Posts Tagged ‘Entrepreneurship’

Making a Profit in Music: The Mick Jagger Meme and More

Friday, May 28th, 2010
Mick Jagger - The Rolling Stones live at San S...
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I saw this quote from Mick Jagger at least 5 times in different blogs in my Google Reader,

…people only made money out of records for a very, very small time. When The Rolling Stones started out, we didn’t make any money out of records because record companies wouldn’t pay you! They didn’t pay anyone!

Then, there was a small period from 1970 to 1997, where people did get paid, and they got paid very handsomely and everyone made money. But now that period has gone.

So if you look at the history of recorded music from 1900 to now, there was a 25 year period where artists did very well, but the rest of the time they didn’t.

I think people are fascinated about what Jagger has to say since he is one of the most wildly successful and no doubt wealthy recording musicians of all time with career longevity most artists envy. Plus, he’s rich, right? Is he saying it was just good timing? (Nah, I’m certain some of that musical genius and epic charisma had something to do with it.) However, despite Tyler Cowen’s friendly rib that Jagger is no economist, the phenomenon Jagger is talking about is no less true and is explained further by Daniel Wolf of Renewable Music,

That date [Jagger is referring to] in the late 90′s coincides rather precisely with the mass introduction of cheap digital recording equipment and media as well as the widespread use of portable digital players.  The old model of radio advertising paying royalties for recorded music which was licensed cheaply for broadcast with the idea that randomly-heard broadcasts of songs were advertisements for the purchase of albums — which allowed the listener to select particular songs on their own — pretty much collapsed at that point in time.  The technological innovations leading to ever-cheaper and ever-more accurate recording and storage capacity were inevitable but the whole thing gets ugly when one considers that the firms selling the new recording technologies were, in many cases, also publishers of the music that was inevitably going to be recorded.

The “gets ugly” Wolf is referring to is the loss of revenue to individual artists. (Check out this scary graphic re: distribution of profits in the music world via NewsObserver TechJunkie.) This is admittedly a problem for most artists aiming to have a recording and performing career. Wolf further notes, and correctly in my opinion,

Although recordings and webcasts may have some advertising function, in the end, the grand experiment [of commodifying music] may leave us back where we started, with live performance the most important — and in many cases, only — opportunity for a musician to earn money.

While I will only mention the can of worms that is the issue of Baumol’s cost disease in live performance, I think Wolf is correct in that performance is likely to be the most lucrative way to make money. It is undeniable that the business model for artists is subject to rapid change, in particular when technology is introduced and dramatically alters the landscape artists have to work with.

However, I find it curious that despite the fact that individual artists are likely to have low(er?) chances of making it big financially in music, introduction of technology has helped achieve what has long been considered one of the most troubling aspects of becoming and artist and disseminating work: access to distribution channels. Never before in history have so many people been able to access A) ways to make and distribute their own music cheaply B) ways to hear music of all kinds cheaply. This is an undoubted improvement, as far as egalitarian ideals of access to the arts are concerned.

So, are we dealing with trade-offs (sacrifices) between access and profitability? Are there other business models that could evolve to put even more control of revenues into individual artist’s hands? Is what is “wrong” with the music industry the big labels in charge promoting watered down music, or the poor tastes (and thus, demands) of mass consumer culture?

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Business Models for Artists: Jingle Punks

Monday, March 8th, 2010

I hope this post becomes the first in a series of presenting successful business models for artists and those pursuing otherwise creative careers. In my experience, artists think far less about business and financial matters than they should, making the already-competitive world of the arts even more difficult to navigate successfully.

I love this idea and in fact, wished there was something like this for myself and my students years ago. There is nothing more discouraging than having students walk into my studio with oodles of talent, ideas, and finished original music with few outlets for it besides the local music scene and relying on the off-chance some producer, somewhere will discover them at a show or open a demo they sent without an introduction from someone in the business. Furthermore, until now, it seems most online submission sites have had costly fees and dubious results.

Enter Jingle Punks,

After an initial screening of your music and a bit of paperwork, you’ll be ready to get your music in The Jingle Player giving countless TV Networks, Production Houses, Film Producers, and Ad Agencies access to your music. What more could you ask for?

The Contract Details

NON-EXCLUSIVE: Continue to market & sell your music elsewhere.

50 / 50 SPLIT: Half of any licensing fee we get for you music, is yours.

OWN YOUR STUFF: You remain in control of all rights to your music.

1 YEAR: The initial contract is for one year.

NO FEE: No cost to give it a go.

Learn more about how the Jingle Punks creators came up with their idea, collaborated and executed what is now a thriving small business in this CNNMoney clip.

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A Scathing Admonition for The Artist

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

I was delighted today to come across this lively, and at times, painfully honest speech given by Ismail Mahomed of South Africa’s National Arts Festival. I recommend reading Arts Entrepreneurship Can Smash the Begging Bowl it in its entirety. He begins,

When for far too long we have attributed the term “artist” to an individual or organisation that holds a paintbrush in one hand and a begging bowl in the other hand, is it possible to associate the term “artist” with the now much brandished about term “economic development”?

Mahomed is adamant that individual artists are obligated to change this stereotype, that is, if they expect to make a living and to be taken seriously,

How much of this can be attributed to the fact that the artists have often define themselves in the ways which serve to entrench their un-employability and their positions of poverty? Take a walk down Commissioner Street in Johannesburg and ask any entrepreneur what he or she does. The answer will be clear and unambiguous. “I am a banker” or “I sell insurance” or “I am a lawyer”, “Here is my business card”.

Conversely, walk around the Newtown precinct and ask any artist what work he or she does and you are likely to receive an answer such as, “Eish! I am an artist. Sometimes, I sing. Sometimes, I dance. Sometimes, I act. But eish! It’s tough so I try to do anything.”

Often, the “I can do anything” doesn’t reinforce the versatility of the artist. In fact, the message that it conveys is that the artist is a Jack of all trades and a master of none. In an environment where there is a shortage of resources for the making of art; and where there is a competition for the limited resources, the artist can no longer afford to be complacent about his or her career.

I have had the honor of knowing or meeting many working artists (meaning they make their entire living from the arts). They all have one thing in common: keen business sense and artistic direction. Without naming names, many times these people are not always the most talented, and in fact, they are quite amused to tell you this. A famous composer I once met told me about how there were so many more students more talented than he, but he simply worked harder than any of them and has had a wildly successful career as a composer.

Mahomed’s example reminds me of when I was once criticized for not being a “real artist” because I had little experience begging on the street corners of New York City for people to come see my Off-Off-Broadway show. Now, that strikes me as a peculiar qualifier. I would hope that an artist can be defined by a combination of talent and marketability, whether on the streets of New York, or here in Detroit.

Another “real artist” I once met became very annoyed when I asked him “what kind of music he composes.” He looked extremely put out, and then, as if doing me some kind of favor, gave a speech about the ineffable in art and how his music is beyond definition. Wow. Maybe that kind of bumptious discourse lands him oodles of commissioned work, but my guess is that it does not.

Knowing that these people exemplify the commonly accepted definitions of “real artists,” I’m more than happy to be excluded from their company. Yes, perhaps I am a bit more career-oriented than most “artists,” and perhaps I don’t have a career that most “artists” would call “real art-making,” but that is no matter to me. What I do know is that a “real artist” can and should sell his work and make a living at it.

 
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