MUSIC DOOMSDAY THEORY!
While the major labels celebrate the performance royalties established by the Webcasters Settlement Act of 2009, and anticipate the approval of a broadcast performance royalty for radio, Internet companies and radio broadcasters are reeling. Unfortunately, few people are paying very much attention to the potential consequences to the independent music industry.
Internet Effect
1. Internet companies must license an empirical copy of songs to play online. The licensing fees cost millions of dollars in up front fees, which is a huge barrier to entry for start ups.
2. Performance royalties for non-interactive streaming are substantial, as high as 25% of revenues for companies with revenues in excess of $1.25M.
3. VC that are funding music companies see their investment dollars simply changing hands and not augmenting the growth of their investment therefore, VC dollars are moving away from music companies, meaning fewer music-centric startups.
4. Companies that are not funded by VC can not afford the licensing fees and royalties to start up, meaning fewer outlets for music.
5. Adverting only business models alone can not support these two major expenses therefore many companies attempt to migrate to premium listener subscription services.
6. Most listeners won’t pay to listen to music and commercials when they can listen to the radio or Internet for free.
7. Many companies offering listener subscription services are not generating sufficient revenue to cover for the costs of licensing and royalties and are therefore shutting down.
Radio Effect
1. If the performance royalty is adopted for radio broadcasting, then the state of affairs for music programming gets even grimmer!
2. Radio stations playing music in small markets may stop playing music altogether because there is not enough advertising available in small markets to accommodate added expenses.
3. Small market radio stations will drop streaming
4. Partly because of the bandwidth costs,
5. Partly because of the royalty costs,
6. Partly because they can’t commercialize it with advertisements, and
7. Partly because of the administration required for reporting requires additional personnel.
8. Small market stations will migrate to lower cost formats. They are not likely to absorb the costs or sacrifice the livelihood of their business for music. They will migrate to talk, sports or sell air time to third parties to make ends meet.
Summary - The Webcasters Settlement Act of 2009 in addition to the high cost of music licensing creates a substantial barrier to entry, forcing venture capital companies to migrate away from the Internet music space. These costs alone put downward pressure on an already saturated market grappling with a seriously diluted adverting market.
There will be; fewer VC investments, fewer music related start ups, fewer digital outlets to sell music and fewer opportunities to earn royalties from online resources or revenues from advertisers.
Small market radio stations unable to absorb the additional costs to stream music are also affected. The addition of a broadcast performance royalty will force many stations to migrate to less expense broadcast formats such as talk, sports and news. These additional costs result in fewer radio stations playing music, fewer stations streaming music, fewer opportunities to expose new music, and fewer opportunities to earn royalties.
About 2,700 record stores have closed across the country since 2003, according to the research group Almighty Institute of Music Retail. Subscription services such as; Virgin, AOL, FullAudio, MusicNow, and Datz Music Lounge have shut down and Yahoo sold its subscribers to Rhapsody and shut down because they could not compete with free music services like radio.
What will the record labels do when there is nobody left that can afford to play their music?
While the major labels celebrate the performance royalties established by the Webcasters Settlement Act of 2009, and anticipate the approval of a broadcast performance royalty for radio, Internet companies and radio broadcasters are reeling. Unfortunately, few people are paying very much attention to the potential consequences to the independent music industry.
Internet Effect
1. Internet companies must license an empirical copy of songs to play online. The licensing fees cost millions of dollars in up front fees, which is a huge barrier to entry for start ups.
2. Performance royalties for non-interactive streaming are substantial, as high as 25% of revenues for companies with revenues in excess of $1.25M.
3. VC that are funding music companies see their investment dollars simply changing hands and not augmenting the growth of their investment therefore, VC dollars are moving away from music companies, meaning fewer music-centric startups.
4. Companies that are not funded by VC can not afford the licensing fees and royalties to start up, meaning fewer outlets for music.
5. Adverting only business models alone can not support these two major expenses therefore many companies attempt to migrate to premium listener subscription services.
6. Most listeners won’t pay to listen to music and commercials when they can listen to the radio or Internet for free.
7. Many companies offering listener subscription services are not generating sufficient revenue to cover for the costs of licensing and royalties and are therefore shutting down.
Radio Effect
1. If the performance royalty is adopted for radio broadcasting, then the state of affairs for music programming gets even grimmer!
2. Radio stations playing music in small markets may stop playing music altogether because there is not enough advertising available in small markets to accommodate added expenses.
3. Small market radio stations will drop streaming
4. Partly because of the bandwidth costs,
5. Partly because of the royalty costs,
6. Partly because they can’t commercialize it with advertisements, and
7. Partly because of the administration required for reporting requires additional personnel.
8. Small market stations will migrate to lower cost formats. They are not likely to absorb the costs or sacrifice the livelihood of their business for music. They will migrate to talk, sports or sell air time to third parties to make ends meet.
Summary - The Webcasters Settlement Act of 2009 in addition to the high cost of music licensing creates a substantial barrier to entry, forcing venture capital companies to migrate away from the Internet music space. These costs alone put downward pressure on an already saturated market grappling with a seriously diluted adverting market.
There will be; fewer VC investments, fewer music related start ups, fewer digital outlets to sell music and fewer opportunities to earn royalties from online resources or revenues from advertisers.
Small market radio stations unable to absorb the additional costs to stream music are also affected. The addition of a broadcast performance royalty will force many stations to migrate to less expense broadcast formats such as talk, sports and news. These additional costs result in fewer radio stations playing music, fewer stations streaming music, fewer opportunities to expose new music, and fewer opportunities to earn royalties.
About 2,700 record stores have closed across the country since 2003, according to the research group Almighty Institute of Music Retail. Subscription services such as; Virgin, AOL, FullAudio, MusicNow, and Datz Music Lounge have shut down and Yahoo sold its subscribers to Rhapsody and shut down because they could not compete with free music services like radio.
What will the record labels do when there is nobody left that can afford to play their music?