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Gerd Leonhard: “Streaming music is the new radio”

Ernst-Jan Written on June 7, 2008 – 9:59 am
Ernst-Jan Pfauth, editor in chief

There’s a huge shift going on in the music industry. As you might have noticed during the past few years, downloading music is becoming less and less common. Whereas labels used to freak out by the idea of Napster or torrents only five years ago, now even those services have become outdated. The next generation just wants to click. Not on the download button, but on the play button. To get an overview of these developments, I gave Gerd Leonhard a call. Since this media futurist, speaker and author of The Future of Music and Music 2.0 sure knows what he’s talking about. Today’s keyword? Attention.


Gerd Leonhard at the Commonwealth Club

Access and new business models

“Kids now only listen to music, they don’t download it’, Leonhard said. “Access has become an important factor. People want to listen to music on their mobile. Developments like Wifi, 4G, iPhone’s, fancy Nokia’s turn streaming music into the new radio”. This shift requires new business models, as even fewer people than now will want to pay for music. “The new business model is selling stuff around music. Tickets, merchandising, posters, books, things like that.”

“Music also becomes part of environment where you can meet like-minded people”. They all have a connection, which makes it interesting for targeting advertising. So companies can sponsor a music community and effectively reach the right group of people.” Moreover, Leonhard point out an interesting difference with today’s advertising: “Consumers skip television ads, but they will listen to a sponsor message when they get free music in return”.

Nobody knows you exist

Give away your music and sell stuff around it

So if you’re an musician, you might start to wonder how you should cope with these changes in the music industry. Well, don’t worry, Leonhard has some advice for you: “Nobody knows you exist, so get attention. There should emerge a service like Twitter or Delicious, only then for sharing music. Before that happens, artists and labels should use blogs and widgets to attract as many people as possible. Give away your music and sell stuff around it. Like Nine Inch Nails sold a book. Build a brand around your music”. If you look at this from Kevin Kelly’s perspective, you’ll need those 1,000 true fans to spend a 100 dollars each. Kelly:

That sums up to $100,000 per year, which minus some modest expenses, is a living for most folks.

Give away and make money

To me, these advices and expectations sound exciting. Yet it isn’t all one big happy adventure, as there’s also something called The Major Labels. They don’t allow third parties to give away their music in exchange for some sponsor exposure. “This is a problem, as it blocks innovation. It’s too risky for start-ups to invent a new service like YouTube, since it violates the copyright regulations. What these labels don’t get, is that when you ask people to pay for music, they’ll get it somewhere else for free. But if you give the music away for free, you can make money with sponsoring”.

I hope you like that post!

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About the author: Ernst-Jan is blogger and co-organizer of BLOG08, who previously worked in New York to cover news at the United Nations. Next to writing, he's also a singer in the band Christina Five. Follow him on Twitter or read his personal blog Dutchproblogger.com .

6 comments/trackbacks to “Gerd Leonhard: “Streaming music is the new radio””

  1. Jun 8, 2008: 1000 True Fans - from the songwriter point of view

    [...] June), Ernst-Jan Pfauth interviewed Gerd Leonhard, a specialist in media, and Gerb Leonhard said “streaming music is the new radio”. I find this particularly interesting because I’m a user of Napster subscription on-the-go [...]

  2. Jun 23, 2008: SoundCloud: share your rocking tunes in a super effective way (invites)

    [...] you’ve read the interview with Media Futurist Gerd Leonhard a couple of weeks ago, you know there’s a huge shift in [...]

  3. Jun 24, 2008: Tiago Dória Weblog » Blog Archive » Geração que quer clicar no botão de play e não de download

    [...] Next Web traz uma entrevista com o futurista Gerd Leonhard, que fala sobre algo que foi comentado rapidamente durante o II Seminário de Tendências [...]

  4. Jul 1, 2008: Legal download when artist agrees with downloading? | Glowrich on New Media

    [...] What other artists are sharing their work or promote to share it freely like these artists? Maybe a list of those artists, with right next to the download button a button to buy a concerttickets is a good businessplan Or will the future only bring streaming music? [...]

  1. By Dave Allen on Jun 9, 2008

    Why does Gerd include the word “Radio” in his interview. We need to drop these old fashioned conceits if we are to embrace the future. Radio is a push technology and music search online is a pull..so we don’t really need streams we actually need a service that provides free downloads of music files from artists who want to give away music. They do exist, they’re called music blogs. I run one that has 100’s of thousands of visitors who love the idea of being able to get filtered content from my site.

    Dave Allen http://www.pampelmoose.com

    [Reply]

  2. By rnr on Jun 9, 2008

    radio is not dead. it just smells funny. the age of ‘user generated radio’ is upon us: http://www.laut.fm

    [Reply]

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