A Little Less Paid Promotion

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I saw a couple of posts today regarding changes at Spotify that give new artists the ability to take a lower royalty in order to get promoted in what they are calling "Discovery Mode" - and there are of course, complaints. Because essentially, people believe that they should get promoted by the algorithms for free and this is just another greedy corporation. It may very well be the case, but what are they expecting to be promoted upon

The quality of the music?

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Who chooses what gets boosted?

An emerging artist essentially comes to the table with a zero fanbase, so through Discovery Mode, they can submit their songs and get bumped by the algorithm in exchange for less royalty. This might very well seem like a money grab, but it is also a sorting process and once they are established, they would be able to move off the emerging list, possibly having a fanbase that crosses the globe and gives them alternate sources of income, like potential to tour.

Currently, it is difficult to get discovered through the streaming platforms for emerging artists, because in general, people will automatically listen to what they know, using collections and playlists that are curated, not randomly looking for unfamiliar music.

Wouldn't you want to be able to advertise to get visibility?

And, while this way it is skimming from earnings, at least it is coming from earnings - not an outlay before earnings, like the advertising. It isn't money out of the pocket, it is potential future money, before it ever goes into the pocket. A subtle difference, but an important one, as far too many people see money that could be their in the future, as already theirs in the present. We see this on Hive of course, where people get a vote on their post and then a downvote, and believe they have had money taken away from them. That is not the case, as the platform code allows for posts to be open to negotiate the value, and only when it is transferred from the blockchain pool into the private wallet, it becomes owned.

Ownership.

It is the future. It is the past and present too, but currently the average expectation is that everything should be given for free, even though no skin has been put in the game. In the case of the bands, there may be skin in the game in terms of the band at a local level, but that doesn't give it strength to negotiate on a platform at a global level. The platform is under no obligation to boost anyone's music and they can instead just drive for profits. And if that is what they are going to do, then it is more efficient to just have the big name artists there and the ones the record labels are willing to push.

If you want exposure and support, you are going to have to pay for it.

One way or another.

In many ways, this is a good thing for the artists, because it is starting the trend away from the middlemen negotiators who take their cut too, and lets the artist themselves make their decisions. No one is forced to pay a slice of their royalties to be discovered on Spotify and, no one is forced to be on Spotify at all. Granted, it is one of the places an artist might want to be on, but what is the point if not getting listens?

Anyone can publish on Spotify, as long as they have been signed to a label or get added through an aggregator. But, being on the platform is largely like the tens of millions of Instagram accounts that don't even have their family and friends checking in regularly - they are not monetized. They might dream of "making it big", but the reality of it is, only a miniscule amount of artists ever do make it mainstream. Not many are even indie popular.

Ownership isn't just about the content, it is also about the distribution activities and control over the visibility. Too many people think that these centralized publishing platforms are public forums, rather than the corporate, for-profit entities that they actually are. It is their business model to make money and ultimately, their success depends on being able to take a cut from the artists. It is up to the artists to decide whether they are willing to pay or not, and if they want to earn, they are going to have to pay someone - they have publicists and managers that work for a fee, right?

And this is something interesting to note in terms of payments from Spotify, because most of what they payout, goes to the record labels and distributors, and it is up to them to pay the artists.

While I do think that streaming music is one of the killers for new artists, I also think that it has increased the money being generated in the music business as a whole, with select artists taking in a lot more than they would have earlier. I also think that it is part of a changing meta in the industry, where once again "proof of person" is going to be the deciding factor, and the artists that are touring and performing live, will take the largest share of the cake, because they will build a fanbase through paid gigs, that will also drive streams on platforms for supplementary income.

And perhaps this is where it comes down to these days, where a lot of people in general , want to be able to earn large amounts of money, without having to do all the work, or even getting out of their house. Technology has shifted so that we can work from anywhere and still reach a global market, but the attention of that market is always going to be limited and therefore, needs to be won. On top of this, the culture of society has made everything disposable and people flick and change from one thing "they love" to another, very, very quickly.

Few artists can maintain the attention of their fanbase for long, which is why the "stars" are getting up to all kinds of mischief in order to get the attention on what they are actually selling - themselves. It is rarely about the music these days, it is about the story behind the personality that people connect with and through that, they attach themselves to the music too and, keep listening. They might need one song to be the hook -

Where will they hear it?

Taraz
[ Gen1: Hive ]

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27 comments
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Anyone can publish on Spotify, as long as they have been signed to a label or get added through an aggregator.

I’d guess that a fair percentage of emerging artists would try the aggregator route since many of them might not have an agent, let alone have signed with a label.

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Yep. And the funny thing is, they cost too. The aggregators aren't free, and they take the money upfront.

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On top of this, the culture of society has made everything disposable and people flick and change from one thing "they love" to another, very, very quickly.

I think there is also another thing at play here, that is the sheer size of all media available. New artists aren't just competing with other current artists, but with every artist that has been recorded since... well, since we started recording music. I guess that's always been true, but in the past that older music wasn't as easily available and sounded old, but now it is as easily available as something new and a lot of it has been remastered so well that it sounds just as good as modern produced music.

It's hard for new people to break in and it's becoming even harder. That in mind, I think the Spotify deal is a great one.

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New artists aren't just competing with other current artists, but with every artist that has been recorded since...

Absolutely! And, there is a very long and growing tail, as people tend to listen to what they listened to in their younger years, rather than new music. This means that the longer the streaming services run, the harder it becomes to break into the industry. In the past, people had "less access" to music, so tended to listen to the radio a lot and therefore, get the introduction to random new - that happens less with a playlist of 90s hits.

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I think a lot of artist leverage YouTube in conjunction with Spotify to actually reach new fans and bring them in. I can think of several who already had a decent fanbase on YouTube before they released anything on Spotify. That likely makes a little bit of difference. Probably not much. I don't know...

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YouTube and Tik Tok I reckon... I don't think you can find a fanbase on Spotify if you're not with a record label... you have to create your fanbase elsewhere and direct them to Spotify.

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Yeah, that's my thinking too

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Yeah, I thinkthis is the way most will find the record label these days. Some of them only do covers and still get played.

On that note, notice how in many restaurants and stores don't play the original anymore, they are all covers?

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There are a couple of stations I listen to on satellite radio that are just covers. I enjoy hearing artists reimagine the classics that we love. Some of them even turn out better than the original. It is rare though.

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While it's true that people do tend to stick with music artists they know, people really do love using the Playlists function on Spotify because they hear new music that isn't in their usual rotation.

The problem is that record labels have outsized leverage on Spotify's playlists:

It’s even worse when you look at the Rap Caviar and Get Turnt playlists. There, UMG artists had almost 42% of the list, UMG almost 25% and Sony around 21%. That’s 88% of the total spots on the lists!

Source

Despite this change, I doubt new artists will get much exposure... the algorithm might give artists a momentary boost for essentially free music, until they are including new artists on the Playlists it will make no real difference.

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I use playlist function a bit, just to get some random. Choose a genre and spin the wheel kind of thing.

until they are including new artists on the Playlists it will make no real difference.

Perhaps it helps them decide who will be included. maybe only 1 in 100 get through the filter, but perhaps earlier, it was 1 in 1000?

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Or one in 1 in 1,000,000,000 since the record labels hold so much power.

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Etsy also does same thing. They want you to list your products and also pay for the algorithm. And some people do it to get sales. And then sale funds also go back into the loop. It takes a lot of sales to even out the money being spent on such algorithm. I feel that corporations got very greedy and also there is one thing of reach too. Like too many accounts connecting them to right buyer or the person does require algorithm, and maybe this loop hole is what they are gaming.

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Etsy does the dropshipping thing, right? (I don't know much about it.) However, this is the problem with the low cost of content creation - drop shipping doesn't even require the product to be made until sold etc, so there is no cost in "production" in a sense. Same with content created on Hive through AI - it clogs up the system for real users, making it hard for anything of value to be found.

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I look at Tom MacDonald and his success as his own promoter, producer, publicist etc.
He writes and records all of his own songs, and his girlfriend shoots his videos. He makes the point that he can't be cancelled as there's no studio to boycott.
On one hand, you might say that it would be unfair for something like Spotify to demand a share of his potential earnings in exchange for promotion, but then what are the odds somebody as fearless and confrontational would've ever seen fame otherwise?

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Never heard but I like that song. Will check out more :)

He makes the point that he can't be cancelled as there's no studio to boycott.

And this is why it is so important not to be beholden to the ad revenue model - it is why people can be cancelled and why they are forced to sell out, if they want to make it a career. I see the changing dynamic in this through blockchain ownership and distribution of content, as well as revenue though. Hopefully Hive is part of the content creator revolution.

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If the song of an emerging artist is good, then he/she will be trend somehow. Spotify or precedents don't need to call such artists to our attention.

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There is a lot of good music that never sees the light of day. A lot of crap does get seen too :)

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I don't think I have heard many people click on things from the Spotify algorithm for music. At least, I think the existing social media such as Youtube, Twitter, Tiktok and Instagram seem way better because they can just post clips of their music for people to enjoy. Then if people want the actual music, they can always go over to Spotify to pay for it.

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I think a lot of the platforms that people use for exposure, also take advantage of it, as they make money too, while the artist gets nothing. What is the difference?

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I think the barrier to earn is quite tough but it does help them gain more followers. It's kind of tough but having more eyes does help but I don't recall hearing anyone I know saying they follow spotify recommendations at all.

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If you want exposure and support, you are going to have to pay for it.

Completely agree, but while reading your post, I started to think how easy will be for the new AI platforms such as GPT (with its new 4 version integrated into Microsoft Bing) to tweak their algorithms in benefit of companies they are charging for exposure. Just the same way Google started being a "pure" search engine and now most top searches are ads.

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I think the best discovery of an artist is the face-to-face to the best style of all time Mr. Taraz who listens to him hopefully a good artistic promoter and starts to lead him to the path of success with work, dedication, effort, and many presentations in places that step by step lead him to stardom.

Have a great day in union with your family.

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This is one of the reasons why the music company I work for -- MoonLvnding.com -- puts out its own curated playlists. We get to highlight artists and songs based on the merit of their work, not which label they're on.

The one I enjoy most - New Music Friday Heat - is updated weekly with many of the new songs that drop on Fridays. We also manage a house playlist and a bass playlist too, curated a few times each month. Truth be told though, I've never had a Spotify membership and I typically use SoundCloud because they have more of what I really want - recorded live sets from festivals and radio broadcasts.

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I think back in steemit days I paid a bot. But payout of the post was disappointing. I believe I made less than I paid. Now I would not want to pay for that. I would rather power that hive up.

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