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Welcome to the Music Industry

Date post: 26-Feb-2016
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Welcome to the Music Industry. How to thrive & survive as a public relations practitioner. The Digital Age. At the beginning of the digital revolution it was common to ay that digital was killing music. Now, it could be said that digital is saving music . – Edgar Berger. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Welcome to the Music Industry How to thrive & survive as a public relations practitioner
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Page 1: Welcome to the Music Industry

Welcome to the Music IndustryHow to thrive & survive as a public relations

practitioner

Page 2: Welcome to the Music Industry

The Digital Age

At the beginning of the digital revolution it was common to ay

that digital was killing music. Now, it could be said that digital is

saving music.

– Edgar Berger

Page 3: Welcome to the Music Industry

Nielsen Soundscan2011

Overall: +3%

Digital album: +19%

Digital tracks: +8.5%

Digital album sales accounted for 31% of all album purchases

2012

Overall: -1.8%

Digital album: +14%

Digital tracks: +5%

Digital album sales accounted for 37% of all album purchases

More albums sold in digital music stores than any other strata

Global revenues: +0.3%

Page 4: Welcome to the Music Industry

Nielsen Soundscan

Page 5: Welcome to the Music Industry

Piracy & Licensing 1 in 5 American Internet

users downloaded music through a P2P service in 2005

1 in 10 American Internet users downloaded music through a P2P service in 2012

40% of people decreased P2P use because of streaming services

95% of music downloaded online is illegal

Pirates purchase about 30% more music

In the race to adopt new technologies, the music industry

historically has finished just ahead

of the Amish. – Stan Cornyn

Page 6: Welcome to the Music Industry

Online Stores – The End of An Era

Single downloads streaming

Page 7: Welcome to the Music Industry

Festival FashionistaMore than in the past, I’ve noticed high-end

designers are looking to the streets and music festivals to find elements to include

in their lines.

–Tana Ward

Page 8: Welcome to the Music Industry

Listen Up

Tape. 8tracks. Spotify. Sirius. Last.fm. Piki. Rdio. Rhapsody. Napster. MOG. CD. Vinyl. MySpace Music. Satellite.

Streaming. Radio. Pandora. Analog. Ex.fm. Songza. Grooveshark.

Page 9: Welcome to the Music Industry

Streaming Services

Currently about 20 million paying subscribers to music streaming services worldwide

Average American spends $17/year on music $17/month

Profitability

Royalty rates

Page 10: Welcome to the Music Industry

Streaming Services

Artists didn’t make big money from CDs when they were introduced, either. They were a specialty thing, and had a lower

royalty rate. Then, as it became mainstream, the royalties went up. And

that’s what will happen here.

– Donald Passman

Page 11: Welcome to the Music Industry

Words from the WiseThere has been a lot of money lost in artist investment…in the future I see ourselves as advertising agencies.

The industry won’t look the same as it used to (nor should it), and it won’t be structured in the same manner, but the industry is retooling in a way that bodes well for music (if not for the salaries of music industry executives).

Page 12: Welcome to the Music Industry

Words from the Wise

Right now, we’re just in a little chaos. Things are resettling and re-shifting and people are trying stuff, people are getting laid off.

Fewer records are being sold every day. The people left in the business are, I think , the best, the people who were there because they cared and have new ideas. Everyone else is

gone.

– Ben FoldsMusicians do need labels…You

may not call it a label, but whatever your team is, who’s going to do marketing, who’s going to do billing, who’d going to monetize the assets and the brand?

– Tom Silverman

Page 13: Welcome to the Music Industry

Strive to ThriveDO…Know the industry

moves fastManage expectationsBe honest Remember it’s a game

of “musical chairs”Have a “side hustle”Pump the breaks

“Work” the companyRemember that it’s a

business of who you know

Network with cautionLook for opportunities

for growthUnderstand business as

a wholeLearn niche publications

Page 14: Welcome to the Music Industry

Strive to ThriveDON’T…Get too comfortable

Pigeon hole yourself

Hype a project

Count on one form or revenue or marketing driver

Rush to claim an idea

Be afraid to voice your opinions

Get involved with artist’s personal affairs

Forget lower personnel

Start pop and then try to go back to other worlds

Page 15: Welcome to the Music Industry

PR is Here to Stay“Artist-independent”

world

Publicity and public relations functions more necessary than previously

Cost-benefit

Hired internally by company


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