A question of value
Mar. 18th, 2009 01:01 pmI was chatting to Julie about music recently - and about the changes that things like Last.FM and Spotify make to how value is perceived.
If you have nothing, and £10 will get you an album of music to listen to, then that sounds like a pretty good deal.
If you have a free pseudo-random selection of music you have no control over interspersed with adverts (i.e. radio), and £10 will get you an album of music to listen to, then you might still decide that that's a good deal - depending on how much you like the stuff that you get for free.
If you have total control over the music you listen to, so long as you have broadband access, broken up by only the occasional advert, then how much would you pay to get rid of those ads? £1 a month? £10 a month? £20 a month? How much to have that music on the move? £1 a track? £0.20 a track?
I'd pay a couple of pounds a month to not have ads. £10 is probably too much. The differential between "all the music for free (with the occasional advert)" and "all the music for free (no ads)" isn't _that_ high to me.
Of course, this does nothing to help me have music on the move. But how much am I willing to pay for my own music, rather than radio?
It feels very much like the value proposition is changing.
[Poll #1367528]
If you have nothing, and £10 will get you an album of music to listen to, then that sounds like a pretty good deal.
If you have a free pseudo-random selection of music you have no control over interspersed with adverts (i.e. radio), and £10 will get you an album of music to listen to, then you might still decide that that's a good deal - depending on how much you like the stuff that you get for free.
If you have total control over the music you listen to, so long as you have broadband access, broken up by only the occasional advert, then how much would you pay to get rid of those ads? £1 a month? £10 a month? £20 a month? How much to have that music on the move? £1 a track? £0.20 a track?
I'd pay a couple of pounds a month to not have ads. £10 is probably too much. The differential between "all the music for free (with the occasional advert)" and "all the music for free (no ads)" isn't _that_ high to me.
Of course, this does nothing to help me have music on the move. But how much am I willing to pay for my own music, rather than radio?
It feels very much like the value proposition is changing.
[Poll #1367528]
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Date: 2009-03-18 01:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 01:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 01:08 pm (UTC)I also like cover art.
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Date: 2009-03-18 01:11 pm (UTC)I remember the cover art argument from when CDs first appeared, when vinyl lovers said that nobody would be interested in CDs because the cover art was so tiny :->
You should give Spotify a go, it's the best music listening service I've used so far.
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Date: 2009-03-18 01:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 01:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 01:44 pm (UTC)I found that the physical bits didn't do much for me after a while (all of my CDs are in crates at the moment). Burning CDs for others is slightly more serious :->
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Date: 2009-03-18 01:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 01:50 pm (UTC)I sure miss Pandora, though.
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Date: 2009-03-18 01:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 02:00 pm (UTC)Pandora was nice because it learned. Shame it's US only nowadays.
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Date: 2009-03-18 02:58 pm (UTC)b) I find it hard to conceive of much of my collection being covered by any one service. Some of it almost certainly not by ANY service.
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Date: 2009-03-18 03:04 pm (UTC)But neither really does the trick for me in that I most want to listen to music when I'm not at home--on the bus, on the train, at my desk, in a public space when I don't want other people's sounds eating my head--and so these don't fit that gap very well. I want takeaway music, as well as endlessly cusomisable radio. So, paying for online radio? Not so much.
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Date: 2009-03-18 03:12 pm (UTC)-- Steve also doesn't like the lack of personal portability of a lot of the music "services" like satellite radio and subscription streaming audio. If it can't fit in a shirt pocket, not interested.
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Date: 2009-03-18 03:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 03:23 pm (UTC)(Although thinking of it almost everything we watch is ad paid for UK TV).
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Date: 2009-03-18 03:33 pm (UTC)Actually i have a fair few Cds sold by bands out of the van that won't be on the likes of Last and Spotify.
Re: recurring fees
Date: 2009-03-18 04:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 04:33 pm (UTC)I don't mind whether I buy MP3s or CDs, though; I'm pretty comfortable with my backup regimes.
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Date: 2009-03-18 04:36 pm (UTC)If it covered 50% of what I liked then the urge would clearly be higher.
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Date: 2009-03-18 04:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 05:18 pm (UTC)Online stations that play songs from a genre of my choosing where I can veto songs I don't like aren't anywhere near as enjoyable for me; a large part of the pleasure of radio is the unexpectedness of it.
If I was going to pick any option, it would be the one that allowed me to download a certain amount of songs for a regular fee. Possession adds a lot more value for me as well.
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Date: 2009-03-18 05:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 05:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-18 06:45 pm (UTC)I'm probably wrong, but I like my theory anyway :->