|
digital audio insider |
home about Digital Audio Insider is David Harrell's blog about the economics of digital music. contact Follow the advice of a certain Scottish band to send an e-mail. links music business/tech: Ad-Supported Music Central Analog Industries Ars Technica Apple 2.0 AppleInsider Brad Sucks Blog Broken Record Byte of the Apple CNET Music News Coolfer Digital Music News Digital Noise Duke Listens Epicenter Future of Music Coalition Blog Hypebot Know the Music Biz LA Times Technology Blog The ListeNerd Medialoper MP3 Insider Music Ally Music Machinery Music Think Tank MusicTank New Music Strategies Online Fandom Pampelmoose Penny Distribution Blog RAIN Rough Type Swindleeeee TuneTuzer economics/markets: The Big Picture Core Economics Freakonomics The Long Tail Marginal Revolution Odd Numbers Partially Unexpected The Undercover Economist mp3/music: 17 Dots 3hive Fingertips Shake Your Fist archives January 2006 February 2006 March 2006 April 2006 May 2006 June 2006 July 2006 August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007 July 2007 August 2007 September 2007 October 2007 November 2007 December 2007 January 2008 February 2008 March 2008 April 2008 May 2008 June 2008 July 2008 August 2008 September 2008 October 2008 November 2008 December 2008 January 2009 February 2009 March 2009 April 2009 May 2009 June 2009 July 2009 |
November 29, 2006 Increased Per-Song Payments from eMusicby David Harrell The per-download payout from eMusic to labels/artists has increased: Our CD Baby account is showing eMusic payments of 27.4 cents a download for our most recent sales. (CD Baby takes a 9% cut, leaving us 24.9 cents a download.) This is a huge percentage jump from the 19.4 cent gross per-song payment from our last batch of reported eMusic sales. While eMusic's recent changes in its subscription plans should boost per-song payouts, the new plans just took effect last week, so that can't be the reason. One factor in eMusic's variable payout is the average number of songs downloaded by subscribers -- any increase in the per-song payout indicates that the average number of downloads per subscriber has declined. The increase above indicates a fairly sharp drop in the average number of downloads. (Though I've certainly been wrong before in my attempts to decipher eMusic's revenue-sharing economics.) related: Welcome to the Club, A Price Increase for eMusic tags: eMusic music subscriptions digital downloads link 0 comments e-mail this post Digg this post follow DAI on Twitter |
Subscribe: Add this blog to Del.icio.us, Digg or Furl The Digital Audio Insider Twitter feed: Looking to hire? Looking for a job? Check out the digital audio insider job board. Most Popular Posts The New Music Equation By the Numbers: Using Last.fm Statistics to Quantify Audience Devotion Lala.com Owes Me Sixty Cents Economists, Radiohead, and Bob Mould To Free or Not to Free Price Elasticity of Demand for McCartney The Digital Pricing Conundrum series: Part One Part Two Part Three Part Four The Layaways (my band) New album: "The Space Between" is now available from eMusic. "It can't be easy to make something this basically simple sound so fulfilling; it if were, everyone would do it." -- Fingertips "The Layaways have a unique sound with great drum fills and airy vocals that will make you tap your feet and sing along." -- VIC Radio Keep It to Yourself - free mp3 All Around the World - free mp3 Come Back Home - free mp3 Download from eMusic, iTunes, Amazon MP3, Lala.com, or CD Baby, listen to free streams at Last.fm and Napster. "The Layaways make fine indie pop. Hushed vocals interweave with understated buzzing guitars. The whole LP is a revelation from the start." -- Lost Music "A wonderfully crafted recording built around tasteful songwriting and musicianship..." -- PopMatters Silence - free mp3 The Long Night - free mp3 Download from eMusic, Amazon MP3, or iTunes, listen to free streams at Last.fm, Napster, or Rhapsody. "These are songs that you want to take home with you, curl up with, hold them close -- and pray that they are still with you when you wake up." -- The Big Takeover Let Me In - free mp3 Ocean Blue - free mp3 Download from eMusic, Amazon MP3, or iTunes, listen to free streams at Last.fm, Napster, or Rhapsody. More Layaways downloads: the layaways website Current/Recent Reading and Listening:
It's written as a how-to guide for those looking to become music supervisors, but I found it to be a good resource for musicians (like me) who are trying to get their music used in movies, TV, etc. |