the long tail theory applied to the music industry
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The Long Tail Theory Applied To The Music Industry. Georgia, Ellen and Sophia. Chris Anderson (2006) states that the internet and introduction of broadband has effected economics , commerce and consumption . . - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Georgia, Ellen and Sophia.
The Long Tail Theory Applied To The Music Industry.
Chris Anderson (2006) states that the internet and introduction of broadband has effected economics, commerce and consumption.
This theory states online distributors of niche products are more powerful collectively.
As apposed to physical businesses.
“The Long Tail is… an economic principle that reveals a strategy that can be used by creative businesses: sell less of more. That is to say, release a large amount of things that sell in smallquantities. To date the major record labels have grasped this far more quickly than the independents.”
By allowing popular products to be sold in one place, they create niche market.
This allows a online retailer to create a market area, which appeals to the
consumer of the product.
The dominance of the niche market allows the distribution of the products to be cheaper they can be sold over a multi-
media platform.
The distribution of products is key in the music industry as they are able to reach a much wider audience with specific needs
ensuring the retailer has fulfilled the consumers wants.
As with previous three years, digital downloads are
up but CD sales and total revenues are down.
Andrew Orlowski stated that studies discovered that,
of the tens of millions of tracks available for sale on
the web, 80% sold no copies at all – and that 80% of the money spent on the 20% that did sell went on
just 52,000 songs.
Individual artists, producers, inventors and makers are
overlooked in the equation.
The long tail does not raise the sales of creators much,
but it does add massive competition and endless downward pressure on
prices.
Unless artists become a large aggregator of other artist's
works, the long tail offers no path out of the quiet
doldrums of minuscule sales.
In other words, new technology is bringing about changes in media
commerce that allow songs, books and
movies to keep selling -- modestly, but in
aggregate, profitably -- long after their shelf life.
eMusic, which sells DRM-free songs through a subscription system, is one of the world's largest digital music retailers. Despite dealing only with independent
labels, it has sold more than 250 million tracks since 2003.
So what's the effect of this new technology? First, there are more tools to produce content, such as Apple's Garage Band software, which can remix and create digital music, blogging
software, and so on -- all of which puts more niche content out there.
Second, the cost of buying media is cheaper, whether
through peer-to-peer software or through Web sites such as eBay. So it's both easier and more
convenient to buy this stuff.
DMG's best-selling titles in June: Fats Domino's Ain't That a Shame, The Tams' Be Young, Be Foolish, Be Happy and The Foundations' Build Me Up, Buttercup.
None of these will ever again be bestsellers, but there's pent-up demand to buy them online, because buying them on a CD usually means buying a dozen other songs you probably don't want.
Add up enough of these microsales, and you can end up with a megafortune.