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Expected MySpace service to compete with iTunes
Jennifer Netherby
NEW YORK—Amid ongoing competitive pressure from Facebook, MySpace is
taking its latest shot at entering the music business as other social
networking peers, such as Last.fm and imeem, are making big audience
gains with ad-supported music offerings.
According to sources, MySpace is planning a service that would combine
free ad-supported music listening with paid MP3 downloads and music
subscriptions.
MySpace parent company News Corp. has approached the major labels about
forming a joint-venture music site, similar to its partnership with the
major Hollywood studios for video site hulu.com.
The new service would be operated by MySpace and seemingly be positioned
to compete against every offering from iTunes to subscription service
Rhapsody to social networks. Details are still unclear on MySpace’s
plans, but it is expected that MySpace will build the music service on
its existing social networking base, which draws nearly 70 million U.S.
users each month.
MySpace did not return calls for comment.
During the last year, the four major labels have warmed to the idea of
allowing users to share music on social networking sites, inking deals
with Last.fm and imeem for a cut of advertising revenue. Music is the
central connector on both sites: Users create and share playlists with
their favorite songs, find and add friends based on their music
preferences, listen to full-length songs on demand and purchase
downloads through links to Amazon and iTunes.
CBS-owned Last.fm reported a 92 percent jump in U.S. users in the span
of the last month, making it one of the fastest-growing music networks.
Last.fm now claims 21 million unique visitors per month, close to the 23
million unique visitors of rival imeem, which has also seen strong
growth in the last year.
ROOM FOR GROWTH
But only a minority of consumers use social networking sites to access
music. According to NPD Group, just 14 percent of Internet users report
getting music through social networking sites in 2007. Among teens and
college-aged users, the proportion is 25 percent.
Execs at imeem and Last.fm shrugged off MySpace’s impending entrance.
“MySpace is a bit late to the table, to be quite honest,” Last.fm
co-founder Martin Stiksel said before adding, “MySpace is always a force
to be reckoned with.”
Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey predicted in a recent report,
“The End of the Music Industry As We Know It,” that in five years social
network-enabled music purchases will be the primary way people buy
music.
Stiksel believes the ad-supported model is an even better way for
consumers to get music and for labels and artists to get paid.
“When you buy a CD, the artist and the label get paid once,” he said.
“On Last.fm, music gets monetized perpetually every time someone presses
‘play.”’
Imeem is pushing its business as an alternative to piracy for a young
audience that isn’t purchasing music.
“Social networking has the opportunity to be the best hope for the
online music experience for the fans, the artists, the industry,” imeem
chief marketing officer/head of business development Steve Jang said.
“If we can do it in a controlled way where we’re getting marketing and
promotion and also revenue, that’s great. It will eat away at a lot of
illegal usages online.”
Music social networking still has its challenges, the biggest being
whether users will put up with ads to hear their favorite songs. Execs
from imeem and Last.fm say users don’t mind ads so long as they don’t
get in the way of music playback.
“They certainly have a tremendous opportunity,” NPD VP/senior analyst
Russ Crupnick said. “On the other hand, nobody has really done a
particularly good job so far of challenging Apple. The thing about
iTunes with younger consumers is that linkage back to the iPod. It’s
hard to separate the device from the music storage and software
application.”
McQuivey points out that even if social networking does emerge as a
dominant model for listening to music, it could benefit Apple by selling
more music online, which could help sell more iPods. |