Streaming internet music is EXACTLY the same as FM and AM radio. We may have a few more functions, but it is still just free music that comes free into our homes and outdoors. We still buy some of the music, but revenues are down. Yes, but so are their expenses. A digital purchase does not include a disc, packaging, and printed lyrics and as it was in the past, sometimes much more. For them to sell you a digital copy, all of these expenses are gone. The sale is essentially expense free. So, revenues could plummet, but profit should still be fine.Perhaps the real problem lies in the quality of the current product. Like many others, I am dismayed by the current music offerings. The music industry used to find and promote at least one new kind of music every 5 to 10 years or so. But we are in a new music drought. There has been nothing new in almost 20 years. Rap is over 20 years old. New Country is just rock/country fusion. Alternative, new wave, punk, are all over 20 years old. There are lots of fusion bands. But even the fusion phase is getting really long in the tooth. I am sure there are artists out there that are making new music. But the music execs have created a system that never lets that come to light.That new music is probably out there on the internet, but without the music industry’s advertising budget, it remains mostly unknown. I want my new music! It is time for the music industry to stop navel gazing, and find it before they suffer the fate of buggy whip manufactures.
    Anonymous 1 year ago
    They still don't get it. It's not because music is being streamed free, it's because most of the new music they produce now is crap. No one wants to buy crap, now that we have the means to make more and better choices. Geeze, executives are Durrhh!!!
    Anonymous 1 year ago in reply to Anonymous
    Chris Wright, the chairman of the Chrysalis media group, yesterday attacked the Pop Idol culture that dominates the UK music industry for stifling talent and creating an appetite for "disposable" music.The founder of Chrysalis, the radio, music, books and TV production group, lamented the fixation that major record companies had on short-term market share, which he said was damaging the industry.http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/disposable-music-is-killing-our-industry-650749.html

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