Friday, April 12, 2019

Algorithms and Touring: How The Music Industry Creates Revenue


Streaming services are a big reason that the Global Music Industry has to thank for record highs in valuation – in 2018 the industry was estimated to be worth $19.1 billion which is the largest total since 2007.  While there is constant gripe in the news cycle about streaming services paying out minuscule royalties to artists, streaming services as a whole have spurred revenue growth not seen since right before the Great Recession. Prior to the Napster and Youtube era of music consumption in the early 2000s, albums used to cost upwards of $20, so as the average price of albums plummeted in early 2000s with the rise of streaming and downloading, the music industry needed to pivot to figure out how to bring in revenue.

The 2000s consumer consumption signaled that people wanted to listen to whatever they wanted, when they wanted, and they didn’t want to leave the house to get it. Rather than attempt to go backwards in time, the industry responded by meeting where the consumer where they were with a model that benefited both parties: music streaming services. The rise of Spotify, Apple Music, and Tidal helped consumers get all the music that they wanted, while generating revenue and increasing concert sales. Music streaming services main goal is to get you to listen to as much music as possible, and then feel moved enough to go see that artist in concert. Present day, the majority of revenue for artists come from touring – artists put out music, knowing it won’t generate them money from sales, but from it getting you to go see them on tour, which is where the money is.

This leads to the present day issue surrounding the algorithms that influence what people listen to and what kinds of music is rewarded. The streaming algorithms of Youtube, Apple Music, Spotify and others prefer higher quantities of content on a more regular basis to constantly feed users with new and fresh content – this is the reason why Drake and Migos will put 25 songs on an album as opposed to a refined album with not as many filler songs. The lack of boundaries for listening to music and creating playlists encourages more content from artists; Drake puts out 25 songs on an album knowing that each person will only revisit 5-10 of those songs regularly on their respective playlists, and the more songs Drake puts out the better chances he has of a listener liking one of those songs enough to keep on a playlist. While these algorithms satisfy the immediate want for new music from artists, their true purpose is to get you into a seat at a venue where the record label can generate the most revenue from you as a listener.

 Algorithms are decreasing the quality of music to fulfill the financial need for new material to be played on tour so the label can recoup their investment. All the major record labels own significant shares in Spotify, the leading music streaming service; the platform is a marketing vessel to gain fans and convert them to paying customers at shows. Spotify still operates at a loss right now and pays songwriters small paychecks for their work, but there is no rush to change the pay structure because this model has produced highest revenue streams for the industry in a decade. The algorithms and payout structure incentivize artists to release more music and announce more tour dates – give fans more content to persuade them to buy merch, vinyl or a concert ticket, because simply streaming an artists music on Spotify or Youtube is not enough to sustain their careers.

Finally, there are some interesting ideas to help bridge the gap between streaming and touring to help aid those artists that can’t tour as intensely as other artists. Music streaming services could integrate a Patreon, Twitch, or Bandcamp payment model into their platforms. Patreon is a subscription website that lets creators receive direct monthly payments from consumers in exchange for varying levels of exclusive content. For example, small artists will have lower tier subscription that gives subscribers early access to new singles and higher tiers will have your name included in the Thank You section on their album’s packaging. Twitch is a streaming website owned by Amazon that, with a Prime membership, allows you to directly send your favorite streamer $5/month free of charge to the viewer as inclusion of the Prime membership. Bandcamp is a music marketplace where listeners can download music for free and choose how much they want to pay for the music. Streaming services can include an option to directly allocate $0.50/month of your subscription cost to a specific artist to help further support them, or include options to pay additional fees to get access to exclusive content from specific artists.

Questions:
  1. When an artist releases a new album, how do you consume the album (shuffle it, play it all the way through, just the singles, etc)?  
  2. Does the interface and platform of your choosing ever influence what you listen to through its recommendations, playlists, or charts? 
  3. What would it take for you to pay additional money to a streaming service to support a specific artist?

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