Showing posts with label CD trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CD trends. Show all posts
Friday, January 4, 2008
Does Music Industry "Get It"?
as someone who arrogantly and wrongly has accused whole industries of "not getting it" at points in the past, I never like to presume I understand executive thinking better than they themselves do.
What sometimes appears as "cluelessness" often has more to do with deliberate timing. and rational calculations about how long to let one revenue model atrophy before heating up a replacement revenue model that will cannibalize the older model.
So let me be charitable. Perhaps U.S. music executives do have a plan for changing their business model and packaging. Perhaps they are executing on that plan even now.
Album sales declined 9.5 percent last year, while digital song sales grew 45 percent, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Physical product sales were down 15 percent, including sales of "singles."
So maybe the issue is simply figuring out better ways to handle digital rights that aren't unfriendly to consumers who have paid for their music, nor damaging to copyright holders. It's a tough problem, to be sure.
And the problems extend far beyond copyright issues. As someone who has made a transition to iPod as my primary music playback system, and as someone whose PC-embedded hard drives need to be replaced once a year or so, the issue of storing and managing the music collection is a serious problem.
The reason, of course, is that each iPod syncs with just one hard drive. Lose that hard drive and one has two options: completely erase the contents of the iPod, or never change the data already on the iPod.
So now I have to take two paths to make sure the music isn't lost: store the copies on an external hard drive that hopefully "never" dies; and then keep the compact disk as well, since the external hard drive will ultimately fail, forcing me to restore or simply forget about the music stored on it.
As a simple music customer, this is a problem. Unless I have physical media backup, the music always is at risk of loss, for mechanical reasons. But keeping those CDs is not ideal, either. And the process of restoring lost music is time-consuming. So music storage "in the cloud" seems promising, at least to me.
Labels:
CD trends,
digital music,
iPod,
MP3
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Boomers Buy More than 1/3 of all Music
The trick is to get them to buy digital downloads or music subscriptions as well as CDs, which they buy in great quantities. More than 70 percent of the 76 million baby boomers in the U.S. report buying music in the past year, making it the most important buying segment for CDs and an increasingly important market for digital downloads, according to Russ Crupnick, entertainment industry analyst for The NPD Group.
Baby boomers born between 1941 and 1964 now account for a third of all music sales. About 68 percent buy CDs. About 26 percent purchase both digital music and CDs, while just six percent purchase only digital music downloads.
Nearly 40 percent of boomers report that they regularly visit the music retailers or the music section of retail stores.
NPD believes more attention to the boomer segment could yield $700 million to $1 billion in potential incremental sales of both CDs and digital downloads from baby boomers.
Nothing personal: Just don't put them on iPod billboards!! That would not, as they say, be a pretty picture
Labels:
CD trends,
digital music,
iPod,
iTunes,
music downloads,
music sales
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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