People I talk to seem to be split between two opinions: the majors are doing OK; and the majors are doomed. If people come from the world of independent music they tend to be biased against the major labels or downright distrustful of them. If they have some experience with major labels they tend to recognize the degree to which the majors have changed and have greater faith (or hope) they will carry on.

Lately I’ve had some interesting conversations with people who think the label model is proving its sustainability. I agree. Not all labels will survive — witness last week’s news that respected metal label Hydra Head will cease putting out new releases. But labels have worked hard to develop new business models and are proving that a varied mix of revenue streams can sustain a business.

If you think labels are more doomed than saved, here are the numbers for your own interpretation: In the first six months of 2012, Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and Sony’s music companies had operating profits of $356 million on $6.26 billion of revenues. Given the seasonality of the business, these three majors should have over 1 billion dollars operating profit in 2012. (Due to release schedules, the first six months of the year are the lightest in terms of profit and the last six are the heaviest.)

I think you’d have to be living in a bubble to say the traditional music business – in the midst, and possibly at the bottom, of a painful transition – is doomed with well over $1 billion in annual operating profits. That figure doesn’t take into account amortization (which take into account the value of the intangible, fixed-life assets at the very heart of the business). Nor does it take into account depreciation, and some other one-time expenses such as fees related to mergers. But it’s still a billion dollars. I’d say that’s evidence the record label model can succeed in its current form for many more years.

The other majors in recorded music and publishing only add to that billion-dollar figure. EMI does not report its financial results. Bertelsmann does not break out the performance of BMG Rights Management on a quarterly basis, but CEO Thomas Rabe told Billboard.biz last month that BMG revenues would reach 250 million euros this year.

Those are somewhat encouraging numbers given the trauma the music industry has gone through, yet it’s always been easier to find a naysayer than a believer in large, corporate music companies. Jeff Price,co-founder and former CEO of digital distributor TuneCore, wrote last week in a blog post ”[t]he old system is in ruins, degrading a bit more each day.”

But the old system is not in ruins. Not yet. And with Universal Music Group closing in on its acquisition of EMI Music’s recorded music division — most likely with some concessions to lower market share — the “old boy’s club,” so to speak, is about to get a little bit stronger.

The idea that the record industry lays “in ruins” runs throughout the public’s consciousness. While watching the movie “The Social Network” recently — and not for the first time — I noticed an interesting exchange between the characters Sean Parker (played by Justin Timberlake) and Eduardo Saverin. Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin had Parker equate the demise of Tower Records with Napster’s victory over the record industry. But Sorkin missed the point: Tower Records was merely a supplier. Tower went bankrupt, but the labels are still in business.

The old way of doing business — the old value chain — is gone. Music companies owned the plants that manufactured CDs and LPs. They owned the distributors. They had representatives and promotional people spread across the country. It was a business built for physical product, newspaperadvertising and mom-and-pop retail.

The new value chain is different. It encourages efficiency and a keen eye toward technology. Ownership of multiple pieces of the value chain is gone — distributors and manufacturers have been sold. Artist contracts are different (for better or worse). Staffs are smaller and many tasks are outsources.

The reason why EMI Music and Warner Music Group had so many bidders? There’s still great value in music companies.

Read more at http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/industry/record-labels/business-matters-reports-of-the-death-of-1007951122.story#IEDsJJd34IIBkUTD.99

Why is it that Spotify is typically villified by artists, while Apple is lauded as a savior?  In a telling interview with the Black Keys, drummer Patrick Carney was intensely critical of Spotify, its leadership and its dangerously-low payouts, but contrasted Apple as the more artist-friendly alternative.

 ”I imagine that if Spotify does become something that people are willing to pay for, then I’m sure iTunes will just create their own service, and do it themselves.  And they’re actually more fair to artists.”

Part of the reason is that Apple is more friendly to artists, and far more transparent than Spotify.  Since the beginning, Apple has negotiated good faith payout percentages on paid downloads for copyright owners, whether the label or artist (via services like Tunecore).  And we all know what those payouts are – ie, 70 percent of retail.  There aren’t backroom deals with major labels and shady ownership stakes involved; artist payouts aren’t a frustrating mystery.

And when the clouds blew in, Apple was also negotiating with labels to secure the rights for iTunes Match – despite a murky legal terrain.  Amazon and Google weren’t as friendly.

But is that the full story?  Apple’s good guy glow is shining once again on Match, which pays artists modest amounts for cloud-based listens.  These are a small fraction of what Spotify pays (imagine that), yet somehow, you hear the word ‘bonus‘ tossed around repeatedly on this.  The logic is that the consumer already purchased the song or ripped it from a CD, therefore any extra money is nice to have.  It’s icing on the cake.

 

But what about the fans that didn’t purchase or rip these songs in the first place?  It’s almost impossible to measure percentages here, but collections of 10,000+ songs are rarely acquired through legitimate methods.  And for years, the industry estimated that 19 out of every 20 downloads were obtained illegally.  Indeed, in the iPod-toting heyday, 10,000 or even 20,000 songs was nothing impressive, and easily managed by the iTunes app and accompanying iPod whatever.  Of course, iTunes+iPod (and ultimately iPhone) was designed to handle, organize, and sync these massive loads with ease.

Which means Apple’s wildly-successful iTunes ecosystem was a major motivator for illegal acquisition in the first place, and an integral reason for the massive devaluation in recordings.  And the beauty, from the vantage point of Steve Jobs, was that Apple wasn’t doing anything illegal yet making billions off of hardware.

 

A fairly mainstream experience, circa 2008…

 

 

The rest is recent history.  Limewire died but downloads continued, while huge swaths of fans shifted to YouTube or Spotify.  But not entirely, which means that in the current battle between Spotify streams and cloud-enabled collections, the hangover of billions of stolen MP3s remains a huge part of this picture.  Which also means that Apple is ‘matching’ lots of dirty downloads, while sprinkling penny fractions on top of it all.

So does that make them the good guy, and iTunes Match a ‘bonus’?

[DigitalMusicNews]

Here’s a detailed breakdown of the twenty most profitable merchandising items – pound for pound – based on average costs and expected retail price tags. The data comes from top merchandising provider Jakprints, which compiled and averaged the data from multiple band and retail sites.

Here’s a top-level look based on profit margins, specifically expressed as how much larger the retail price is than the cost.

 

 

 

And, here’s the more detailed breakdown of average cost and retail price.

 

But what do you do with this data? The wrong answer is to focus entirely on the highest-margin stuff, simply because there may not be a match with your audience. But faced with limited choices on what to sell and focus on, this can help guide choices.

Jakprints also offered a number of other tips of maximizing returns, and reducing upfront spending:

(1) Start off with smaller minimum quantities to see what your fans react to. Scale up your production when you know what works.

(2) Know your fans, find out what they want and see what they buy so you can offer products that fit your fan base.

(3) Smaller accessories that fit into pockets or bags are a great way to increase your exposure.

(4) Giveaways such as stickers or patches with a larger dollar purchase creates a fan base that will come back for more.

(5) Keep track of what’s selling, what isn’t, how much you’ve invested and what you are selling it for. Track your profits for intelligent future investments in merch.

(6) Pre-sales! See how many people are interested in the product and help quantify what quantity to purchase from your printer.

(7) Space at a premium on your tour? Don’t take your entire inventory with you, lots of printers offer drop shipping options. Have your merch meet you in Cleveland.

(8) As you get bigger, don’t forget about online merchandising companies. They can take care of your online sales, warehousing, drop shipping, invoices, even printing your merchandise. You’ll spend a little bit more money, but you’ll have pros stressing about overnighting a t-shirt to Tulsa on Christmas Eve while you relax with your family.

[DigitalMusicNews]

If you thought digital sales weren’t growing fast enough, think again. According to Ovum, the global digital music market is expected to grow at 15% annually, reaching nearly $22.5 billion by 2017. Subscription services (Spotify, Pandora, Songza) are acclaimed responsible for the growing revenues, predicted to show a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 46% from bundling partnerships with service providers.

 

Ovum also states they expect to “see high digital music growth in most regions across the globe, with exceptions being North America and Europe, where mobile music (ringback tones) is expected to actually decline by 5-7% (although this excludes unlicensed, non-music, and mobile subscriptions).”

“The decline in the growth rate of mobile music from previous forecasts is mainly due to the underperformance of ringback tones, the dominance of free ad-supported music, and data costs that are making over-the-air (OTA) mobile music less appealing to consumers,” said Ovum’s consumer telecoms analyst Mark Little.

Ovum concludes that the main driver of digital music in the forecast period will be subscriptions, due to it being “a format that can be easily bundled by service providers, as well as offered directly, resulting in increased penetration of subscriptions around the world”.

Ovum says the main driver of digital music will be subscriptions, due to it being “a format that can be easily bundled by service providers, as well as offered directly, resulting in increased penetration of subscriptions around the world.”

This comes as no suprise, as in western countries smartphones are utilized with subscription-based music services. However, Ovum states that telecommunications companies are helping to drive subscription growth with more mobile music bundles – pointing to significant growth in South & Central America, which have each seen over a 50% compound annual growth rate. [Allindstrom]


Making Music with Apps’ series Danny J Lewis shows you how you can put together professional sounding tracks on the move. In this tutorial he starts off with the beatmaking using Native Instrument’s iMaschine.

This approach is all about making the most of the unique qualities of each app and recording the results into Ableton as audio clips. The advantage is that you are committing the sound that you have made to audio so there is no temptation to endlessly fiddle with the synth parameters or the intricacies of the midi patterns and you can get on with the task of arranging the parts to make that banging tune that your 8 bar loop had promised!http://www.pointblankonline.net/

Mixtapes: I noticed a lot of artists will spend money on studio time, features and beats to record a mixtape but spend no money or very little money on getting the product (Mixtape) out to the people. Marketing and promoting a product is just as important as the product itself. I personally think it’s better to just push one song and spend money on marketing and promoting it, instead of doing a whole mixtape.

Videos: A lot of artists get a video made and just post it on Facebook and Twitter. It takes more than those two social networks for your video to get some decent views. You need presence on media and blog sites too. Also, I notice some artists have no description about the video or any type of contact info. How do you expect people to get in touch with you if they run across your video on Youtube.

Read the rest after the jump!

 

Performance: A lot of artists perform at the same venues over and over which is filled with the majority of other artists. It’s only so far your buzz can grow from performing in the same areas, at the same venues. You should branch out to other cities and perform, meet and network with new faces every month.

Promoting On Social Media: I noticed a lot of artists sit on Facebook and Twitter and promote their music and shows to the majority of other artists. It’s true that you can turn another artists into a fan, but your main focus should be to get regular people (people who don’t make music) to become a fans.

Radio: I see this way too often. Artists trying to get their song on the radio and don’t even have the song registered with BDS or Mediabase. Getting your music played on radio and not having your music probably registered is pointless. You have no way of proving to a label that you are getting radio spins.

Graphics: I see a lot of artists put out low quality mixtape cover designs or flyers for their show performance. Your mixtape cover or flyer could be the deciding factor in whether or not someone takes the time to listen to or download your mixtape or show up at one of your shows.

Misuse of Social Media: This is a real BIG mistake that artists make. A lot of artists sit on Facebook and Twitter all day spamming people with your music links. Mentioning or posting links on random people’s Facebook wall who don’t know you is the quickest way to get you blocked or ignored. It’s best for artists to hold a short conversation with a person and ask them to check out your mixtape, video, or song. Try it. I promise you that you will get more people to listen to your music and give you feedback.

Contacting DJ’s: A lot of artists expect a DJ to play their music in the club, on the radio during their mixshow, or add it to one of their mixtapes when in fact, your music is not industry quality or your song is not club or radio material. That will mess up a DJ’s name if he plays your song and bore the crowd or audience. Make sure your song is professionally mixed and mastered.

Copyright and Publishing: Way too many indie/upcoming artists are uploading their music to the internet and sending it to A&R’s, DJ’s, or label reps, but don’t have their music copyrighted and published. That should be the first thing you do when you finish recording a song. People can steal your music if the proper paperwork has not been filed. And trust me when I say it has been done plenty of times.

Campaigning: A lot of artists don’t do a music campaign before and after releasing a mixtape, video, or song. Announcing it via Twitter and Facebook isn’t enough. It’s only so many people you can actually reach out to doing only those two things. Contact media/blog sites and see how you can get your music submitted for posting consideration. Contact radio stations, whether internet, commercial, or college radio, and set up interviews before and after you release a song or mixtape. Find out what events and showcases are going on in your state and contact the event planner to see if you can book a performance slot and make sure you bring cds and merchandise to sell or pass out. Also, contact your local newspapers for press coverage.

No wonder music fans are confused! Here’s a sampling of some of the most popular ways to pay (or not pay) for music today…  [DigitalMusicNews]

Just a lazy, late-August summer day ahead a three-day weekend. And the worst day yet for Facebook on Wall Street.  As of this writing, shares of FB are grovelling above $18, based on continued investor skepticism over Facebook’s flimsy model.

 

This is now a huge problem for Spotify, which is now effectively married to a company with serious monetization, valuation, and long-term survival questions.  Indeed, it seems that Facebook is dragging down everyone, but Spotify has almost irreversibly structured its application around Facebook logins and sharing functionality.

Perhaps the more insidious tie-ins are financially oriented.  Spotify gives lip service to subscriber gains and profitability, but all of that is speculative at best.  The real bonanzas here have little to do with actual profitability, and everything to do with frothy IPOs and ridiculous acquisition multiples.  This is classic Silicon Valley-meets-Wall Street gamesmanship, which is exactly the reason why investors like Goldman Sachs are at the table in the first place.

The question is whether a Facebook-hitched tech company will ever float again.  Souring analyst sentiment, corrosive insider trading, executive departures, and a looming leadership crisis spell serious trouble, which means Spotify’s grandiose IPO and liquidation plans are also in serious trouble.

Facebook is plunging for a reason, though respectable companies sometimes have crappy stocks.  The deeper question is whether Facebook is even around when we all grow up.  I’m not sure anyone really knows the answer to that question. [DigitalMusicNews]

CNN has written an article illustrating the relationship between online music industry giants, like Spotify and Pandora, and the more traditional music industry, dominated by the labels. The article discusses the general issue with money making in the industry and potential ways for things to improve. Here’s a snippet:

Listening and sharing music online couldn’t be more convenient or crowded. Options are easily found at the swipe of a finger or click of a mouse: the algorithm, radio-style option (Pandora); a social-sharing streaming strategy (Spotify); the download model to Apple-only devices (iTunes) and the download, keep in-the-cloud options from Amazon and Google on almost every other device.  Then there are the smaller streaming and subscription players: Rhapsody (who has missed the social boat so far), Slacker, Rdio, MOG and more. Or, there is straight-up piracy.

There are essentially two business models for online music right now: advertising–a losing model with scale, says Kusek, or subscription, which he thinks has more viability long term.

What complicates the issue further is unique to the music industry: Too many separate, competing interests fighting for a piece of the pie. Music labels, music publishers, and artists themselves (to a much lesser extent) all have certain terms in their favor including most favored nation, minimum payments, per-play costs, percent of total company revenue, and one of the most head-scratching, detailed reporting of the competition.

“Negotiating deals on a global scale is extremely hard,” said Kusek. ” What you used to have was revenue following format changes: From vinyl to 8 track to cassette to CD, the revenue always followed. That didn’t happen with MP3s exactly… “

Check out the full article here. [Allindstrom]

I’ve written many things about booking, such as a step-by-step guide on booking a tour and a few things on getting into SXSW, but what happens if you don’t have a massive history of touring the country? What if this is a new band and this is your first gig? How do you get started?

Here are some tips on booking your band’s first show:

  • Find the Right Venue: I can’t stress this enough, even for seasoned veterans. Not only should you pick the right venue by scene (appropriate genre of music), but you should find a venue that is just a little bit smaller than what you need so that you can pack it out. A promoter would much rather you bring in 100 people to a place that fits 75 than if you brought 400 people to a place that fits 2,000. Realistically determine what you can by finding out what the venue capacity is before you even bother contacting them.
  • Book at Least 2-4 Months in Advance: The further in advance you can book a show, the better chance that the date will be available. Many venues require a two month minimum advance but actually prefer at least 4-6 months notice.
  • Don’t Send Attachments: Most talent buyers do not want mp3 attachments filling up their inbox. Unless they specifically request them, send a link to someplace they can hear your music instead of the files. Same with photos or anything else (plus you don’t want that a spam filter blocking out your message).
  • Read Their Booking Requirements: This might seem obvious but check out the venue’s booking policies page. They’ll usually tell you what they need and who to contact. Sometimes they want a phone call or a booking form filled out, usually they just want an email.
  • 2 Paragraphs or Less: In 2 paragraphs or less, explain how you will make them money: basically, how well you can draw and how you’ll promote the show. The more you focus on that, the better. If they want to know what you sound like, they’ll click on your link. No need to spend 4 sentences describing that.
  • Give Options: Throw out a few different dates that you’re interested in. You might not be able to get a weekend the first time around.
  • Ask For Help: Contact other bands in the area or people you know in the scene who are actively performing and ask if they can get you on as an opening act for one of their shows. If you can prove that you can bring people out, hat venue will be more likely to have you back.

I’m guessing there’s no need for me to get into things like practicing and having a tight set or suggesting that you make flyers. You should already know that. However, you might want to read this article: Don’t Act Like an Amateur Band. It’ll help you keep getting gigs.

[MusicThinkTank]

Simon Tam is the founder/owner of Last Stop Booking and author of How to Get Sponsorships and Endorsements. Simon’s writing on music and marketing can be found at www.laststopbooking.com. He is on Twitter @SimonTheTam