- Related Stories
-
Ring tone downloads on the rise
August 9, 2005 -
Digital music is going mobile
July 26, 2005 -
Where's the iTunes for movies?
July 6, 2005
Digital download services such as Apple Computer's iTunes have gleaned most of the headlines to date. But the digital music market has already moved to a diverse model, particularly when mobile consumers are counted, Thomas Hesse, president of global business for Sony BMG Music Entertainment, said in a speech at the Music 2.0 conference here on Tuesday.
Sony BMG is already seeing 10 percent of its revenue in the United States, and more than 20 percent of its revenue in China and South Korea, come from digital and mobile products, the executive said. In the next year, labels will increasingly find ways to boost those figures by offering a large range of different products at different times, and through different channels.
"We will see tiered pricing in the online world," Hesse said. "It will be coming out in different windows over time, and will be much more sophisticated than just the 99-cent download that we have seen."
These budding music windows--ranging from exclusive tracks posted on iTunes or prerelease ring tones to live CDs released long after an album's street date--are signs of how seriously the music industry is taking the digital business at last.
Indeed, physical CD sales continue to drop, and executives say they don't realistically expect that to turn around or even to stabilize immediately. Peer-to-peer use continues to rise worldwide, and according to research firm NPD Group, 44 percent of music found on consumers' hard drives in 2004 still came from file swapping or copying other CDs.
Digital sales continue to grow by leaps and bounds, however. According to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, about 180 million songs were sold online in the first half of 2005, up from 57 million in the same period last year.
A few individual titles are driving the surge. According to Jeremy Welt, Warner Music vice president of new media, his label is seeing digital sales account for 10 percent to 20 percent of first- and second-week sales for some of its heavily marketed titles. He cited the recent release of a soundtrack from the TV show "The OC," for which 18 percent of the first week's album sales were online.
Releasing content in tightly controlled windows--first in theaters, later to home video, and finally to TV, for example--has been hugely profitable for movie studios in the past few years. These windows have shrunk substantially as DVD releases have been moved substantially closer, but the studios have kept strictly separate release dates for theaters, home video and on-demand services.
With a quickly expanding number of products and channels, including cell phones, online subscription and download sites, retail stores, streaming and downloadable video and more, the music business is evolving into a natural home for windows, some analysts say.
"The reason the movie industry is moving away from windowing is because they got so excited about DVD sales," said JupiterResearch analyst David Card. "But I think windows is more the natural order of things, with multiple packages and multiple release times."
This new product model is also fast changing the role of record companies, which are increasingly dealing with other giant corporations, from telephone companies to Internet portals, as music distributors.
"With the huge telephone companies, with Sprint, with Cingular, it is a completely different world," Hesse said. "It is a world in which the wind blows a little colder, and one in which the record companies are just tiny little cottage industries compared to the sandbox where we were before."
See more CNET content tagged:
record company, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, home video, Hollywood, telephone company






Do fall for it, wait for the ipod phone. Hopefully Steve Jobs will still offer music at 99cents.
Do fall for it, wait for the ipod phone. Hopefully Steve Jobs will still offer music at 99cents.
With this kind of backing and the vast number of stupid people that don't stop and look at how baddly they are getting shafted before they buy I think both of these industries are going to do just fine.
What we need is a goverment that will stand back and let them sink themselves instead of proping up their poor business habits with new laws and regulations. We also need more consumers that have at least two brain cells to rub together.
Robert
With this kind of backing and the vast number of stupid people that don't stop and look at how baddly they are getting shafted before they buy I think both of these industries are going to do just fine.
What we need is a goverment that will stand back and let them sink themselves instead of proping up their poor business habits with new laws and regulations. We also need more consumers that have at least two brain cells to rub together.
Robert
Listen up people. IT IS NOT A FAIR PRICE. YOU ARE BEING DUPED INTO BELIEVING IT IS VALUABLE.
99 cents IS and will CONTINUE TO BE the starting price point for downloadable music. ON ANY DEVICE. PERIOD!!!
The RIAA should go back to marketing basics and stop trying to dictate their pricing. Let the market decide. 99 cents initially, 79 cents after 3 months, 49 cents after a year.
On a side note, I see no value to using your phone as an iTunes client. The market has shown that they will only bear 3 inch screens. I've searched through ring-tone catalogues this way......it is for crap!!! The user interface is much better on a PC/MAC or maybe, at the very least, a treo/sidekick/windows mobile device that does 280x300 resolution --- and even that is stretching it.
Listen up people. IT IS NOT A FAIR PRICE. YOU ARE BEING DUPED INTO BELIEVING IT IS VALUABLE.
99 cents IS and will CONTINUE TO BE the starting price point for downloadable music. ON ANY DEVICE. PERIOD!!!
The RIAA should go back to marketing basics and stop trying to dictate their pricing. Let the market decide. 99 cents initially, 79 cents after 3 months, 49 cents after a year.
On a side note, I see no value to using your phone as an iTunes client. The market has shown that they will only bear 3 inch screens. I've searched through ring-tone catalogues this way......it is for crap!!! The user interface is much better on a PC/MAC or maybe, at the very least, a treo/sidekick/windows mobile device that does 280x300 resolution --- and even that is stretching it.
movie will be more expensive than the movie. Yeah sure limited
audience etc. But pop songs? Sure those five guys and in the studio
have so much more overhead than say Harry Potter.
movie will be more expensive than the movie. Yeah sure limited
audience etc. But pop songs? Sure those five guys and in the studio
have so much more overhead than say Harry Potter.
music prices, you're right. Competition is the best way to secure
a fair price for a commodity. It amuses me that those that gripe
about music prices are sometimes the same ones who insist on
regulation in other arenas. Thereby driving up costs for the
commodity. Let's talk about gas prices.
Almost 40 cents per gallon of gas, or higher, is caused by state
and federal regulations. There's no free market for oil products.
Or phone services, for that matter. Check your bill. It's there.
Regulation after regulation, one on top of another driving up
costs. That's before taxes! Placed there by your elected officials.
God help those poor SOBs in California. Those tax and rule
happy fools.
So when you whine about the RIAA trying to jack up music prices
unfairly remember to use the same free market instincts in other
areas too.
Know you know and knowing is half the battle.
music prices, you're right. Competition is the best way to secure
a fair price for a commodity. It amuses me that those that gripe
about music prices are sometimes the same ones who insist on
regulation in other arenas. Thereby driving up costs for the
commodity. Let's talk about gas prices.
Almost 40 cents per gallon of gas, or higher, is caused by state
and federal regulations. There's no free market for oil products.
Or phone services, for that matter. Check your bill. It's there.
Regulation after regulation, one on top of another driving up
costs. That's before taxes! Placed there by your elected officials.
God help those poor SOBs in California. Those tax and rule
happy fools.
So when you whine about the RIAA trying to jack up music prices
unfairly remember to use the same free market instincts in other
areas too.
Know you know and knowing is half the battle.
- £1 is still a rip
- by Scott W August 15, 2005 11:34 AM PDT
- £1 for a DRM riddled mp3 is a rip-off. £15 for a full album of 15 songs might seem worse, but remember you can rip and encode that album in whatever format and quality you like. want 120kbps ogg? go ahead. want to BUY 120kbps ogg? no chance!
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- correction
- by Scott W August 15, 2005 11:35 AM PDT
- i meant £15 for 10 songs (though my H-I-M album was £15 for 17, but that's neither here nor there)
- Like this
-
(16 Comments)