Archive for the 'pwoody' Category

Flixn

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Check out my post on my other blog about Flixn.  Coolest service…kinda like Photobucket. Found it via The Blogging Times.

Qtrax and Warner

Saturday, September 23rd, 2006

Warner has made a deal with Qtrax a company that provides a secure and profitable p2p application.  The service will be ad sponsored.  It looks like a good deal.  Things are really moving in the right direction for this business towards the end of 2006.  Really cool stuff happening.  Other labels are joining in on the Qtrax train too.  The ad supported model is finally being looked at by the music business as a good thing.

Twitter

Friday, September 22nd, 2006

Another way to keep in touch with the world. Twitter was started by Noah Glass who was a founder of Blogger and Odeo. I just signed up…kinda like Dodgeball that is pop in NYC.

In the right Direction

Thursday, September 21st, 2006


Warner’s move that they made with YouTube is the best deal the music business has made all year. This will go down as one of the first steps in an innovative direction that the industry has made. The most interesting thing to come of this is YouTube’s royalty tracking system. How does it work and does it work well? All of this cool stuff going on and what is the biggest record label doing with YouTube?…suing them!

picture originally uploaded by: me

Advertising really isn’t so bad

Thursday, September 14th, 2006

I read a lot of Bob’s posts but this one stood out to me.  I was just having a conversation with someone about this same exact subject the other night.  At the root of the this issue, of making available copyrighted material on streaming sites such as YouTube and MySpace, is how to monetize it.  It is really very simple.  When in doubt learn from your piers in the same market.  What is the simplest way to make money on the web?  Advertising.  Wrap up the content in pre or post roll ads.  This will accomplish two vital things.  One being that the majors will start seeing some income from all their material they have available and two, it will at the very least be a step forward instead a lateral step or no step at all.  The music industry in particular, hasn’t made big steps in experimenting with monetization schemes.  These are times of trial and error.  But they don’t have to be that risky if you look around and learn from other’s mistakes.  Fred has a good post on his ideas for monetizing YouTube.  YouTube will look at Google for inspiration on how to make money.  Other industries should do the same.  The music business needs to pay very close attention to what services like YouTube and MySpace are doing because these services are the future of their content distribution.  There is no question that this is how content will be served up in the coming years.  All of these issues make me want to form a consulting team that would walk with music labels and other content owners as they navigate how to make money in an “everything is available all the time” world because its not going to come from the inside.  I should do that.

picture originally uploaded by: me

Mobile New York Times

Thursday, September 7th, 2006

New York Times has moved mobile with the introduction of mobile.nytimes.com.

They are using Microsoft advertising too. 

LA Times

Tuesday, September 5th, 2006

An old media paper using their users content.

The New York Times is realizing the value in their user’s content too.

More MySpace

Tuesday, September 5th, 2006

This subject is getting so much talk lately but I have to say one more thing about it. What MySpace should have done that would really put them ahead of the pack would have been to pioneer the mobile distribution of music downloads. This would have been huge and it would have put them far far ahead of anyone else in this market, even Apple. Apple is going to come along and do mobile distribution better than anyone else and it will be difficult for anyone else to catch up. However, MySpace does cater to the “unsigned and independent” niche and that is what separates them from Apple. This could prove to be how MySpace will win music customer market share over Apple. The bottom line is that there are more unsigned and independent bands than there are signed bands; MySpace and Apple respectively. MySpace is deeper in search when compared to the Apple store and is user generated where the Apple Store’s content is distributed like old media. These are growth stages that we’re seeing right now. Step one was the iTunes store, step two is the MySpace store, step three will probably be by Apple in the form of extensive mobile distribution. The next nine months will be interesting to see who makes big strides in mobile.

photo credit: me

MySpace selling music

Sunday, September 3rd, 2006

MySpace is going to start selling music via their site without and DRM.  The interesting thing to me is that Snocap is involved.  I have been following what they have been doing over the past year and wonder what their niche is going to be.

photo credit: oh_no_whoa

Step in the Right Direction

Wednesday, August 30th, 2006

Universal backs Spiral Frog.

Some are disagreeing with this because of its DRM usage. DRM isn’t the way to go.  However, it will fade out over time.  Who knows how long it will take though.  Look how long it took a major label to get hip to ad based revenue.
We’re out of the age of the rock star.  We’re in the age of quality production by anyone who is smart enough to make it.  No longer does it take a lot of money…the technology is available to everyone to produce quality material.

Eric joins the club. Just because its apple I included this link.