Comments on: People do pay for music
CNET Blog Network contributor Gordon Haff is shaking his head at much of the media coverage of downloading Radiohead's album.
CNET Blog Network contributor Gordon Haff is shaking his head at much of the media coverage of downloading Radiohead's album.
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This blog takes a deep (and often skeptical) look at trends big and small in the world of enterprise servers, data centers, and "Yotta-scale" computing. This means also taking into account the myriad of software, networks, and devices that are driving change in (or being driven by) these back-end systems. Stories posted to this blog may also appear on Illuminata's site.
Gordon Haff is a principal IT adviser for Illuminata of Nashua, N.H. Before becoming an IT industry analyst, Gordon held a variety of product-marketing positions at Data General, spanning more than a decade. He's programmed for DOS, Windows, and Linux; builds his own PCs; and holds engineering degrees from MIT and Dartmouth, with an MBA from Cornell. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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ever think to pay for a Radiohead album. Why? Because I?m not familiar with them
and if it hadn?t been for this free download, I still wouldn?t be.
To be fair, I haven?t actually listened to it yet; I?ve probably got too much
unlistened-to stuff in my iTunes Library to *ever* listen to it all. But if, once I do
listen to it, I find that I like it, that gives me the impetus to buy more Radiohead
stuff and bam! they?ve got a new fan and more than enough income to offset the
one free album.
In short, Radiohead?s got more of a clue that the entire RIAA combined. Get real,
guys.
I really really wanted to belive in this stuff but the Music Industry dosn't have it down. I just paid that price the hard way and they're only response is oh well we got your money. Apparently the disreputable file sharing services are the ONLY reliable online method of getting music.
They made 2.28 cents, 10 cents less than they would of made with the Music Industry. But hey thats still a lot of money and propts to radio head to show you don't have to be a label to make money.
I (illegally, considering I live outside the US) subscribed to URGE service and payed my 14.95 a month, I really believe that people should pay for music! I continue buying CD's when I like the album! and now with the switch to Rhapsody, just like russkeller I lost an entire library, what are my options? considering I cannot use any subscription music services outisde the US except Rhapsody and it sucks!! The only, is downloading it DRM-Free illegally! mp3 is the only thing you can trust!
I wish Radiohead demonstrates that the music industry MUST change!
Think of this as "Marketing 521" in the graduate school of the music business.
Smart move band. I wish more bands got the idea. Some do on bt.etree.org They allow you hear the concert knowing that a fan will pay tooth and nail to see them LIVE!
I hope, for Radiohead's sake and independent artists everywhere, that this is a viable business model.
Clever boys.
-Kyle Steed
http://www.kylesteed.com/blog
> The 38 percent who did cough up cash paid an average of $6 each. A total of 1.2 million people downloaded the album.
1.2 million x 0.38 = 0.456 million people payed money for the album.
0.456 x $6 average = $2.736 million dollars!
That doesn't sound to bad considering I would think its all going to Radiohead, no physical CDs to produce, and no record label in the middle.
much of the news outlets these days are owned by companies with a stake in
the music industry. Hence, it is in their own best interests to promote the
idea that this experiment is a big failure.
As you mention in your article many people do pay for their music and I am
one of them. I do not buy CD's that come via the RIAA. I have several sources
of DRM free music with artists that are every bit as good as the artists
promoted by the RIAA. And the artist actually gets a fair cut of the sales. The
RIAA is dying and they can't figure out why. Well, if you refuse to change you
are going to eventually go away.
producing ZERO money for the band. Why? Because the label charges the
band for recording costs, video costs, tour support, etc. These costs can
easily top 1 or 2 million dollars. Depending on how much a band earns per
CD, the band could end up OWING the label money after selling a measly 1.2
million CD's. In Radiohead's case, they earned 2.7 million dollars in a very
short time. In the "record label world" Radiohead would have had to have sold
over 3 million CD's to earn that kind of money, and would have had to wait
months or longer for the label to actually cough up the money. THIS EVENT IS
A TOTAL SUCCESS FOR ARTISTS EVERYWHERE.
- But what about...
- by TaintDeli November 7, 2007 1:48 PM PST
- ...the people who D/L'ed for free and then came back and paid after listening? I, for one, downloaded the album from a Torrent site the day it was released (Radiohead's site was swamped). After listening to it, I really liked it and went and paid them $10 a few days later. There are very few artists I will buy a CD from without hearing it before dropping $10-15. Surely there are others who feel the same way.
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- That is another problem with the data
- by ghaff November 7, 2007 2:11 PM PST
- As far as I know, it counted downloads rather than unique downloads. I can also imagine people downloading to 2 separate computers because it was easier that way. And you're also right about the quality--although I suspect that the number of people who take that sort of thing into account is a fairly small minority.
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(17 Comments)I was reluctant to pay for 160k MP3s, but I really believe in what they are doing and wanted to show my support. If they offer FLAC in the future I will gladly pay $20!