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Matt Rosoff is an analyst with Directions on Microsoft, where he covers Microsoft's consumer products and corporate news. He's written about the technology industry since 1995 and reviewed the first Rio MP3 player for CNET.com in 1998. He's also a bass guitarist and an avid collector (and digitizer) of LP records. DISCLAIMER: This blog contains the personal opinions of the author and does not necessarily represent the opinions of his employers or of CNET Networks. As an IT industry analyst, the author occasionally agrees to nondisclosure agreements from Microsoft or other companies, and he will not violate the terms of such agreements on this blog.
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TuneCore:
The actual amount we pay when a song sells on iTunes it $0.70 for the U.S.
store, of which the artist sees 100%, just as you said.
We're also proud to include ISRC codes and UPC codes at no extra charge, if
the artist/band doesn't already have them, which is a real boon to unsigned
or new people. Those codes are theirs for life, and can even be used on
physical products--we never reuse them, even if the person leaves TuneCore.
Also, that $19.98 per year isn't mandatory: if someone's had their music up a
year and decides they don't want to pay the annual maintenance/storage fee,
we'll take it down, no questions asked, no charge. I don't want your readers
to feel they'd be locked into anything, we're non-exclusive and cancel-any-
time.
There are a lot of other factors folks might want to consider when shopping
for a digital distributor: frequency of payments (TuneCore is 24/7), the
accounting process (I admit I'm REALLY proud of ours, which is astoundingly
thorough and transparent, even down to letting folks export a spreadsheet-
ready accounting), and customer service.
I'm really glad folks on the c|net boards are offering information about digital
retailers. The more people know, the better informed their decisions.
If you or your readers have any questions, feel free to drop me a line or post
here--we scope out blogs all the time, it's a great way to learn how to
improve our business.
Thanks!
--Peter
peter@tunecore.com
Also online accounting, a fixed release date, 4 week turnaround and you can become eligible for the UK charts.
They cover a total of 700 worldwide stores and take 0% commission on sales.
They have had 7 UK top 40 singles, all with unsigned artists.
A better service for UK artists
There are a couple options that CD Baby offers that seem to work better for the average indie artist. Our service is a flat fee of $35 per album. No annual fees or hidden charge for each store (Including all the different versions of iTunes). CD Baby will get you to far more digital outlets for that flat fee, but probably the best feature of our digital program, is that you can sell downloads on cdbaby.com.
For downloads directly through CD Baby, the artist gets to set the price, so they can charge far more than 99¢ per track which has been a huge boost to the indie music community. For those downloads, artists keep 91¢ on the dollar. No one even comes close to that kind of return.
Don't forget, we also sell your CDs worldwide! CD sales are still going strong for the indie artist, especially in international markets that artists in America tend to overlook!
Feel free to contact CD Baby with any questions at cdbaby@cdbaby.com
Thanks,
Kevin Breuner
CD Baby
This week I'm discussing US aggregators (ie Tunecore and CD Baby) with fellow Danish musicians. And we wonder if your companies see to that copyright and royalties are paid. In Denmark we have KODA/NBC , organisations that take care of these things for composers and writers.
How does it work if we Tunecore or CD Baby?
Joe Klok, Singer/songwriter
- by rspeck August 8, 2009 12:19 PM PDT
- Another important service to compare is Nimbit.com. They offer everything CD Baby and Tunecore offer and they have a single content management capability that allows a single artist or small label to change information in one place and have that content distributed to all web distributors as well as the artist site. Also, they take zero from online sales through web distributors (iTunes, Rhapsody, etc). We are using it as their NimbitSkin product allowed us to create a nice seamless store within our artist site.
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