Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
News

Report: Music Labels Must Adapt to Net

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Report: Music Labels Must Adapt to Net


In order to succeed on the Net, major music labels must quit fighting the digital music revolution and implement their own digital distribution model to support Learn how SugarCRM will improve your business. Free Trial. Click here. single-track purchases, according to a report released Thursday by the Gartner Group.

With the days of consumers being willing to purchase an entire CD for one or two tracks now gone, the Stamford, Connecticut-based research firm advises record companies to establish a business model that will allow consumers to go to a site and sample music from an old or new CD and decide on a track-by-track basis what they want to purchase.

Click here for LiveOps

Less is More

"With technological developments, such as MP3 file formats, consumers are becoming more familiar with digital music formats and 'ripping' CDs," said P.J. McNealy, senior industry analyst for Gartner's e-Business Services group. "Many of these consumers don't want a full album but instead are looking for three to four tracks from a CD."

In order to make money in the age of digital downloads, record labels need to either establish their own music portals or sign licensing agreements with as many Internet distributors as possible and then find a way to sell single tracks off CDs.

The problem with allowing consumers to purchase single tracks is that in order for the labels to recoup the same amount of money as if a consumer purchased a full CD, consumers would have to be charged up to $5 (US$) per track. Unfortunately for the labels, Gartner believes that consumers would only be willing to pay $0.99 to $1.99 per track.

Alternative Approaches

One way that the labels could overcome this obstacle is to develop a business model that is the inverse of the traditional model -- where someone buys a hard copy CD and then rips the CD into digital format.

One suggestion by Gartner is a new model that would allow consumers to purchase the full digital download first and then receive a hard copy CD. Consumers would have the choice of paying only for the digital download or paying for the digital download and the CD.

"It will be up to the record labels to counterbalance their needs with the demands of the consumers and then to distribute their content through effective Internet channels," McNealy said. "If a Napster-like or peer-to-peer solution with DRM (digital rights management) were offered, it would be palatable to all content owners and a likely legal solution."

Labels Listening

There are signs that the major labels are heeding Gartner's advice and developing their own digital distribution models. Seagram's Universal Music Group announced Thursday that it is expanding its digital distribution format, Bluematter.

Universal launched Bluematter two weeks ago with trials of about 60 songs from artists such as opera tenor Luciano Pavarotti, jazz guitarist George Benson and pop band Blink 182. The company will expand Bluematter to thousands of tracks over the next couple of months.

Universal does not have its own music portal, but is making Bluematter-formatted songs available through selected affiliate sites, including RollingStone.com and Music.com.

Sony has announced plans to resurrect its popular Walkman brand for MP3s. The MC Walkman, one of several new versions that Sony is rolling out, is designed to use Sony's MiniDisc format but will include a digital-to-analog converter.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Lori Enos


Talkback: Join the Discussion.
Re: Major Music Labels vs. A Sustainable Music Distribution Model
serenity
Posted 2002-05-30
As the proliferation of potential digital music distribution hopefuls (Major Labels) enter our ...
Re: Study: E-Gift Market Hinges on Reliability
Silvia
Posted 2001-06-05
"Gift spiral" is certainly a key process to acquire new customers with low costs.. ...
Re: Study: E-Gift Market Hinges on Reliability
Moshe
Posted 2001-06-17
"Gift spiral" is certainly a key process to acquire new customers with low costs.. ...
See Related Stories
Universal Music Leaps into Digital Downloads (08/02/00)
EMusic.com Unveils Subscription Plan (07/24/00)
Report: File Sharing Boosts Music Sales (07/21/00)
Music Industry Seeks Napster Shutdown (06/13/00)
Music Downloaders Willing To Pay (06/08/00)
Online Music Debate Storms Capitol Hill (05/25/00)
Fee-Based Music Takes Hold on the Net (05/04/00)
AOL Embarrassed By Free MP3 Music Software (03/16/00)
MP3.com Countersues Recording Industry (02/08/00)
IBM and Record Giants Test Online 'Music Store' (02/03/00)
E-Commerce Sending Shock Waves Through Music Industry (01/28/00)

More by Lori Enos

One Year Ago: Amazon Loses Round in 1-Click Patent Case
February 15, 2002
The setback in the patent case may slow the revenue stream Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos was expecting from the company's patented 1-Click technology.
One Year Ago: E-tail Invades the Real World
February 12, 2002
The latest step of the dot-com move toward brick-and-clicks is the Internet kiosk placed in a real-world store. Surprisingly, in-store Web kiosks have some advantages over at-home online shopping.
One Year Ago: NBCi Cuts 150 Jobs Amid Net Ad Downturn
January 18, 2002
The layoffs at NBCi are the second round of staff cuts announced by the company.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Free eBook: Secure Your Datacenter
Click here to download today.
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network