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DATE | 2007-04-22 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] DRM Free MP3s - Forbes
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The recently revived debate over usage restrictions on digital music probably seems old hat at eMusic, which has sold songs in the universally compatible MP3 format since its founding in 1998.
Still, Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) Chief Executive Steve Jobs' recent call on major record labels to drop so-called "digital rights management," or DRM restrictions--and EMI Group's (other-otc: EMIPY - news - people ) subsequent decision to do exactly that--has the potential to spur changes in the market for online music.
And that, in turn, could have important implications for eMusic, which, with 10% of the U.S. market for song downloads, is the second-largest online retailer of digital music, according to research firm NPD Group.
EMusic has enjoyed rapid growth even though it only sells music from independent music labels, which, until EMI's recent move, were the only labels willing to sell all of their music without restrictions. The company also requires users to sign up for subscriptions, although unlike other subscription services like RealNetworks' (nasdaq: RNWK - news - people ) Rhapsody or Napster, eMusic's song downloads are DRM-free.
In an interview, eMusic President and Chief Executive David Pakman discussed his company's prospects in this changing market.
We've heard you were in serious talks to sell eMusic to Amazon.com. What's the status of those talks?
I can confirm there are no talks right now with any strategic buyer. The company's not for sale. The company is in no need of financing, and our growth is off the charts. We've talked to every media company on the planet, we've been approached by everyone. The company has had 100% year-over-year sequential growth for the last three years. It's doing something right, and there are a lot of people who have come knocking to talk to us. But we really believe in our ability to succeed as a standalone.
Now that EMI has agreed to sell its music without usage restrictions, we'll presumably see other online retailers allowing independent labels to sell restriction-free digital music as well. That would seem to present a competitive challenge for you.
Our assumption all along has been that if there's going to be a healthy digital industry, there's going to be a healthy number of digital retailers. Our differentiation will not be in the format. It'll be who we serve as customers. Whole Foods (nasdaq: WFMI - news - people ) is a highly differentiated supermarket chain. They differentiate themselves based on what they carry, what their brand is and what type of customers they target. They're not for everyone. We are that. We are a specialty retailer who will always do better at satisfying the needs of the type of customer we go after than a one-size-fits-all retailer. As a result, we'll never be as big as iTunes. We don't want to be, and we don't have to be in order to be very successful.
You're in talks with EMI to sell their music in the MP3 format. Once you start carrying music from major labels, won't that affect your focus?
No. We would only carry the stuff from the majors that our customers want us to carry. We would not take their entire catalogs by any means. You would not see a lot of Janet Jackson in our service. But what we would see from EMI--the Blue Note catalog or EMI Classics--would do hugely well. Their label Astralwerks is probably an underperformer at iTunes but would do really, really well here.
As a business model, what are the advantages of selling digital music via subscriptions rather than as a la carte downloads?
It just delivers better value to customers. It's sort of a trade-off. If you're a customer who buys a lot of music, you get a much better deal out of a service like eMusic where you'll be paying $10, $15, or $20 a month but you get 30, 50 or 75 songs, so you can get music for between 25 and 35 cents a song. But because you're agreeing to spend $10, $15, $20 a month, that's a lot of money on music compared to the average [digital-music] customer. The average iTunes customer spends [much less than that]. The subscription model delivers better value for a customer but it also extracts more money from their wallet for the music industry. And that's the trade-off--spend more, get a better deal.
Victory Records [an independent hard-rock record label] recently pulled out of eMusic after you launched your discounted, high-volume "Connoisseur" subscription plans. How much does a record label keep under a Connoisseur plan versus your cheaper plans?
Some clarity first: The Connoisseur plans are the same pricing as our top-tier plan [used to be]. Our top tier was $19.95 a month for 75 songs. We just took the same pricing and we [applied it to] 100, 200, 300 songs. It's just so we can get more music to customers and get more money. The Connoisseur 300 plan is a $75 a plan. You want to spend $75 a month on music? You've got to give them that. If they want to spend that much money, that's fantastic. We've got 13,000 labels on the service. Fewer than five have ever left. They decide what's best for their artists, where they want to sell their music and at what price points. We're just one retailer.
But is there a significant difference in how much money flows back to a record label when a customer downloads music via a high-volume subscription plan versus a basic plan?
It doesn't come down to a wholesale price, it's a revenue share. We take all the revenue the company generates from every plan and cut it in half. Half of it gets paid out to all the labels each quarter pro rata based on the number of downloads they got. The important thing to note is if you signed up for the Connoisseur 300 plan at $75 a month and you went on vacation for a month or you just didn't use the service or you only downloaded 10 songs, we still take the $75, put it in the pot, divide it by half and pay [it] out to all the labels. On average, customers don't use their full allotment of whatever they're paying for. It's the same thing with a gym or a health club. Do you go everyday? Some guys do, and they get the most value. For us, subscription business optimization is about making sure customers are never always maxing out their plans. That way, the customer feels they have some headroom and we're able to optimize the profitability of our business.
What's ahead for eMusic?
We look a lot at long-tail television. I'm not announcing that we're going there, but we have an interest in that. TV is such an ephemeral medium, It gets shown once and then it's gone. The only stuff that tends to be sold through iTunes or put up on the networks' Web sites are the hits. But what about the shows that don't become hits or don't go into syndication or are only around for a season or half a season? There is, we think, a huge amount of content owned by either production companies or studios or networks that has some viability if you could find the target customers that would be interested in it. And we think we could sell it very well.
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