Record Business

Catalog Sales: Why The Past Is So Important To The Future.

Illustration by Emily Rabin

Illustration by Emily Rabin

Much has been said over the past week about catalog sales overtaking new release or front-line sales. Many have offered opinions on why this has happened (pricing differences; deaths of important artists) and what it means (legacy artists are “better”; new music “stinks”, etc.).

I feel that much is missing from this conversation, so I’ll try to provide a little background on catalog as a business and how I think it should be integrated into new record company models.

A record company’s assets are its sound recordings (as embodied on the actual masters). These recordings are what the company owns, and with that ownership comes a potential revenue stream. Of course, for this potential to be realized, the catalog needs to be created and then marketed effectively. If this takes place, the revenue stream created by it won’t dry up simply because an artist moves into a new release cycle. In fact, if an artist remains viable, then their catalog will generate a revenue stream that will pay out like an annuity.

Financial planners tell you to diversify your portfolio as a hedge against market downturns. The theory is that through diversification, you can weather a bear market because some portion of your assets will still have returns even if others are losing money. This is accomplished through a variety of means: investing in multiple asset classes, using a mix of investment vehicles, etc. Given the current state of the record business and that I see a future involving assessing multiple—though much smaller—revenue streams, it makes sense to take the financial planner’s advice. Capitalizing on a variety of revenue streams as they relate to an individual company’s (or artist’s) business is essential.

When we talk about “depth of catalog”, we talk about a record company that made investments in its future by signing and developing artists whose recordings became more valuable over time. To do this, label A&Rs must balance the need to sign talent that is hot and current with an eye toward whether that talent has staying power. If done well, each signing works to diversify the company’s portfolio. Each should be an investment that will continue to pay (like an annuity) regardless of the current market conditions.

What has concerned me about record company structure over the past decade or so is how their catalog business has been divorced from their front-line business. Yes, catalog is old and unsexy. However, it sells, and certainly given this recent data, it is reemerging as an important revenue stream. I do understand the principle behind the split: it’s simply economy of scale. However, I think that valuable synergies are lost when you separate the catalog and the front-line. Furthermore “music discovery” is a growing business that will hopefully lead to greater increases in catalog sales. Frankly, in the current marketplace, companies need to take advantage of every opportunity.

(Of course, this entire conversation is described in Chris Anderson's book, The Long Tail.)

What this shift in sales ultimately represents is an opportunity for a return to focusing on the catalog business. While I would argue that it should have never taken a back seat to front-line marketing efforts, the reemergence of catalog sales shows its continued importance to the record business. And in the digital marketplace, catalog product doesn’t take up space or require tremendous resources to manage. As a result, it is like free money, as (presumably) the costs incurred in creating it have already been incurred, and therefore any cost in maintaining it is purely for marketing and promotion.

So does the reemergence of catalog sales mean that new music stinks? Of course not, but it should be a clarion call to record companies and artists that they need to diversify their products and take better advantage of their catalog.

One Year Into The Future: Spotify And The New Record Business.

CDs won't ever go away completely; neither will vinyl. Physical recordings won’t disappear as consumer products. Collectors and audiophiles will still purchase them as part of high-end or limited-edition releases. (Well, maybe not all formats, though this is ironic given I was in a Range Rover last weekend that had a cassette deck hidden behind the GPS.) Each of these formats has a consumer, and each represents a revenue stream for musicians trying to make money by selling recordings of their work.

This brings us to Spotify, the Swedish streaming service that launched in the US a year ago. I remember anxiously awaiting its arrival, my interest piqued by reports from the international marketing staff who were hearing about the service in advance. We were waiting for this new service to launch in the US, wondering whether it would be important enough to revolutionize the music business.

It turns out that Spotify is important. It is the link between iTunes and the future.

The main question involving Spotify is how it replaces traditional revenue streams at a time when artists and record labels can’t completely shed their reliance on them. This is a particularly vexing question, as there are arguments that Spotify is not much of a revenue stream at all. (A subject for another post.) Physical sales still represent a substantial part of many labels’ and artists’ income (and margin), and no matter how much they may want to transition to digital, they must still deal with this reality. Even more troubling is that the mix of digital and physical sales is inconsistent from artist to artist, project to project and genre to genre. As a result, it is difficult to gauge the impact of any service.

Despite this question, Spotify represents a significant step forward in how music is monetized. Regardless of whether or not Spotify becomes the industry standard, it is important because it is the first to emerge that satisfies the issues previously affecting streaming services. It may not currently completely replace physical or even digital album and singles sales, but it works, shows consumer acceptance and is growing. It is also legal. Spotify may be untested, but as consumers shift into the cloud, and from "ownership" to "access" models, it gives artists a chance to adjust to these new models while continuing to make money from traditional ones. It also gives consumers an easy way to join the newest segment of the record business.

iTunes was once a new service that solved many problems inherent in "ownership" models. However, if the future is streaming, satisfying artists and consumers in different ways is the key to success for "access" models. Spotify is important because they have realized this.