It
took just a few years for streaming services to become fully part of
our streams of consciousness. One thing for sure: Streaming is
probably the number one focus on the industry, if judged by the
number of times the word occurred in discussions at
Eurosonic/Noordeslag.
The
trade show/conference/festival in Groningen (Netherlands) usually
kicks off the year with its mix of panels on serious and not so
serious issues and its impeccable line-up of concerts, and sets the
agenda for the industry, especially for the live sector. Several
sessions were focused on the impact of streaming on the biz and it is
fair to say that the rise of the likes of Spotify and Deezer,
alongside Simfy, Rdio and many others has given hope to many and much
food for thought.
Jeff Price (Photo: Mike Breeuwer) |
Obviously
it is going to take a few more years before streaming revenues give
the music industry some comfort, but there is optimism in this field
– and a few question marks. Former Tunecore founder/CEO Jeff Price
is on the side of the optimists. For him, streaming will happen when
it will be fully part of an experience that will make the users feel
it is free even if it isn't. His case in point is to say that
streaming will get traction when services will be bundled into cars,
for example. “I am waiting to see what will happen when the cost of
music is bundled with the cost of hardware,” said Price in his
keynote presentation.
Another source of optimism for Price is the
imminent launch by Apple of their answer to Pandora. “They have
half a billion with iTunes accounts,” he said, explaining that this
should give Apple a lot of leverage. He strongly believes that
streaming services will provide the opportunity to scale revenues to
the level of their audience. “It is there. It will happen. More
money will flow into the system,” he claimed.
Another
converted to the positive force of streaming is former PRS for Music
economist Will Page who now works for Spotify. He took Spotify's home
country, Sweden, as an example of what can happen when streaming gets
mass acceptance. Music revenues have been revitalised since Spotify
has started operating, and it also keeps piracy levels down. “Spotify
helped stabilise Swedish market,” said Page, who added that Spotify
now accounts for the vast majority of digital revenues in Sweden,
ahead of Apple.
Page
then turned his attention to the Netherlands, which he said has
become the second big country after Sweden to reach critical mass
with streaming and predicted “some light at end of tunnel in
Holland” thanks to the rise of streaming usage. For a start music
sales have seen a slight upsurge, with an estimated 677% growth of ad-supported and subscription revenues during the first half of 2012, while digital downloads sales
continued to grow by 40%. But what is more important, according to
Page, is that measurements suggest that piracy levels in the
Netherlands have been steadily dropping (Forrester put the number of
people using pirate sites in Holland at 5m in 2008, while a recent
report by MusicMetric puts the figure at 2.25m). Page sees “streaming
as an alternative to piracy”. “It gets sexy when it gets to
critical mass,” he concluded.
However,
not everyone is convinced that streaming has such healing power.
Analyst Mark Mulligan was far more cautious in his presentation.
“Streaming is everywhere but let's be realistic: It is a technology
to get content into devices. It is not a business model: It is a
delivery means,” he stated. The overall digital music picture is
still dominated by falling sales of CDs and download sales that are
“sluggish”. And, he added, “subscriptions are finally getting
some traction, but is niche.” More so to the point: The conversion
rate from free with ads to premium, with subscriptions, if extremely
low. [A representative from Deezer on another panel suggested that
out of 26 million adopters, Deezer has about 10% who paid for a
subscription.]
In
an other presentation, Buma-Stemra's Andy Zondervan crunched a few
figures. He said that the accepted idea is that subs should be in the
region of $10 or €10, but since only a few consumers are actually
ready to pay that sum, he suggested that it would be more beneficial
to focus on the bulk of consumers who were not going to spend more
than a few euros for music (around €3). There is certainly there
matter for debate and certainly more in-depth research.
Like
Price, Mulligan sees streaming taking off when bundled with devices,
cars or with telcos subscriptions, where the cost will be invisible
to the consumers. For him the upside is that car and devices
manufacturers, and cable or internet service providers will use
streaming to offer their clients a better experience. “If you buy a
car for $12,000 and you pay 3$ for customized music subscriptions, it
is a meaningless cost,” he said. “You have to make music feel
like free or close to free even when it isn't.”
[Typed
while listening to Electric Guest's 'Mondo']
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