Evolution and Development of Music Consumption: November 2016
Evolution and Development of Music Consumption: November 2016
Evolution and Development of Music Consumption: November 2016
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CONTENTS
Introduction .................................................................................................... 5!
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Introduction
My attention in the last years focused in the various faces of music. According
to my academic studies in the conservatory, I studied in deep the art aspect,
the big world behind history, composition. Alongside my university courses
in the last years, I wanted to discover the “backstage” of modern music. I
realized it is a complex world, but sometimes it is not so complicated as it has
been before the web 2.0. Many things changed in the last century concerning
music, like production, distribution, consumption and use. My purpose is to
examine these aspects. In addition, I will observe the important role of the
consumer (became ‘prosumer’) on the related customer management. I will
also sum up how the consumption of music is generating a big size of data,
giving much information to related companies. Music has always been a
matter of numbers, but in this case, is the mixture between art and data a good
one?
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Music have always been a matter of numbers. There are several examples of
how music was and is, in different genres, a matter of numbers in terms of
public or money. From classical music to classical music composers and rock
band, most of the artists were interested in earn as much as they could, for
example through commissions from other wealthy people or as Oasis band
teaches. What is changed is the consistency and the value of those numbers.
The evolution brought to a “de-materialization” of numbers, or better, a
digitalization. Referring to George Ritzer and Zygmunt Bauman, the
condition evolved under another important distinction: that from heavy to
light. One characteristic of people, things, information and places of older
years (assuming the parameter for this example the advent of internet) is
solidity. Music was CDs sold, instruments owned by composers, music
composed, and many other things. But what I consider fundamental is the
arrival of internet. This tool is revolutionizing communication and affected
music in its three main aspects: from production, to distribution and
consumption (there would be another step, the use of music, for example
soundtracks for movies or advertising). First of all, digitalization brought to
the de-materialization of instruments. Software which emulate real
instrumental (virtual studio technology) could be installed in almost any
computers, played and recorded. Once composed, this can be distributed all
around the world via new services which give music to web platforms,
allowing people to buy or stream what has been produced in the furthest place
from them.
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intro
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2016-2017
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The main topic of M. Zuckemberg speech at the annual developer conference F8 conference
in San Francisco in 2016 has been the access to internet to the poorest populations.
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It’s the reason why the data scientist profession is gaining more and more space among big
companies (wired.it)
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According to Wikipedia.org, OOH it’s the acronym of out-of-home and Out-of-home
advertising is focused on marketing to consumers when they are "on the go" in public places,
in transit, waiting
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As the reader may suspect, the public opinion about this type of advertising
campaign is heterogeneous4. The content is fascinating and funny as
mentioned above, but must be considered the availability of personal data
which music companies hold. Companies know users’ tastes and behaviours,
credit cards, addresses, and this could arouse “anxiety” to them. How can the
situation be rectified? I do not know, and I do not think it could be avoided
too. More and more things are filed on databases and even if people do not
want to accept this system, they are locked up on it since their birth, with the
storage of their personal data etc. The company, for example, offers a website
with music insights of their web traffic related to the most streamed music
from Spotify or the 50 genres with the strangest names.
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Comments about the campaign can be easily find on blog or websites concerning this
argument
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The attention goes even on knowledge from the customer other than focusing
on knowledge about the customer. In other words companies use CKM5,
“Customer knowledge management”, CRM, customer relationship
management and CEM, customer experience management to design their
product 6.
However technology can hurt. Recently, in Winter 2016, Spotify released a
desktop client version of its software which created really huge problems to
users. As reported by the Arstechnica or Extremetech, Spotify’s application
wrote a massive amounts of junk data to storage drives. The app wrote from
5 to 10 GB of data in less than an hour on Arstechnica reporters' machines,
even when the app was idle. Letting the app running for periods longer than
a day it resulted in amounts as high as 700 GB.
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Knowledge Management refers to the management of knowledge from customers, i.e.
knowledge resident in customers, in contrast to knowledge about customers. The experience
management focuses on the process of strategically managing a customer's entire experience
with a product or a company (Schimth 2003)
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Definition by businessidcitonary.com
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This term belongs to Roland Robertson. Grobalization to Ritzer.
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Glocal
Something Nothing
Grobal
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origin by local population that uses to identify themselves with local culture.
Another last case in this quadrant, is the glocal-nothing category which
explained local music that haven’t been understood by other population.
Furthermore, following this classification, there is another one which walk by
side. Grobalization, as said before, is a modern view of how things are
changing. It emphasizes the growing worldwide ability of, especially, largely
capitalistic organizations and modern states, to increase their power and reach
throughout the world. According to Ritzer, this is homogenization, a sort of
standardization and uniformity of consumption dictated mainly by
phenomena like “americanization”, “capitalism” or “mcdonaldization”. If
homogenization regards grobalization, heterogenization regards
glocalization. With this latter it’s enhanced the difference between cultures,
“glocalization theory sees individuals and groups as important and creative
agents who have a great deal of power to shape their own lives” (Ritzer,
2007). The goal of Ritzer is to explain a gradually globalization of nothing, a
spread of empty forms throughout the world. In this lens, this is a partial - in
my opinion - globalization of nothing. The revolution is on the way of
production, distribution and consumption which tend, to be empty, adoptable
and adaptable by countries. Rather, services I have already mentioned as
iTunes, Apple Music, Google play, Amazon, or Spotify (the most used in
Italy) tend to diversify in each country regarding content. For example, each
country has its own top list which differs from country to country by artists
and songs bought/streamed by users.
For this reason I resume the concept introduced earlier of “Nothing &
something”. With nothing Ritzer identifies 4 sub-types called “non-people”,
“non-services”, “non-places”, “non-things”, which are groups that sum up,
each with its own references, the concept of nothing. They differ from what
is something by the lack of distinctive content (“a local book shop with a
knowledgeable and involved owner and staff and a lovingly chosen selection
of books, many of them quite out of the ordinary, would be a good example
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Spotify, the music social network, let users to listen to free online music with
ads, or with a premium subscription to listen music without ads and in a better
quality. In the previous paragraph I wrote about theories, and their application
on this case study. Another huge thing has changed inside the process of
production – distribution – consumption. From another point of view, as
declared by Edgar Berger and reported on Billboard.com, Sony Music
Entertainment chairman & CEO international on IFPI conference, “music
industry is managing three transitions at the same time: from physical to
digital; PC to mobile and download to streaming”. Users are involved in
music consumption change. It is a factual information that music has became
easier to listen and more accessible. In the digital system, user interface gives
the possibility to create personal playlists, collaborative playlists, and on the
Spotify desktop app I can see what my friends (users I’m following) are
listening. I think these opportunities are really important to improve and
differentiate the experience8 and they should not be neglected. The consumer
it is not passive at all any more, but community members can interact each
other, sharing music or comments. In other words, users are not only
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Another important tool it’s the Collaborative filtering: As in many other social network, a
crucial system is what is called “Collaborative Filtering”. It’s class of tools and mechanisms
that allow analysts to recovery of predictive information relatively to interests of a given set
of users from a larger mass, and yet undifferentiated of knowledge.
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I do not consider exhaustive the analysis made so far, mainly due to the wide
topic of this work. There are lot of benefits, but I would like to focus on some
disagreements caused by this system. I identified 5 points, 5 contradictions
related to the concept of exploitation that is involved in the process of music
consumption.
3) Playlists and radios are very advantageous and used by users, but are a
multitude of artists (superficial knowledge). I have talked about playlists,
collaborative playlists and radios. Single artists may be loose value in please
of standardization or attitude.
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I choose Spotify just becuase it is the only service, at the moment, which lets users see
what friends are listening. This feature is adaptable to other services.
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Conclusions
Up until now I have draw a critical and general image of the system around
music consumption nowadays. The change we are undergoing in new digital
services is faster than ever before, so we have to expect changes that will
affect our lives year after year. People facing these innovations should be as
opened minded as possible in order not to remain excluded from society. I
tried to argue how the paradigm is shifting from ownership to access,
involving other sectors as shown by companies like Uber, Airbnb or
Blablacar. In this field, economy is quickly evolving together new form of
remuneration and payments. Companies try to capture customers' attention
with lower and competitive prices than competitors. This will not take long
due to financial statements of music labels which have to pay artists. Just in
the last months (to innovate the experience of consumption), new forms of
sharing economy have been introduced by Spotify and Apple, which provide
a breakdown of subscription cost to the service among multiple users. For
example, this is what is happening for the family subscription solution.
Things are changed very fast month by month, and it will not take long to
assist to important features.
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Bibliography
Gibbert M., Leibold M., Probst G., (2002), Five styles of customer knowledge
management and how smart companies put them into action,
Knobloch, S., & Zillmann, D. (2002), Mood management via the digital
jukebox, Journal of Communication, vol. 52, pp. 351–366,
Pink, S., & Mackley, K. L. (2013) Saturated and situated: expanding the
meaning of media in the routines of everyday life, Media, Culture & Society,
vol. 35, pp. 677–691,
Saarikallio, S., & Erkkilä, J., (2006) The role of music in adolescents' mood
regulation, Psychology of Music, vol. 35(1), pp. 88–109,
Ter Bogt T. F. M., Vieno A., Doornwaard S. M., Pastore M., & van den
Eijnden, R. J. J. M. (2016), ‘You’re not alone': Music as a source of
consolation among adolescents and young adults, Psychology of Music, pp.
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1–17,
Tschmuck P., Collopy D., Winter C., (2012), International Journal of Music
Business Research, vol. 1 no. 2,
Ward, M. K., Goodman, J. K. & Irwin, J. R. (2014), The Same Old Song: The
Power of Familiarity in Music Choice, Marketing Letters, vol. 25(1), pp. 1-
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Juslin, P. N., & Västfjäll, D. (2009) Emotional responses to music: The need
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Sitography
Cnet.com, CNET: Product reviews, how-tos, deals and the latest tech news,
Chris Matyszczyk, last consultation 15/12/2016, website link:
https://www.cnet.com/news/spotify-ad-campaign-2016-weird/
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