Curated by: Luigi Canali De Rossi
 


Sunday, October 14, 2007

Music Publishing: Make Your Music Profitable By Leveraging Events Context And Relationships

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As music sells increasingly more through concerts than through CDs, content superstars, like Madonna and the Rolling Stones, show that serious revenues can be built around events, without music publishers, record companies or labels and without the need to push pricey locked CDs to your own fans.

concert_id3125031_size485.jpg
Photo credit: Yuri Arcurs

The emerging music content economy lives increasingly around monetizing contextually and not by focusing on selling individual locked replicas of its recorded music artifact. In fact in many cases innovative content producers are giving out their main dish for next to nothing while banking on contextual premium services and products that are very relevant to their audiences.

In one way or another, this is also what I do here at Master New Media. I write and publish high-quality, valuable content for free, while monetizing contextually by putting in touch my readers with those companies that would want to have a conversation with them.

The music industry itself seems now set for some major evolutionary changes in this same direction, as popular rockstars choose to release their records for free or next to free, some allowing buyers to even set their price and some having already well understood that today, to be a successful music band, one that plays what it likes and that makes enough money to pay all of its musicians, does not need a record company to publish them anymore.

This is the real news.

Content and Media Business expert John Blossom, has written a truly fantastic short article on this and one that seriously deserves all of your attention and insight.

As he writes:

"Music publishers have been squirming desperately to keep consumers from dropping their habit of purchasing copyrighted content from them with lawsuits, DRM ... but sadly they have been unable to overcome the key factor in today's media: distribution is dead and relationships in the right venues rule.

...

We are seeing artists whose primary value comes to life in venues in which they can develop relationships with audiences discovering that music publishers are failing to help them build those relationships effectively in an era of Web-based content distribution."

Can you see the revolution coming? If not, you should really look at the links and references in this article and evaluate the data for yourself.

If you are into being an independent music artist, an event organizer this is a vision that you should embrace while stopping your money wasting on old regime music companies offering you lots of promises for selling your CDs but no events where to play. Better yet, if you are working for the existing recording and music publishing industries, may help you get a glimpse of the future you should be painting or provide you with the final puzzle piece to see what's really coming.

In any case, this is a "must-read" for anyone looking at how the value of music content in context offers lots more opportunities for monetization than locking the same content inside rounded plastic discs.

 

Venues Rule: Madonna Signals Content Superstars Can Build Events Revenues Without Publishers

madonna-380.jpg
Madonna - Photo credit: Wallpaperbase

by John Blossom

There are any number of people highlighting pop music superstar Madonna's jilting of her contract with Warner Bros. Records in favor of events producer Live Nation, the loudest of recent label signoffs that include pop bands Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails.

Music publishers have been squirming desperately to keep consumers from dropping their habit of purchasing copyrighted content from them with lawsuits, DRM and any other types of mechanism they can manage, but sadly they have been unable to overcome the key factor in today's media: distribution is dead and relationships in the right venues rule.

Rolling-Stones-Mick-Jagger-23-aug-07-eci65.280907052549-150.jpg
Singer Mick Jagger of the The Rolling Stones performs during a concert at the O2 Arena, London, 23 August 2007 - Photo credit: AFP - Yahoo News

To me the key factor leading up to this move was no doubt the bellweather Rolling Stones tour that recently completed with a record USD 500 million-plus in the bank. When creaking, croaking rock stars can pocket half an extra-large by filling arenas with little more than name recognition, why do they need allegiances to plastic disk distributors to reach people who love them?

I am reminded of our definition of content posted on Wikipedia in this regard:

"Information and experiences created by individuals, institutions and technology to benefit audiences in contexts that they value."

Events are content by any measure under this definition.

We are seeing artists whose primary value comes to life in venues in which they can develop relationships with audiences discovering that music publishers are failing to help them build those relationships effectively in an era of Web-based content distribution.

By focusing on protecting the unit sales of copyrighted materials music publishers lost the opportunity to negotiate a compelling position for themselves in the relationship building business that is at the heart of today's Web-powered content industry.

concert fans_id570685_size250.jpg

Events producers know how to build a crowd and work it for maximum profit in the venues that matter most to an artist's audience.

This contextual approach to profiting from content is as old as artistic performance itself and one that is the dominant factor in the music industry yet again.

Online venues such as social media sites that help artists to merchandise themselves to their fan base through videos and downloads and sponsored appearances help them to profit from relationships in valuable contexts as well.

While the labels crow about six-figure copyright infringement suit awards and try to sue people for listening to someone else's radio at work these punitive actions only seem to decrease the value of their brands as credible venue sponsors that could build the marketable value for their artists.

Relationship marketing is all the rage on many levels of the publishing industry, including B2B trade publishing.

B2B publishers are discovering that where once their events marketing was the tail on their revenue dogs increasingly events marketing and marketing through Cost-Per-Action pricing is putting more emphasis on conversational content and collaborative marketing efforts.

Social media venues that are becoming increasingly popular in publishing add to the mix of content-as-a-marketable-venue plays that have little to do with yesterday's mass production publishing culture.

It takes a different kind of producer to succeed in producing this kind of revenue mix - a factor that both music publishers and other publishers need to adapt to as quickly as possible.

You can always make money selling copyrighted content, but today's money is in marketing what cannot be copied - the unique venues and the relationships that they foster built around valuable content.




Originally written by John Blossom for Shore.com and first published on October 11th 2007 and entitled "Venues Rule: Madonna Signals Content Superstars Can Build Events Revenues Without Publishers"

Find out more about John Blossom and the management consulting services of Shore Communications Inc., covering the business of enterprise, media and personal publishing at Shore.com.

John Blossom -
Reference: Shore [ Read more ]
 
 
 
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posted by Robin Good on Sunday, October 14 2007, updated on Tuesday, May 5 2015


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