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  • This extra video was made possible by Setapp.

  • One low price for over a hundred great Mac apps.

  • Okay, so you're scrolling through Reddit, because, what else does one do during the

  • tired hours of 9am-5pm? just minding your own business, when you click

  • on a link and this happens.

  • Nothing is more frustrating than a paywall - being told you have to buy an entire subscription

  • to read this one article.

  • Sometimes they wait until you're halfway through, Oh, wanna know what Snape does next?

  • That'll be $10.

  • Well, this one's free: Snape kills Dumbledore.

  • Don't say this channel isn't a good value.

  • But when I think about it for, half a second, of course they ask for money.

  • Writing, and editing, and publishing require labor.

  • Ya know, the thing you're supposed to be doing right now but instead opened this video.

  • And if there wasn't a paywall, I'd be complaining about how many ads there were.

  • cough

  • The same goes for music, videos, apps, and so on.

  • Long ago, deepwater navigation freed merchants from making only what their town wanted to

  • buy, Now, they had access to the world's markets, As long as someone somewhere wanted

  • their custom engraved potatoes, they could sell them.

  • Today, you can specialize even further, make a living, say, selling homemade glitter.

  • That's pretty cool.

  • But when there are no barriers to entry, supply is unlimited, and the value of everything

  • trends to zero.

  • So here we are.

  • Nobody wants to pay for music or news or apps,

  • And yet musicians, and writers, and developers need to get paid.

  • The question is how, preferably in a way that doesn't suck.

  • Spotify, Netflix, the New York Times, and the App Store are all attempts to answer that

  • question.

  • Some of which are thriving.

  • Others, you might be surprised to learn, are failing.

  • So, what works? and, maybe more importantly, what doesn't?

  • The iTunes music store opened in 2003.

  • The App Store, in 2008.

  • In other words, the music industry has a head start.

  • This graph of music revenue over time, adjusted for inflation, tells the story pretty well.

  • Earnings peaked in 1999, and they've been down ever since.

  • Like, really, really down.

  • Now, I'd argue this period was somewhat artificially high,

  • If we zoom out a little, it looks more like an anomaly, a ten-year spike in the long history

  • of recorded music.

  • People spent so much, because, they had to.

  • Their choices were: buy music a whole album at a time, or don't listen at all.

  • But then, the numbers just start falling.

  • If we break it down by format, first, LPs, EPs and 8-tracks, then cassettes, CDs, and

  • later, digital, You can see this time is different.

  • Nothing replaces the CD.

  • At least, not immediately.

  • You'd think people just stopped listening.

  • Busy wondering why the world didn't end or something.

  • But really, of course, they just stopped paying, in favor of sites like Napster.

  • iTunes tried to fight piracy by breaking up the album.

  • But nothing really changed until a Swedish programmer, no, the other one realized something:

  • The problem with the music industry is piracy

  • But you can't beat technology.

  • Technology always wins.

  • But what if you can make a better product than piracy?…

  • It took a few minutes to download a song, it was kind of cumbersome, you had to worry

  • about viruses.

  • It's not like people want to be pirates.

  • They just want a great experience.”

  • And that's how Spotify was born.

  • The lesson is: Companies can fight change, lobby for new laws, burden everyone with annoying

  • restrictions, even more annoying ads, and sue 12-year old girls for sharing songs.

  • Or, they can adapt, see it as an opportunity.

  • Because most of us are lazy.

  • If we can pay a little more for a lot more convenience, we usually will.

  • That's why streaming wins.

  • Today, people listen to more music than ever before - an average of 32 hours a week.

  • That's a lot.

  • And revenue is actually growing, for the first time since the 90's.

  • Now, Netflix seems to be in the same position,

  • Both are $10, all-you-can-eat streaming subscriptions.

  • An answer to piracy and, in this case, Blockbuster making a killing on late fees.

  • Before Netflix, the idea of letting users watch any movie, from any device, at any time

  • wasridiculous, What if people share their password?

  • Netflix was like: Ah, good point, we should make that easier.

  • They don't just accept it, they embrace it, letting you make separate profiles on

  • the same account.

  • But then you look at money, and suddenly the two companies couldn't be more different.

  • One has been profitable for 15 years, making half a billion dollars last year alone.

  • The other, reported almost the same number a year earlier, except its number wasnegative.

  • Why is that?

  • In a word: scalability.

  • Spotify only takes a small cut of your $10 a month, the rest is distributed among the

  • songs you listened to.

  • In other words, no matter how many people sign up, the economics never improve.

  • More users, more costs.

  • Netflix, on the other hand, licenses shows for a set period of time.

  • 7 or 10.99 a month isn't a lot of money, but after they've paid for content, every

  • additional user is pure profit.

  • More users, more money.

  • So why doesn't Spotify just raise prices?

  • Well, competition.

  • Every company and their mother sells a music service - just pick your favorite color.

  • There's also plenty of video sites, Netflix, Prime, Hulu, Showtime, HBO, soon even more.

  • The difference is, customers can and do pay for several at a time.

  • Music is winner-take-all.

  • We expect every song to be available on every service.

  • They just... aren't unique.

  • They also can't really take a bigger cut, Because artists barely survive as it is.

  • When Taylor Swift complains about money, you can only imagine what it's like for the

  • average musician.

  • For many, streaming is really just an ad for their concerts, where they make almost all

  • their money.

  • The problem is musicians share their revenue with producers, writers, and record labels,

  • Just three of which: Sony, Universal, and Warner, control most of the industry.

  • Spotify, for example, pays between six and eight-tenths of a penny per stream.

  • But after everyone takes their cut, artists are left with just over an estimated 1 tenth

  • of a penny.

  • So, here's my prediction: Sites like Netflix will focus almost entirely on exclusives - the

  • Stranger Things and the West Worlds that make their service unique.

  • There won't just be one winner, but several.

  • For music, the future may not be so bright.

  • Unless something drastic changes, like cutting out the labels, services will land in one

  • of two categories,

  • those owned by a bigger company, like Apple or Google, who use them as a loss-leader.

  • Not to make profit directly, but to sell more phones.

  • And, everyone else, left with no way to make money.

  • This is already starting to happen.

  • It's just not obvious unless you're looking.

  • A MoviePass user can feel the business model fail underneath them, Unlimited movies turns

  • into most movies, turns into some movies turns into only black comedy westerns starring Adam

  • Sandler, only between the hours of 4 and 5 am... in select Wyoming theaters.

  • But a Spotify user can just keep happily listening away.

  • For now.

  • Every song ever written for less than the price of a single album works only because

  • investors pay for it.

  • But that won't last forever.

  • The industry may look healthy in aggregate, but it's mostly the top 1% inflating the

  • average.

  • It's not that I don't think developers, or musicians, or journalists will survive,

  • I worry which ones survive.

  • There are three kinds of companies, those that make money honestly, those that make

  • money dishonestly, and those thatdon't.

  • When nobody pays for music or software, independent musicians and developers lose, But there are

  • still ways to make money, they just aren't good ones.

  • Journalism won't die, but the good kind very well could.

  • Some would say, largely has.

  • If you think there's a problem with freemium apps and in-app purchases today, just wait

  • until that's the only thing that works.

  • The good news is that these industries have an advantage: they don't have record labels.

  • And Spotify offers them a few free lessons:

  • First, people will pay for content, but it's on the company to make it cheap and convenient.

  • To adapt, not to fight.

  • Second, services have to be unique.

  • And finally, for it to be sustainable, it can't just be good for you and me, it has

  • to work for the musician, the writer, the developer.

  • The companies that apply these lessons will determine which industries thrive, and which

  • just survive.

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  • Again, full disclosure, this is a sponsor, but what they can't pay me to say, is I've

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  • I use Ulysses to write these scripts, CleanMyMac to manage storage, and Timing to track my

  • time.

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  • Thanks to Setapp for making this extra video possible, and to you for listening.

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