Can the music business be saved

Ranked #33,316 in Business & Work, #457,413 overall | Donates to Acumen Fund

Is it all over?

Can the music business be saved?

A lot of people in the music business think it's all over. I think it's just getting started. Music isn't in trouble, just the status quo of the music business.

YOUR TURN!

Can the music business be saved

Loading Fetching blurbs now... please stand by

Yes, it can, if they hurry.

musicrevo says:

THE music business cannot be saved. The business of music can be saved, though, with the introduction of new techniques of monetization and new leadership. The value of physical music is essentially zero for my generation (what is it, Y or W now? I like the Myspace Generation better). Music business companies must attach more value to music, such as enriched personal connection, the promise of future tickets or merchandise in order to entice fans.

davidhooper says:

Yes, it's in better shape than it was. People have more control over music and there are tons of outlets to get the music out there. The only problem is that everybody and his brother thinks he is a musician now. Still gotta practice, guys. ;)

Jgunn says:

We have just got to keep abreast of the changes and open our minds to new strategies of making it work, and making a living!
Independance is good - I love Myspace and CDBaby

IanBND says:

This is from my "The CD is dead" Lens
http://www.squidoo.com/lensmaster/workshop/thecdisdead

As we march ever onwards toward the "Global Jukebox" the days of "owning" physical product like CD, DVD etc are numbered, the industry must develop an entirely new business model whereby having a "deal" for an artiste/band will mean that they are signed to someone who is capable and licensed to place their "commercially released" product into the "Global Jukebox"...at the moment it is pretty much a free for all as the ISP, Telecom, WiFi, Sattelite and Cable companies are all in a VHS/Betamax...CD/Minidisc type battle for the high ground.
Places to find FREE music and video like Myspace, YouTube, Last FM, et al will still exist and indeed be the breeding ground for major acts just as the live circuit still is.
BUT!
in order to get total anywhere/anytime streaming of your art on the "Global Jukebox" (where everything is correctly accredited, secure and paid for) will be as tough as getting a major record deal today and will be quality controlled by the music industry "big guns".
So, paradoxically, in the future, the only way to listen to the major artistes of the day, when YOU want to, will be to pay to stream their "virtual" material from the registered, accredited, "Global Jukebox" (which will come with video and some kind of "virtual" artwork concept)? as opposed to historically when the only way to was to pay for the physical record/tape and play it yourself!

fefe says:

I think more artists will go the Myspace + CDBaby route and not have a need for major record labels who sometimes give us the meatball sundae. I would love to see a Squidoo music project!

pyle_mountain says:

Some of the music business needs to go in the tank. :) Ultimately, the success of the music business depends on whether the "folks in charge" are willing to adapt to the "new way of things"...so it can be saved if they're willing....

AMK says:

The problem for many of who are not teenagers anymore is that we have heard all the good music and know the origional artists. Young people listen to copies of there work. By hiphop, Rap and techno artists. Lets not forget this never ending line of coloured feemales who can,t sing. (Ok maybe one in a million can?) I beleave that if people today stop listening to todays music then there is a chance. And I hope they do?

ideasbymarz says:

I think it can be saved but it needs artist with more talent, less techno and better songs

supercibor says:

Quality is the salvation key to the music business.
That means better musical education not only for new talents but for the public in general. It's important to create a qualitative musical awareness in order to save the industry and at the same time let the public decide what music they wanted and not by the imposition of the musical industry.
The big question in how they artists are going to make money if everybody downloads their music for free which in a way is good promotion for old and new artists.
This sould be solved by some kind of clever advertising that would share the profits with the artists.

tshirtfort says:

The music business needs to throw their weight behind GOOD bands. The kind that make songs that grabs you and will not let go. Not the one where you download it and it's ok-ish, I am talking about a song so good that you listen it to 7 or 8 times right off the bat, before you head over to amazon to see if the whole CD is as good as that one, and to see if their whole catalog is as good as that cd, then you head to their web page to see when they are playing near you. Maybe if the music industry stops concentrating only promoting stuff for 8 to 9 year olds like Hanna Montana, and focuses on true music fans it will salvage itself. Or not. Whatever.

timelsinga says:

I agree. Times changed. The business have to come up with some new ideas to get their profits. The music is now an attention getter. The sales are coming elsewhere, at least they should. The more attention you have, the more interesting you are for brands to join your music/image. And attention isn't so hard to get with the Internet and the old media(for instance through Myspace) if you're clever enough. And if the music is special enough offcourse!!

ChrisMcCrory says:

The music business itself isn't what is in jeopardy. It's the delivery system. There will always be a business with music, as with everything else. It will look different. And it should. Tight-grip control, over anything, is going away. So, the answer is yes, it can be saved, and no, it can't (in it current form).

bdkz says:

I think that the music industry is in transition...It's not over just becoming something else. Seth makes some great observations and I think he's Spot On!

KathleenLisson says:

I agree with Seth, music can profit off of me if they sell me the chance to identify with the artists I love through souvenirs, increased access, etc.
Kathleen Lisson

jdumbrille says:

Yes, but not the old music business.
New business = self employment.

levikujala says:

It will be saved by individual bands who not only possess the creativity and drive to make music that people want to buy but they'll also possess the intelligence and business skills (also known as creativity) to make a great living. (My band in three years...smirk)

So I agree that "It's just getting started". My band has never had as much opportunity as we have right now. It's almost tough to sleep at night because my next genius idea is always just right around the corner!

No way, it's over!

draik says:

Forget about it. Move on.

tunghaichuan says:

The music industry should not be saved. It is archaic and exists only to fleece the artists out of money that is rightfully theirs.

In the past the music industry provided several things: promotion and marketing, production and recording facilities, and contacts.

With the increasing power of the computer and DAWs (digital audio workstations) musicians can learn to record their own music which is indistiguishable from that which is recorded by a recording studio.

The internet takes the place of the distribution and contacts. So what is left? Why should musicians make record company execs rich while simultaneously being bankrupted.

The music industry just doesn't make sense in a digital world.

Talldarkmystery says:

Does it even need saving?
Great music was around for hundreds of years before there was a "music industry" and great music will still be created once this current model no longer exists.

JeffRozic says:

No! But there's plenty of room for a NEW music business that's a lot more like music BEFORE the music business. Music is about the song, the sound, the words and the performance! I love what Dave Matthews points out- it was never really about "the album" until the last several decades...but it has always been about all of those other things. No predictions on what the new business will look like, although clearly iTunes is leading the way (since the labels decided it was a better strategy to sue college students and the occasional 12 year-old).

bruceprokopets says:

There is no "new guard" to replace the old guard in the biz. Musicians will become more independent and soon no one will even remember the old model, much less try to save it.

cutshaw says:

Music isn't an industry, it's a hobby. Musicians who love music and create good stuff will find it easier to make a living without the music industry. They will go direct to listeners, but not many of them will get filthy rich.

The music industry has also made money out of attractive youngsters who can sing. They will still make money out of attractive youngsters, but not by selling recordings of them.

Herve-Maas says:

Not in it's current form and mindset

thebije says:

Yes, the old way is almost over.

 

New Link List

The original music lessons post

The original post is here.
Things you can learn from the music business (as it falls apart)

The first rule is so important, it's rule 0:

0. The new thing is never as good as the old thing, at least right now.

Soon, the new thing will be better than the old thing will be. But if you wait until then, it's going to be too late. Feel free to wax nostalgic about the old thing, but don't fool yourself into believing it's going to be here forever. It won't.

1. Past performance is no guarantee of future success
Every single industry changes and, eventually, fades. Just because you made money doing something a certain way yesterday, there's no reason to believe you'll succeed at it tomorrow.

The music business had a spectacular run alongside the baby boomers. Starting with the Beatles and Dylan, they just kept minting money. The co-incidence of expanding purchasing power of teens along with the birth of rock, the invention of the transistor and changing social mores meant a long, long growth curve.

As a result, the music business built huge systems. They created top-heavy organizations, dedicated superstores, a loss-leader touring industry, extraordinarily high profit margins, MTV and more. It was a well-greased system, but the key question: why did it deserve to last forever?

It didn't. Yours doesn't either.

2. Copy protection in a digital age is a pipe dream
If the product you make becomes digital, expect that the product you make will be copied.

There's a paradox in the music business that is mirrored in many industries: you want ubiquity, not obscurity, yet digital distribution devalues your core product.

Remember, the music business is the one that got in trouble for bribing disk jockeys to play their music on the radio. They are the ones that spent millions to make (free) videos for MTV. And yet once the transmission became digital, they understood that there's not a lot of reason to buy a digital version (via a cumbersome expensive process) when the digital version is free (and easier).

Most items of value derive that value from scarcity. Digital changes that, and you can derive value from ubiquity now.

The solution isn't to somehow try to become obscure, to get your song off the (digital) radio. The solution is to change your business.

You used to sell plastic and vinyl. Now, you can sell interactivity and souvenirs.

3. Interactivity can't be copied
Products that are digital and also include interaction thrive on centralization and do better and better as the market grows in size (consider Facebook or Basecamp).

Music is social. Music is current and everchanging. And most of all, music requires musicians. The winners in the music business of tomorrow are individuals and organizations that create communities, connect people, spread ideas and act as the hub of the wheel... indispensable and well-compensated.

4. Permission is the asset of the future
For generations, businesses had no idea who their end users were. No ability to reach through the record store and figure out who was buying that Rolling Stones album, no way to know who bought this book or that vase.

Today, of course, permission is an asset to be earned. The ability (not the right, but the privilege) of delivering anticipated, personal and relevant messages to people who want to get them. For ten years, the music business has been steadfastly avoiding this opportunity.

It's interesting though, because many musicians have NOT been avoiding it. Many musicians have understood that all they need to make a (very good) living is to have 10,000 fans. 10,000 people who look forward to the next record, who are willing to trek out to the next concert. Add 7 fans a day and you're done in 5 years. Set for life. A life making music for your fans, not finding fans for your music.

The opportunity of digital distribution is this:

When you can distribute something digitally, for free, it will spread (if it's good). If it spreads, you can use it as a vehicle to allow people to come back to you and register, to sign up, to give you permission to interact and to keep them in the loop.

Many authors (I'm on that list) have managed to build an entire career around this idea. So have management consultants and yes, insurance salespeople. Not by viewing the spread of digital artifacts as an inconvenient tactic, but as the core of their new businesses.

5. A frightened consumer is not a happy consumer.
I shouldn't have to say this, but here goes: suing people is like going to war. If you're going to go to war with tens of thousands of your customers every year, don't be surprised if they start treating you like the enemy.

6. This is a big one: The best time to change your business model is while you still have momentum.
It's not so easy for an unknown artist to start from scratch and build a career self-publishing. Not so easy for her to find fans, one at a time, and build an audience. Very, very easy for a record label or a top artist to do so. So, the time to jump was yesterday. Too late. Okay, how about today?

The sooner you do it, the more assets and momentum you have to put to work.

7. Remember the Bob Dylan rule: it's not just a record, it's a movement.
Bob and his handlers have a long track record of finding movements. Anti-war movements, sure, but also rock movies, the Grateful Dead, SACDs, Christian rock and Apple fanboys. What Bob has done (and I think he's done it sincerely, not as a calculated maneuver) is seek out groups that want to be connected and he works to become the connecting the point.

By being open to choices of format, to points of view, to moments in time, Bob Dylan never said, "I make vinyl records that cost money to listen to." He understands at some level that music is often the soundtrack for something else.

I think the same thing can be true for chefs and churches and charities and politicians and makers of medical devices. People pay a premium for a story, every time.

8. Don't panic when the new business model isn't as 'clean' as the old one
It's not easy to give up the idea of manufacturing CDs with a 90% gross margin and switching to a blended model of concerts and souvenirs, of communities and greeting cards and special events and what feels like gimmicks. I know.

Get over it. It's the only option if you want to stay in this business. You're just not going to sell a lot of CDs in five years, are you?

If there's a business here, first few in will find it, the rest lose everything.

9. Read the writing on the wall.
Hey, guys, I'm not in the music business and even I've been writing about this for years. I even started a record label five years ago to make the point. Industries don't die by surprise. It's not like you didn't know it was coming. It's not like you didn't know who to call (or hire).

This isn't about having a great idea (it almost never is). The great ideas are out there, for free, on your neighborhood blog. Nope, this is about taking initiative and making things happen.

The last person to leave the current record business won't be the smartest and he won't be the most successful, either. Getting out first and staking out the new territory almost always pays off.

10. Don't abandon the Long Tail
Everyone in the hit business thinks they understand the secret: just make hits. After all, if you do the math, it shows that if you just made hits, you'd be in fat city.

Of course, the harder you try to just make hits, the less likely you are to make any hits at all. Movies, records, books... the blockbusters always seem to be surprises. Surprise hit cookbooks, even.

Instead, in an age when it's cheaper than ever to design something, to make something, to bring something to market, the smart strategy is to have a dumb strategy. Keep your costs low and go with your instincts, even when everyone says you're wrong. Do a great job, not a perfect one. Bring things to market, the right market, and let them find their audience.

Stick to the knitting has never been more wrong. Instead, find products your customers want. Don't underestimate them. They're more catholic in their tastes than you give them credit for.

11. Understand the power of digital
Try to imagine something like this happening ten years ago: An eleven-year-old kid wakes up on a Saturday morning, gets his allowance, then, standing in his pajamas, buys a Bon Jovi song for a buck.

Compare this to hassling for a ride, driving to the mall, finding the album in question, finding the $14 to pay for it and then driving home.

You may believe that your business doesn't lend itself to digital transactions. Many do. If you've got a business that doesn't thrive on digital, it might not grow as fast as you like... Maybe you need to find a business that does thrive on digital.

12. Celebrity is underrated
The music business has always created celebrities. And each celebrity has profited for decades from that fame. Frank Sinatra is dead and he's still profiting. Elvis is still alive and he's certainly still profiting.

The music business has done a poor job of leveraging that celebrity and catching the value it creates. Many businesses now have the power to create their own micro-celebrities. These individuals capture attention and generate trust, two critical elements in growing profits.

13. Value is created when you go from many to few, and vice versa
The music business has thousands of labels and tens of thousands of copyright holders. It's a mess.

find the rest.

What does Bob have to say?

(sometimes nsfw language, but always provocative)

Loading Fetching RSS feed... please stand by

Five books to consider

Loading

by

sethgodin

Seth Godin is the bestselling author of 13 books. He writes about marketing, the spread of ideas and managing both customers and employees with respec... more »

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!