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| Perceptions of value on 42nd Street | | Print | |
| Written by Noric Dilanchian | ||||||
| Friday, 09 March 2007 | ||||||
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The report contains an important point about changing perceptions of value in the music business. It's relevant to depressed folk in the music industry.
It's also relevant to every business that needs to respond to changing customer perceptions of value. Afterall the perennial favourite question of sophisticated customers and big enterprises alike is: "Give me what will deliver value for money! ".
Following are the relevant paragraphs, sans Deloitte's footnotes:
Deloitte is noting that while revenue is declining in some areas (eg people are buying fewer audio CDs) value is perceived by consumers in other areas. Sometimes this involves mining areas previously under-exploited, not just discovering new areas.
Recently the US publication, BusinessWeek, contained a report on Live Nation which illustrates part of the point Deloittes has made so well.
Live Nation is apparently the biggest concert promoter in the US. The way it puts its business model is thus: "It's about taking that two-hour experience and turning it into a 12-month relationship." It was launched in May 2006. Live Nation through Musictoday:
It seems this 2006 and 2007 story is building on rising music concert revenues in the US at least. According to the 2005 book The Future of Music which cites Pollstar
magazine,
Can it be true? Is there (finally) an established trend of people going back to live music performances? Do you nowadays go to more concerts or pay more for them? My family does, at least for kids shows.
At the head of this post is a photo from Flickr care of the photographer code named Taminator. Thank you.
Also accompanying this post is a photo I took in London in the 1980s. It features what is now named "Theatre Royal in Drury Lane ". It opened in 1674 and its history makes it one of the greatest theatres in the English-speaking world. At the time I took the shot the American musical 42nd Street (based on the 1933 Busby Burkeley movie) was on show.
Music industry folks in the middle of their own depression, wondering what the future holds, should now join with me to sing, and with verve: "Come and meet those dancing feet, On the avenue I'm taking you to, Forty-Second Street."
Want free initial legal advice?
Let's talk about your intellectual property, commercialisation and business law needs. Call Noric Dilanchian of Dilanchian Lawyers & Consultants: Tel (+61 2) 9269 0229. After hours send an email or better still an Enquiry Form. We'll reply with a costed proposal. FAQ | What we do | Testimonials
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The UK office of Deloitte published a
despite a severe downturn in CD sales over the four years to 2005, the
US music concert business soared, rising four years straight, from US$1.3
billion in 1998 to US$2.1 billion in 2003.
