Are Advertising Funded Models the Panacea in
the Music Industry?

Literally, every man and his dog within the recorded music business is in a fever pitch
talking about how advertising funded models are the way forward. With the likes of
Blyk, myspace music store, muzu, We7 and numerous others advocating this new
model, perhaps they are right? The real test though, is whether
music fans will actually
be prepared to sit through advertisements before having access to listen to a track
they like. Furthermore, are the models commercially viable in the long-term both for
the labels and the artist?

On Monday earlier this week I was in attendance at a
digital music event for the
independent sector. The panel focusing on advertising funded models contained five
proponents and one label. The models were varied yet all had similar commercials in
terms of a revenue share split after costs. One model revolved around
listening/viewing an advertisement and then having access to a one off stream of the
music (We7) pay with "money or time", another discussed the benefits of top and
tailing video or audio on each track and once viewed the fan owns the track yet it is
Windows Media DRM'd (Spiral Frog). Myspace is a straight play on banner advertising
where the label receives a percentage of all advertisements displayed on its catalogue
of artist's pages.

All proponents of the ad-funded model are always pushing the line that as it is
ad-funded it will be free to the consumer and hence will help curb P2P file sharing and
piracy. Are you telling me that a teenager who normally goes to their favorite torrent
site and rips all the tunes they want for free, is going to be incentivised to go to a site
and have to view or listen to ads before having access to their tune? I would state if
anything this is just placing another barrier other than DRM in front of them, which in
turn actually de-incentivises the P2P file sharer.

I asked the question who in the audience at this conference would be prepared to
view/listen to an advertisement to have access to a free track? Only 15 - 20 percent of
the audience half-heartedly put their hands up. In my mind at an industry conference if
there is such a low percentage of industry personnel actually buying into an
ad-funded model, my suspicion is that the percentage will be a lot lower with
music
fans on the street.

At this conference, Simon Wheeler Digital Director at Beggers Group stated that if the
businesses pushing the ad-funded model cannot even afford to license the
music from
the
ad-funded business model what is the point of a revenue share? In my mind
this is a key point. If an ad-funded model does not generate enough income to enable
the business to license
music, than what is the incentive for a label to agree to a
revenue share, as their income derived is obviously not going to be sufficient? How
can these businesses expect labels to accept lower than traditional fees for the
music
to support a business model that on face value seems to be unsustainable.

So what are the commercials (no pun intended) like in terms of payment to labels and
further down the chain actual artists? If you look at the myspace model all
advertisements are purchased on behalf of brands by media agencies usually on a
CPC or CPM model. These models usually purchase advertisement impressions on
the website based on £8 - £10 per 1000 ads served. After costs an ad-funded
business offering a labels music for free expects labels to accept a revenue share.
This would realistically leave labels with a maximum of £3 - £4 per 1000 ads served on
their artist's page and this would usually translate to 500 - 1000 song listens.

So what would an artist receive from such ad-funded deals? Generally an artist in the
major label category would receive a 16 percentage royalty before producer and
packaging deductions and that's if they are lucky enough not to have they royalty
halved because the label deems digital to be 'new media'. So 16 percent of say £4
would equate to £0.64 pence to the artist before deductions for 1000 downloads or
streams of their song. Understandably many labels are reticent to accept such a
model, quite simple due to their unsustainable economic models.

At present this in my mind is a serious stumbling block. Until advertisers are willing to
pay higher rates in the digital age for targeted advertising where
free music is
provided to the end consumer, these models are destined to failure. If anything I view
such ad-funded models as a further devaluing of what music offers to the fan and is to
the business. To date it is clear that the numerous different subscription models have
not been the boon industry wanted, and so I ask the question, will ad-funded models
be any different?

Jakomi Mathews - Digital/mobile music consultant, speaker and innovator
the YUU
the YUU myspace page                   Yasheve's Urban Underground
Online Video Content Branding
iconicon
iconicon