Yet Another Attempt At Ad Supported Music

from the if-it's-more-annoying,-it-won't-work dept

Back in October, we wrote about plans for yet another "free, but ad supported" music download startup, but didn't see how the economics could work out. That site, FreeAllMusic, is apparently now getting set to launch, but it still doesn't make much sense to us. Basically, you can download music (two of the four major labels have signed up) for free -- and it's not encumbered by DRM (that's good), but you have to sit through some sort of video ad before you can get the music and you are limited in how much music you can download. The site's CEO claims "We have made this process easier than stealing."

We'll ignore the confusion (most likely intentional) about the difference between infringement and "stealing" and focus on all the other problems with this service. First of all, it's not easier than infringing. You have to sit and watch an ad. You don't have to do that on file sharing networks. Second, the assumption behind the service is that people would use this the same way they use iTunes: meaning only a very small number of downloads per month. Initially, that means 20 downloads per month, total, and no more than five per session. That may be how people use iTunes, but that's because each download costs money in iTunes. One of the reasons people prefer file sharing systems is because they're not limited that way and can really easily sample lots of music quickly.

But the biggest problem with this concept remains with the basic economics. Since the argument remains the same as I stated a few months back, I'll just repeat it:
You've got the record labels, who are used to getting approximately $0.67 per downloaded song. Assuming that needs to be made up by the ad (and even ignoring any profit for the site), then every single ad shown needs to cost that same $0.67. Translated into traditional ad terms, that's a CPM of $670. Yikes. I don't know any advertiser will to pay anything close to that -- even if it's targeted and you have a half decent chance of the person paying attention. Most CPM ad rates online these days are in the sub-$5 area. Convincing advertisers to jump to a $670 CPM on an unproven model? Good luck.
I'm all for experiments and new business models -- especially those that make use of free music. I just don't see this particular one getting very far. The economics are just not that compelling for anyone involved.
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Filed Under: ad supported music, ads, business models, downloads, economics, free, music
Companies: free all music, freeallmusic


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  • icon
    The Anti-Mike (profile), 29 Dec 2009 @ 9:00pm

    A small math question:

    at 67 cents per song, how much money is lost to piracy? How much money is left on the table by giving music away for free?

    If nothing else, you have highlighted why concert tickets have become so much more expensive. There is a whole bunch of money getting left of the table.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      hegemon13, 30 Dec 2009 @ 8:31am

      Re: A small math question:

      No, concert tickets are more expensive because people are willing to pay it. If they weren't, the market wouldn't bear those prices. In fact, most big-name concert tickets are still sold well below what the market will bear, as proven by scalpers.

      Besides, few contracts give the labels any part of the concert revenue. That is where the actual bands make their money. The bands see little to no revenue from album sales. So, there is little overlap and little feasible correlation between so-called "lost money to piracy" (album sales that go to the labels) and concert ticket prices (money that goes primarily to the artist).

      And that's all assuming that your initial rhetorical question is even valid, which it isn't. No one said that recorded songs are WORTH 67 cents each. The article simply said that 67 cents is the amount the labels are used to getting.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2009 @ 9:19pm

    "at 67 cents per song, how much money is lost to piracy?"

    You'd have to ask the music industry how much money they waste flailing around in panic trying to "stop" piracy.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2009 @ 9:26pm

    It can work!

    All they have to do is make people watch more ads to make up the difference. Let's see now... 670/5=134. So, they just have to get people to watch 134 ads per song and it'll all work out!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Hephaestus (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 6:31am

      Re: It can work!

      Oh! Ohhh!! pick me!!! I have an idea .... how about you embed the music in an otherwise silent ad?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2009 @ 9:35pm

    NO NO no
    you are too late
    you lost any right to do this and its too late
    67 cents per song , ten song min per album
    they are asking for 6.7$ -9$ per album STILL
    sorry guys not quite
    when its 1$ per album
    maybe

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    McBeese, 29 Dec 2009 @ 10:05pm

    Many Shades of Grey

    There are many shades of grey... but they're all grey. There are many different kinds of stealing and words to describe them... but it's still simply taking something that you have no right to. But enough of that... you are blind to that simple basic tenet of right and wrong.

    If the downloaded songs can be merged with your existing collection and managed by any music player you want, then I could see how this model could work from the users perspective. I have a large collection of digital music already so the amount of new material I acquire each month is not that great. I'd be willing to have commercials playing while the music was downloading in exchange for free music.

    However, like you, I don't see how this works from the operators perspective. I don't see any way for them to achieve even a fraction of $.67 in ad revenue per download.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 4:00am

      Re: Many Shades of Grey

      So if a government offers privileges to some that I believe are wrong what should I do?

      The only reason I don't have a right to do this is due to an outdated legal system.

      Your moral system seems to be based on the laws passed by the government. I can't understand how someone would equate a government whose laws are constantly changing to right and wrong.

      Beyond that, if I were "taking something that I have no right to", why does the original owner still have it. I haven't taken anything. I've simply copied it. There is no taking or stealing. There's just creating more.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:06am

        Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

        "So if a government offers privileges to some that I believe are wrong what should I do? "

        1) Work to elect a new government that supports what you want at the next election, or 2) Move to a country without laws like Somalia, or 3) bitch and complain anonymously on blogs.

        "The only reason I don't have a right to do this is due to an outdated legal system."

        Don't expect the legal system to legalize stealing in any of it's forms, including copyright infringement, anytime soon. I don't think you're ever going to have a "right" to take something that doesn't belong to you in this country, and I'm glad.

        What's outdated and broken is the business model, not the legal system. The music industry is completely blind to a new distribution model and as a result is missing all kinds of opportunities to innovate and broaden their market. New competitors will ultimately find a way to bypass this friction forcing the labels to adapt or perish. Stealing is not the answer and it never will be.

        Your moral system seems to be based on the laws passed by the government. I can't understand how someone would equate a government whose laws are constantly changing to right and wrong.

        No, it's the reverse. The laws passed by the government reflect the morals of the majority of people in this country, not the other way around. But even without the law, I would still believe that it's wrong to take something that doesn't belong to you against the will of the owner.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:32am

          Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

          Copy. You make a copy. You don't take anything.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          Michael, 31 Dec 2009 @ 4:10am

          Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

          Let me start with this: I don't agree with infringing or stealing. I don't download music (or anything) without permission. I do use some file sharing services, but I am careful to avoid unauthorized content.

          As for stealing and infringing, they are very different. If something is stolen from me, I no longer have it. Copyright infringement involves copying something so both people have all of it. While that can be unfortunate for the original owner - particularly if they intended to profit from the scarcity of it - it is far different than depriving the original owner of something.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      senshikaze (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 7:06am

      Re: Many Shades of Grey

      "There are many shades of grey... but they're all grey. There are many different kinds of stealing and words to describe them... but it's still simply taking something that you have no right to. But enough of that... you are blind to that simple basic tenet of right and wrong."

      actually no, the definition of stealing is:
      the illegal taking of another person's property without that person's freely-given consent.

      But answer me this, what am i "taking"? the music owner still has his music and can still sell it. at what point did i take anything from him? if you come out with the same number of items as you did going in, what have you lost?

      There is no gray area for stealing. This is also not stealing.
      Funny(sad) fact: the penalties for file sharing are much steeper than going into a store and depriving them of a physical product. up to $X dollars it is just a misdemeanor. with 24 songs shared you can have a penalty of ~$2 million and bankruptcy.
      tell me that the world hasn't gone stupid.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 10:49am

        Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

        actually no, the definition of stealing is:
        the illegal taking of another person's property without that person's freely-given consent.


        Actually, no. The definition of 'steal' as noted in Merrriam-Webster is:

        1 a : to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully.

        or how about:

        1 c : to take surreptitiously or without permission

        Sounds to me like these definitions fit pretty well.

        But answer me this, what am i "taking"? the music owner still has his music and can still sell it. at what point did i take anything from him? if you come out with the same number of items as you did going in, what have you lost?

        You are taking a copy of an author's work against the will of the author or the agent that the author has granted the distribution rights to.

        Let's look at this logic. I take a copy of several original Beatles songs. No problem, right? According to you, the Beatles haven't lost any product because they still have what they started with. Now I decide to use the Beatles tracks in ads for my business, which happens to be a cheesy used-car business. What's the harm right? The Beatles still haven't lost any product and there is no lost sale because there is no way I would use Beatles tracks if I had to pay a license fee. Are you starting to get it yet?

        There is no gray area for stealing. This is also not stealing.
        Funny(sad) fact: the penalties for file sharing are much steeper than going into a store and depriving them of a physical product. up to $X dollars it is just a misdemeanor. with 24 songs shared you can have a penalty of ~$2 million and bankruptcy.
        tell me that the world hasn't gone stupid.


        Good news. There is no penalty for not stealing anything, whether it be stored in physical or digital format. Yes, I wholeheartedly agree that the penalties for illegal distribution are out of line in most cases, but that is in part fueled by the rampant lawlessness of the entitlement society who feel that it's ok to steal and redistribute something because they can.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          senshikaze (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:17am

          Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

          "Actually, no. The definition of 'steal' as noted in Merrriam-Webster is:

          1 a : to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully.

          or how about:

          1 c : to take surreptitiously or without permission

          Sounds to me like these definitions fit pretty well. "


          But i am NOT taking anything! you seem to miss that part. I am copying something. big difference, even in the eyes of the law.

          and your car salesman analogy is weak at best. he isn't making money directly from the song, only indirectly, and that is a stretch in logic. and yes, the Beatles lose nothing.

          "Good news. There is no penalty for not stealing anything, whether it be stored in physical or digital format."
          Actually would say that DRM alone is more than enough punishment, and only music has moved out from under that weight just recently. Execs care only slightly more for customers than they do pirates, the only difference is that instead of suing, they leech them. Same in the end over a life time, just not as flashy as a lawsuit.

          Thing is, I do not file share music. I buy from iTunes or Amazon if i want a big album, or i get music from Jamendo, and donate as I feel is necessary. I am not defending people who do file share, I am just saying that it isn't "stealing". Not in the eyes of the law or the dictionary.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

          • identicon
            Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:36am

            Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

            Corporations that own creative content and lobby the politcal class to lengthen copyright is a form of theft from the general public.

            link to this | view in chronology ]

          • identicon
            McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 3:47pm

            Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

            " I am not defending people who do file share, I am just saying that it isn't "stealing". Not in the eyes of the law or the dictionary."

            So you agree that file sharing is wrong, you're just being pedantic about the wording? To me, physical property theft, intellectual property theft, copyright infringement, trademark infringement, etc., are all wrong and are various forms of acquiring something that you have no right to, which I call stealing.

            I have less of a problem with those who admit that what they are doing is wrong but do it anyway than I have with those members of the entitlement society who think it is their right to help themselves to whatever they want. I sincerely hope that karma teaches them a lesson.

            link to this | view in chronology ]

            • identicon
              Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:04pm

              Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

              As long as you're okay with being called a murderer when you punch someone, a vehicular manslaughterer when you nudge someone with your car in a parking lot, a terrorist when you scare a kid on Halloween, a fraudster when you violate the terms of a coupon, and a thief when you go to the bathroom during a commercial break on TV.

              link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 7:14am

      Re: Many Shades of Grey

      "There are many different kinds of stealing and words to describe them... but it's still simply taking something that you have no right to."

      Except, of course, that you're not "taking" anything either. I see you're still blind to the basic simple tenet of reading a dictionary.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 10:32am

        Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

        What's a dictionary, some sort of depository of stolen words?

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:13am

          Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

          If you're going to re-use my handle, please try to avoid stupid posts like this one.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

          • identicon
            Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:30am

            Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

            How is it stupid? The words are stolen.

            link to this | view in chronology ]

            • identicon
              McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:41am

              Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

              Oh really? Point me to a copyrighted word in a mainstream dictionary that was reproduced without permission.

              link to this | view in chronology ]

              • identicon
                Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:58am

                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

                Who uses mainstream dictionaries?

                link to this | view in chronology ]

                • identicon
                  McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 3:32pm

                  Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

                  People who value literacy and accuracy.

                  link to this | view in chronology ]

                  • identicon
                    Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:04pm

                    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

                    So...not you? Admitting it is the first step to understanding the definition of words.

                    link to this | view in chronology ]

              • identicon
                Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 2:16pm

                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

                But you've never read a dictionary, so why would that help?

                link to this | view in chronology ]

              • identicon
                hegemon13, 30 Dec 2009 @ 3:12pm

                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

                "Google" Okay, it's trademarked, not copyrighted, but Random House tried to include it as a verb.

                link to this | view in chronology ]

                • identicon
                  McBeese, 30 Dec 2009 @ 3:35pm

                  Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

                  So in other words, Google is not an example of a word being used in a mainstream dictionary against the wishes of the owner.

                  link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      hegemon13, 30 Dec 2009 @ 8:34am

      Re: Many Shades of Grey

      "But enough of that... you are blind to that simple basic tenet of right and wrong."

      Nope. Not at all. I just don't subscribe to your particular version of it. Bummer when others are allowed to have their own beliefs, ain't it?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 30 Dec 2009 @ 10:37am

        Re: Re: Many Shades of Grey

        He probably stole his morality from others. That sounds really dumb, how about, he probably copied his morality from others.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    harbingerofdoom (profile), 29 Dec 2009 @ 10:15pm

    i dont see it working out all that well, but i would be willing to sit through ONE short ad in exchange for one drm free song.

    my sitting through $.67 worth of ads however? not so sure id be willing to do that.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Stacy, 29 Dec 2009 @ 11:18pm

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Griff (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 12:50am

      Re: Get "We the Kings"- album

      Perhaps if the site let me listen to their music (even a 20 second snippit) then they'd stand a chance of showing me it'd be worth parting with my cash.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    :), 30 Dec 2009 @ 1:52am

    Hope!

    Hope they fail miserably.

    For all the pain, the ridiculous laws and claims I hope they fail.

    I'm not using any service they offer and will not pay them a cent.

    The music industry is dead to me.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Bruce Houghton, 30 Dec 2009 @ 5:41am

    FreeAllMusic

    The point of comparison for the labels isn't iTunes who pay $.67 cents (or more often less) but P2P and other freely share music. And even the majors give away music sometimes.

    Isn't making 10 cents or even 5 cents better than nothing for many tracks? And Mike, wouldn't you be the first to argue that 10 cents is a fairer price for a lot of music and that lower pricing would lead to more sales.

    As we both write about, its all about music discovery with profits coming over time and from many places.

    Maybe there's a cross blog debate here? Or something for MidemNet?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Mike Masnick (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 9:53am

      Re: FreeAllMusic

      The point of comparison for the labels isn't iTunes who pay $.67 cents (or more often less) but P2P and other freely share music. And even the majors give away music sometimes.

      If that's true, that's interesting, but I've heard time and time again that the major labels won't do deals for downloads at less than $0.67 (other than on a one-off promotional basis). My assumption was that they would never work with a company like this at a lower wholesale rate.

      Isn't making 10 cents or even 5 cents better than nothing for many tracks? And Mike, wouldn't you be the first to argue that 10 cents is a fairer price for a lot of music and that lower pricing would lead to more sales.

      Yes, absolutely. Absolutely. I just find it hard to believe the major labels would ever agree to such wholesale prices -- especially for an upstart site. The second they do that, won't Apple and Amazon go back to the labels and demand similar wholesale pricing?

      Maybe there's a cross blog debate here? Or something for MidemNet?

      Sure, I'm up for either one...

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    jonathon (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 8:04am

    Only offer 20+ year old content.

    With digital content, is there a _legitimate_ reason for the labels to put anything out of print?

    Take the entire music back list. Everything that has ever been in their catalogue. Eliminate everything that has been released within the last twenty or thirty years.

    * Lease office space. 75 - 100 square feet per employee;
    * Buy a US$300 desktop and $200 USB turntable for each employee;
    * Have them play the music on the turntable, using _Audacity_, or similar program, writing the appropriate meta data for each song,whilst it is being played;
    * When the album is finished, upload it to Free4All.
    * Once any song, or album hits a specific number of downloads, transform it into a ring tone with non-gratis distribution;
    * Once any song, or album hits a specific number of downloads per month, pull that album/song in for "digital remastering";
    * Once it has been digitally remastered, pull the Free4All copy, and add the digitally remastered version to iTunes, CD, and other outlets where consumers pay for the content;

    It might not generate revenue this quarter, but in couple of years time, it will be a profit centre.
    * People will pay for ring tones;
    * People will pay for quality music;

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Nate (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 9:03am

      Re: Only offer 20+ year old content.

      People don't pay for ringtones or quality music now. Where's the reason to buy?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        senshikaze (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 11:22am

        Re: Re: Only offer 20+ year old content.

        1)make stuff up
        2)make some more stuff up
        3)???
        4)profit (after a few quarters)

        at least that is how i read it.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    hegemon13, 30 Dec 2009 @ 8:44am

    Not so bad

    Okay, so this service isn't great, and the 20-song monthly limit is silly.

    However, it is at least a step, albeit a small one, in the right direction. Launching with two major labels on something like this is actually a pretty amazing accomplishment. And, for those concerned about wanting to do things the right and legal way, this provides a free alternative.

    Personally, I'll give it a try. If the downloads are high-quality, the time spent watching an ad may be worth it. After all, it can take time to track down a torrent of decent quality for any artist that is not currently a big act. If an ad guarantees a high-quality download, and if searching the site is intuitive and straightforward, I can see myself using it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    PrometheeFeu (profile), 30 Dec 2009 @ 10:20am

    Well Mike, it's not that simple. Let's take the 67 cents per song as the goal here. Now, the record labels aren't really needing to make 67 cents per song downloaded. They just need to make as much money as with iTunes. Now, if instead of 67 cents per song, they get 67/1000 cents per song from advertising (or $0.67 CPM which is quite reasonable) all they need is 1000 downloads to replace every iTunes download. Now, I don't know if that is possible or not, but it does not seem impossible at all given how the downloads are free. It's not guaranteed to work, but nothing is.
    A second thing to think about is that piracy does have a heavy cost for the pirate. There is always the risk of getting caught. That requires taking elaborate counter-measures and still fearing getting caught and getting slapped with ridiculous fines. I know quite a few people who would be willing to sit through an ad for the peace of mind of not risking getting caught.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      hegemon13, 30 Dec 2009 @ 12:55pm

      Re:

      Methinks you've been taking lessons from Verizon when it comes to expressing thousandths of a cent. (Should be $0.00067)

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    AW, 30 Dec 2009 @ 2:38pm

    So I'm using the actual site. There is only one really short ad and the music selection is actually pretty darn good, especially seeing that the songs are not all no name players. That being said the snippets don't always play right and the server can be tediously slow at times and the browse feature leaves a bit to be desired, as in either know who you're looking for or it's going to be a while.
    The commercials are painfully short and were there an option to pay for a service upgrade I might consider it. They are going to need more ads to pay for the service though. Otherwise I don't see how they are going to make it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Def Method, 5 Jan 2010 @ 1:05am

    I wish...

    The author of this article had talked to the CEO about how the economics work out, rather than just making up some numbers to poison the well. You would think that a company wouldn't just throw away millions of dollars without having a feasible profit model, eh? Well, I can't wait for the techcrunch article on freeallmusic.com a year from now.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    morcheeba mp3, 5 Jan 2010 @ 3:58am

    20 downloads per month is so litte????

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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