Search

Music Industry Unprepared For Digital Age

0 views

There's a long way to go for the music industry to work out the kinks associated with the digital age-an age that caught the industry by surprise, causing it to scramble for adjustment while trying to work with outdated business models. Now, as profits from legally downloaded music soars and CD sales decline, another unforeseen issue as sprung up as musicians (the often forgot about cornerstones of the industry) are seeing their royalties decline-a side effect of modern business deals associated with downloading music. Artists receive, on average, 12 cents per $3 CD single sold, according to E-Commerce Times. The sticker price of CDs, of course, reflect manufacturing, packaging, and marketing costs, as well as the desired profit margins for labels and royalty fees. With the dawn iTunes and services like it, that overhead has been greatly reduced. And though the music industry raked in an estimated $790 million from downloads in the first half of 2005, artists are only seeing 6 cents per song royalty, in essence selling their wares at half price. In the United Kingdom, Apple is being pressured by music managers to up those royalty payments, while record labels want a significant increase in price per song-as much as $2.99 per song--a move Apple CEO Steve Jobs regarded as

Suggest a Correction

Found an error or have a suggestion? Let us know and we'll review it.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Please sign in to leave a comment.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!