Monday, October 14, 2013

Pandora Effect: Digital Music Sales Drop

Music fans across the US are likely to buy fewer digital tracks this year than last year — the first time sales of singles will decline since the dawn of the download, according to The NYPost.

In the first nine months of the year, sales of digital singles fell 3.4 percent from last year, to $974.5 million, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

And the decline seems to be picking up steam as third-quarter sales slipped about 6 percent.

The decline comes as the popularity of streaming services like Pandora, Rdio and Spotify explodes.

Through the first half of 2013, streaming volume soared 24 percent over the same period in 2012, according to the semi-annual entertainment report from Nielsen Entertainment’s senior vice president David Bakula.

“Streaming continues to be a tremendous growth story with over 50 billion audio and video streams in the first six months of 2013,” he said.


Streaming music, for most listeners, is free. With the growth of smartphones, it is also just as accessible.

“In general I think you should include Vevo in that mix,” Richard Tullo, an analyst at Albert Fried & Co, told The Post. “They’re hot as a pistol.”

Vevo, launched in 2009, is a free ad-supported online music video destination owned by Universal Music Group and Sony Music. It delivers 3 billion views a month via its YouTube channels — and about half its content is consumed on mobile devices.

The RIAA is anticipating a huge revenue growth in streaming services that deliver music as part of an On Demand experience such as Spotify’s all-you-can-eat offering and digital radio services such as Pandora, iHeart and now Apple’s iTunes Radio.

While a hot fourth-quarter could turn things around, one optimistic music company veteran said they’re expecting nothing better then a flat year.

1 comment:

  1. Yeah, I wouldn't expect music sales to get better, but streaming should go up. Everyone I know is attached to spotify these days, or pandora. There are even services like torch music that specialize in video playlists. I don't expect music sales will ever truly dies, but they will never be again what they were before, that's for sure.

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