Tower Records into Podcasting

In Dave Kusek and Gerd Leonards book, The Future of Music, the authors practically warn music companies that if they don’t embrace customers and respect artists, they will be steamrolled into the digital landfill.

This story in Forbes, about Tower Records indicates that some companies have got the message. It is a podcast service called TowerPod.com that allows listeners to create podcasts  and audio shows using music from the site.

The company will pick up revenue from advertising it will slot into the podcasts –and share the revenue with those who created the podcasts! Marketing folk will obviously see an opening here to (a) buy these advertising slots, and (b) create their own podcasts since it opens a new distribution channel with strong brand recognition –alongside iTunes, of course.

The book’s main thesis, ‘music like water’ talks of music returning to a service once again, after being trapped in the productized format, the CD, tape and vinyl. I can see podcasting as just the tip of the spear of content distribution and sponsored communication. It will leap into newer formats when mobile phones (our future MP3 players) become the interface for such music services.

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What’s Amazon and iTunes up to? And what it means to marketing.

While Google is clearly moving into Microsoft territory with an Office replacement, the Amazon Vs Apple competition is equally worth watching.

All these ‘publishers’ are on a collision course. This MSNBC story highlights the Amazon move. There could be unexpected communications windfalls for independant musicians, podcasters and anyone who has been trying to pierce Big media.

The two billionaires, Apple and Amazon, are all pumped up. The former has sold one billion downloads on iTunes, and the latter just reported $1 billion in quarterly sales. Amazon’s Fishbowl, which began earlier this year is one step into Apple’s territory.  Will Apple reciprocate with, say, a business around downloadable books? Like I mentioned before, everyone’s a publisher. Of course, with iTunes, anything is possible. I recently downloaded 5 chapters of ‘The Future of Music’ via iTunes. The book is all about why content providers and musicians must embrace non-linear media, so marketing it via iTunes is a great way to demonstrate the power of these new publishers.

Sidebar: Found on Amazon:
Apple, The inside story of Intrigue, Egomania and Business Blunders.

:–)

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The web ousts TV in the U.K

One more milestone to take note of. (see other milestone here.)

MediaPost reports that people in the U.K. spend more time online, than in front of the tube.  The study was by TNS Media Intelligence and Google. In the US, it’s still equal time to the two screens.

What does this forebode for marketers? Futurists such as Bowman and Willis on journalism (We Media) or Scoble and Israel on marketing (Naked Conversations.) have been saying it quite bluntly. People want to participate, and TV was intended for the opposite kind of involvement  (or non-involvement.) From the couch…

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Old media feels the heat

I don’t want to bash old media. I don’t think I will ever give up reading newspapers in print, or subscribing to a magazine that is delivered to my doorstep. But i also work in the digital marketing industry, and know the heat is on the old media.

This piece in RedHerring, cites some awsome examples, of how revenue from the new media division of KnightRidder was 54.5% vs 3.1% from the regular version. The attacks are coming from all directions, as I noted before. Even Advertising Age, a print pub, is anything but. As my favorite columnist Scott Donation notes in this Ad Age piece (free, registration required) A New Media Story of Rocks and Revolution:

"Ad Age is no longer a weekly publication; it’s the world’s leading source of news, information and data on advertising, marketing and media. And it’s delivered through whatever platforms make the most sense for our audience and advertisers. It’s why we run a real-time news operation online.."

Elsewhere, everyone’s a publisher. Of the top 3 brands in the U.S., Apple, Google, and Starbucks, 2 of them are publishers in the digital era. Even Starbucks is in the toe-in-the-water stage, with music and movies.

Then there’s Glen Reynold’s book, An Army of Davids, that purportedly spells out the transformation of Big media. Must buy it!

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Advertising subsidized media works? Duh!

The survey of iPod users, cited in an Advertising Age MediaWorks newsletter, shows that people who download or are planning to download Tv programs from iTunes for $1.99 a pop, would view an ad –if the advertiser paid for the download.

This brings an interesting idea to play, one that has always been contentious: Advertising is not such a bad thing, in the right circumstance. People do understand that content is subsidized by advertisers. Of course, in the old mass marketing model, people would do anything to sidestep advertising because the ads were not exactly targeted.

But with channels like iTunes, and dozens of other ways for people to select their own information or entertainment (HBO, for instance is selling segments of The Sopranos, and MTV plans to sell VHI, MTV, and Comedy Central programs optimized for viewing on mobile phones) the problem of ‘bombardment’ is going away.

The study cited, only talks of the findings in terms of attitudes toward iTunes. But as more video-capable mobile devices and phones show up this year, it will open a window for all marketers to bond with content providers. Consumers will rush to the digital faucets for paid and free content. There will soon be many ways to make advertising make much of what flows through them seem like free.

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Blaming iPods for hearing damage

Blaming iPods for causing hearing damage is as intelligent as blaming Starbucks for leaving coffee stains on your teeth. No one forces anyone to stick earbuds into his/her ears. But some will try to regulate any business that takes off.

France, has set a 100 decibel limot on Mp3 players.

But calling iPods ‘inherently defective’ for delivering 115 decibels? C’mon! The lawsuit was filed by a man in San Jose, California.

If you look at the back of your computer keyboard you will notice a warning about ‘improper or prolonged use’ of the keyboard that may cause injuries. Obviously a result of lawsuits filed when Carpal Tunnel Syndrome came to lawyers’ attention. How useful is that? I bet you 90% of people who use a PC haven’t seen the warning!  While we are at it, why not force book publishers to carry a warning that the pages inside could give you papercuts?

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Podcasting picks up –sloooowly

How widespread is podcasting? It’s still a fringe media activity, because companies are still givibg it the blog treatment –waiting to see if it will be a passing fad.

MediaPost, an advertising and media portal reported in its January 06 conference how Whirlpool found podcasting to be a valuable part of its marketing mix.  (Check the number of podcasts Whirlpool has available for download on its site.)

MediaPost puts things in perspective, noting that back in 2002, interactive and online advertising was not on the radar of most big name advertisers who "had to be coaxed, bribed, guaranteed, shamed, tricked and otherwise coerced into rediscovering the Internet."

Podcasting may prove itself faster, without the shaming and bribing.

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New York magazine on Blogging

Blog_cover_newyorkmagNothing like a 4-letter word in gigantic type to get attention.

New York mag, is slightly (!) late in recognizing the impact of blogging. But the discussion is worthy, including, that of Chris Anderson’s ‘long tail theory.’ Anderson, the Wired editor (named Editor of the Year in 2005 by Advertising Age) coined the term 2 years ago not to describe blogging, however.

Almost a year ago, The Nation covered blogging.

Forbes_1105 And of course, there was the (in)famous Forbes magazine story (left) about the ‘online lynch mob.’ that raised a lot of ire.

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GoDaddy’s soap opera: where’s the Big Idea?

By now the GoDaddy Super Bowl commercial has probably run out of steam, and one wonders what all the fuss was about –by GoDaddy, not ABC. Meaning, why would a company go to such lengths to defend such a lame commercial? If the whole ‘malfunction‘ issue is the only idea, then it is not only out of date, but irrelevant. This could very well have been a Super Bowl beer commercial from a time when agencies and clients didn’t know better. (Anyone remember the ‘Swedish Bikini Team’ and the Miller Light’s ‘Catfight’ commercial?)

But Bob Parsons supposedly knows better, judging from the media statements and blog that insist this unnecessary controversy has garnered the company more advertising than the the ads could have achieved. If anything, the strategy to get people to come to the web site to watch the banned versions of the dumb commercial, may pay off. It’s a domain registrar, after all. But GoDaddy wants to be remembered as a company who is pusing the buttons. See how someone has cleverly included the window-washer girl in this Wikipedia entry which obviously has been updated today!

I can hardly fault GoDaddy for the poor taste in the commercial. This is, after all the product of an advertising agency, who ought to know better –about branding. As a marketer, where is GoDaddy really going with this? If you have the moolah to splurge, there is a more responsible way to build your brand than spend it on old story line about a broken strap that is irrelevant to your product offering, anyway.

Speaking about storylines, take the FedEx commercial, ‘stick’ which was both entertaining, and still focused on what the brand stands for.  The caveman tries to air-ship a stick using a pterodactyl, but the courier is snapped up by a dinasaur, mid flight. The caveman’s boss fires him, and he protests that he could not have used FeDex since it does not exist. "That’s not my problem," replies his boss. The poor fellow sulks outside his cave only to be squashed by a massive foot of an anonymous beast. The message: use FeDex (even if it does not exist in your cave) or else…

Ironic, isn’t it how the window washer seems to have predated the caveman? 

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Cell Phone Feature film

Cell I’ve been writing about this recently so this news was to be expected.

A Reuter story notes that South African director Aryan Kaganov used 8 cell phones, to create a feature film. It’s called SMS Sugar Man.

I checked iout the SMS Sugar Man web site and it’s easy to mistake it for a traditional movie web site. The typography etc has been made to look exactly like a film poster with clickable areas to get you into the backstory..

SMS Sugar Man seemingly is shot on Sony Ericsson phones (the site links to the Sony site.) The story line is about ‘a pimp with principles’ but it is a Christmas story with car chases!

It’s worth noting that while this is the first feature film shot on cell phones, Aryan Kaganov was also the first to shoot a feature film using Mini DV technology!

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