Psonar in Deal with INgrooves for Micro-payment Streaming

31/01/2012

Extract courtesy of Midem News 2012 Edition 2

Psonar, the new music service offering a simple payment model to revolutionise access to streamed music in the same way that pay-as-you-go revolutionised mobile phone access, has signed a licensing deal with INgrooves, the digital music marketing and distribution firm, at midem.

Psonar Signs Deal with INgrooves

Psonar Signs Deal with INgrooves - L to R Psonar's Simon Lait and Martin Rigby, INgroove's Alex Branson - (c) Midem News

Instead of offering a limited amount of free (ad-supported) use or monthly subscriptions, Psonar’s Pay-Per-Play (PPP) payment system is affordable and simple by charging one pence/one cent/one eurocent per track.

Users are able to pay via phone bills (pre-pay/contract), credit/debit cards or PayPal. “The deal offers a whole new way of reaching a whole new audience by driving content to kids who listen to music on mobile devices,” said Martin Rigby, UK-based Psonar’s CEO.

“The platform’s viral capacity offers a great capacity to music fans,” added Alex Branson, senior vice-president/managing director at INgrooves, which has 1 million tracks in its catalogue. “There are already acts who have 10 million streams on YouTube; Psonar is like that but more targeted, and can also encourage fans to go and buy.”


Why Independent Labels and Artists Get A Raw Deal from Digital Music Services (There Is An Alternative)

18/01/2012

The Way We Were
Promoting music has never been straightforward and people have always tried to game the system – radio pluggers being the obvious example in the age of vinyl records where radio airtime determined a song’s success or failure. But the structure of the industry was well-understood and the relationships between the players and, more crucially, their economic interests were aligned.

Digital Confusion
Now, with the rise of digital music, it’s different – some bands achieving considerable success without a label (OK Go’s Damian Kulash wrote about this in the Wall Street Journal) others giving their music away (e.g. Nine Inch Nails). Even major bands, including Radiohead with the ‘In Rainbows’ album, have experimented with a ‘Pay What You Want’ approach – although it was not successful enough for Radiohead to use it for subsequent albums.

A Tale of Three Artists (and Labels)
Out of this confusion it’s possible to discern three different outcomes for artists and, to some extent, labels.

      The Major Artist
      Major artists signed to major labels (Sony, Universal, EMI, Warner) can rely on their pre-existing reputation and following and/or the marketing effort of their label to gain mindshare among music fans. They monetize this through gigs (see this latest excellent Economist piece in a series on the economics of live music), conventional CD sales, digital downloads and subscription streaming services. Moreover, focussing on spend per consumer rather than revenue per track, the streaming music services have started to close the gap with iTunes in the revenues they routinely return to the major labels. This is an arrangement that can work well for both major label and major artist, especially if the latter is the author as well the performer of the music.
      The Emergent Artist
      Online services such as Bandcamp, ReverbNation, HypeMachine, SoundClick or SoundCloud serve emergent artists very well. Their primary objective is to gain the exposure that will translate into traffic to their own websites, sales of gig tickets and growth in their fan base. Monetizing their music is nowhere near as important as getting people to listen to it, like it and share that enthusiasm with other people.
      The Squeezed Independent (and Authors and Others)
      Independent artists and labels sit squarely in the middle of these and face a dilemma. They need their content to be available on streaming services so that millions of users can access it but they get little collateral marketing benefit, have to deal with opaque accounting and suffer poor pay-out rates. Yet they need to make their music available on Spotify or Deezer in order to maximise the chances of discovery by new fans. Even then there’s a further dilemma since a subscriber to an ‘all you can eat’ streaming service is unlikely to make the additional outlay to purchase a download when they can listen to the music as often as they like through the streaming service (especially if it offers offline caching on mobile devices).
      Independent artists don’t always have the fan base to fill a major gig venue so their live performance options are limited and generate poor returns. For the majority of independent artists, paid download of whole tracks and CD sales remain the principal ways they earn a living and online music service need to be complementary to these and not risk cannibalising them.
      The increasing focus of the subscription streaming services (and major labels) on revenue per user, rather than revenue per track played, disenfranchises everyone involved in the track except the label itself and, perhaps, the featured artist (though there’s even dissent there). Publishers and authors (i.e. composers and lyricists), managers, session musicians and anyone else involved in creating a song and turning it into a recording, rely on the revenue per track played to earn their livelihoods and revenue per user undermines these economics.

An Open and Transparent Digital Music Service
Now Psonar wasn’t created to right the wrongs of the music industry but its simple and transparent business model is good for both fans and artists & labels.

For fans, Psonar Pay-Per-Play offers easy, selective access to streaming music on a per-track, ‘pay as you go’, value-for-money basis. They can pay via mobile phone (pre-pay or contract), credit card or PayPal. They can also share music on Facebook, Twitter, blogs or email, where other people can pay to play the music shared. Fans can also gift plays via Facebook Messaging, Twitter DM, SMS or email having pre-paid for another person to listen.

For artists and labels, Psonar Pay-Per-Play has a single, straightforward tariff that’s the same for all distributors or labels, as well as clear and transparent accounting where every stream is monetized apart from promotional activity. Psonar offers labels the tools to build highly social, viral promotion campaigns that don’t involve unlimited free access to music and which can be fine-tuned to generate revenue or promote viral spread (or both) as the label judges best. Since all monetization is per track streamed, everyone with an economic interest in the music earns their share of the revenue generated.

Psonar is the digital music service that reaches the ‘mobile music generation’ – digital natives unwilling or unable to pay for subscription streaming – with rich, social features that allow artists and labels to seed the viral spread of new music confident about monetization, transparency and pay-out levels.



Upload tens of thousands of tracks to Psonar with ease

31/08/2010

I thought it was worth quickly blogging about how easy it is to upload tens of thousands of the tracks you own to Psonar so that you can listen to them for free at any time, anywhere on any internet-connected device.

The Psonar SongShifter

The Psonar SongShifter

Unlike web browser-based uploaders, where you need to manually select each track or folder to upload and additionally leave the browser open for the entire time uploading is in progress, with Psonar, this process is taken care of with the SongShifter, the downloadable app which we’ve created to both upload and download tracks from your PC, MP3 player, phone or other storage device.

Using the Psonar SongShifter is as simple as this:

  1. Download & install it
  2. Step through the simple wizard to tell it where your music is located
  3. Forget about it!

The SongShifter runs whenever you log in, scans the configured folders and uploads any new music it finds without any intervention from you. You really can just set it and forget it.

Additionally, every time you plug in an external storage device, the SongShifter will also scan it for your music. So you can seamlessly upload and download directly from your iPhone, MP3 player, memory card or other USB device… and configuring these devices is even easier!

We’ve also developed an alpha version of the SongShifter for both Mac and Linux users. If you’d like to get your hands on it, please email support@psonar.com.

Lastly, if you haven’t already signed up for Psonar, you can do so here and if you need any convincing, here’s a video to explain why you should right now.

Happy listening!


Escaping The Digital Thought Police

21/04/2010

I watched Aleks Krotowski’s excellent history and analysis of the web – The Virtual Revolution – when it was broadcast in February.

Aleks Krotowski by Paul Downey

Aleks Krotowski by Paul Downey

Part 3 of the Series was called ‘The Cost of Free’ and looked at what we, as consumers, feed into the web in order to get the benefits of free access to so much. Not only extensive personal information but also the history of our browsing, buying and other interactions. In the case of the latter we unwittingly provide the information that allows web retailers to offer us goods or services on the basis of “people like you like music/books/films like this”. The insidious truth is that if you respond to that stimulus, like a Pavlovian dog, you’re starting to conform to some stereotype, admittedly part-defined by you, from a brave, new future.

“What about serendipity?” asks Doctor Krotowski. How do you discover stuff that’s so far from what you’ve previously liked that no recommendation engine could ever figure out that you might like it? If you’re like me, you’ll probably use a fairly random mix of music journalism, such as the Guardian’s Music Blog or the BBC’s Introducing, and other rooting around, to see what’s new. To try the music recommended in the blogs (and I’m listening to The Fall’s Your Future, Our Clutter recommended by Dave Simpson now) you probably need to go to YouTube, unless the blog author has thoughtfully embedded a We7 player in the post.

Wouldn’t it be great if you could go to an interesting interface – graphical rather than text – and tell it some random facts about you, your interests, predilictions or even kinks and have it come back with a kind of mind map with a panoply of music of greater or less relevance to the things you seeded it with. Wow! When I asked Rich if he could build it for Psonar, he raised his eyes to heaven, but I’m sure he’s got something in mind.



Easy Sailing Using Psonar

09/11/2009

Who saw that recent documentary about Mike Perham, the 15-year-old who sailed round the world on his own?

Poor bloke got dumped by his girlfriend halfway round and by Panama he looked really bored and was probably missing his Xbox and Hollyoaks an awful lot. What a monumental achievement though.

Anyway, this got us thinking about situations when psonar.com would be really useful and travelling in general and sailing both seem like scenarios when the service could really come into its own.

For example, if you use a netbook when on the move (say you own a nice yacht or cruiser and like disappearing for long weekends up the coast) but you store your music library on an external drive or full-size PC, then using Psonar would enable you to sail off into the sunset, free of anything bar your netbook, and still access your entire music library whenever you have an internet connection.

Many modern marinas also now have wi-fi (there’s always a dongle or mobile option if not) and, once connected, you could stream all your music without using the extra space and power required for a larger computer or external device.

Think how useful that would be if you’re off on a long voyage, like a round-the-world trip.

The same goes for any laptop or PC, but everyone and their dog seems to have a netbook these days and the one thing they lack is a hard-drive to store vast amounts of data, like a music collection. Using psonar.com as a mobile music hard-drive solves this problem instantly.

Backpackers and travellers could also find the service incredibly useful. Not only would you be backing up your iPod (or similar device) into the Psonar Cloud thus insuring against the theft of your music collection whilst hanging out in the less desirable parts of whatever far-flung destination you find yourself in, but you could also access all your tunes from any internet connection in the world simply by logging in and hitting play on psonar.com.

Just think how many hostel parties that could get started. Our livers shudder to think.


Iceland’s in the Stream!

27/10/2009

I was lucky enough to be in Iceland for the recent Airwaves music festival. It rocked.

But whilst I was there I was away from my beloved laptop and iPod for a lot of the time. So no portable music library for me, or that would’ve been the case had psonar.com not launched their streaming service a few days ago.

You can now listen to your own music collection from anywhere in the world, regardless of the location of your own music playing devices and we think that’s pretty neat, even if we did make it happen ourselves. Well, I say we, but it was entirely the work of our very clever technical team of Rich, Tim and Ben.

Just how useful this was bought home on two occasions last week. The first came when I was enjoying a few drinks at a party on my first night in Reykjavik. The music being played was dreadful so I took custody of the laptop, logged onto my psonar.com account and started streaming some of my own music collection straight away.

Some might argue that this offered scant improvement on the quality of music but at least there was now a choice of several thousand tracks, rather than whatever can be dug up (and is licensed for listening in Iceland) on Youtube, Last FM, Myspace etc. My friends had a good laugh at my extensive classic rock collection and eventually settled on some FM Belfast, an enthralling Icelandic band who were performing at that weekend’s festival.

The second occasion was when we received an email from a lady who’d read about psonar.com and wanted to know if we could help back-up and retrieve her iPod music library. Her laptop had been stolen by some NEDs and she was left with just a device full of music that she didn’t want to lose (it wouldn’t download the collection onto a new laptop due to rights issues).

Thankfully, we could help: she installed the SongShifter app – downloaded from psonar.com – and it indentified the music on her iPod and then uploaded the whole lot to our cloud servers. She can now do what she likes with her music, including populating her new laptop with her own rescued music library.

So there you go, we’re there; you can have your music, your way, anytime. It works in any country in the world, even when you’re only a glacier or two away from the Arctic Circle, and it thwarts thieving hoodies.

Beat that Spotify.


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