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The ‘social web’ Category

Fight at Webtrends Engage 2010 Conference in New Orleans

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Fight Portland Engage 2010 Digital Strategy

The Big Idea vs The Right Idea

“The future does not fit in the containers of the past.”Rishad Tobaccowala

We here at Fight are very pleased to say that we have been invited by Webtrends to both attend their Engage 2010 Conference in New Orleans, as well as make a presentation while we are there. We are very grateful to Webtrends for giving us the chance to discuss how we work with our clients by helping them to understand the digital marketing landscape, while reducing risk and maximizing their project goals and achieving real ROI.

Engage 2010 is now sold out, but for those of you in attendance you will hear from speakers such as Rives, the co-host of Bravo channel’s show Ironic Iconic America and a TED regular, as well as, Stephen Baker, senior writer covering technology for Business Week, True/Slant founder Lewis Dvorkin, and the Huffington Post‘s Paul Berry and many more.

At 3PM, on Tuesday, February 2nd, Fight co-founder, Justin Spohn, presents The Evolution Revolution: An Introduction To Iterative Marketing.

Overview:

The digital landscape is one of continual change and has been for more than a decade. Yet, contemporary digital marketing still employs the methods and process of the past. This means that the traditional approach of heavy up front research, long development cycles, and post-launch optimization is no longer sufficient to guarantee success. What’s needed is a method of improving your marketing strategy as you build it.

Taking key elements from extreme programming, iterative marketing is a fairly radical departure from this traditional approach. It is based on an understanding of the nature of the medium, and the opportunities that it provides. Combining it with modern analytics and traditional discovery and research, iterative marketing breaks down the “big idea” approach to marketing into small steps done with a specific purpose, evaluates the results, adapts change to inform the next step, always building, and always learning, with the goal of maximizing business goals.

In this talk, we’ll discuss what iterative marketing is, how it works, and how it’s able to reduce risk while maximizing project goals with an emphasis on real, and measurable, ROI.

Justin and I look forward to meeting you at the event. You can follow us on Twitter here – Justin @adognamedpants and Dave @DaveAtFight. You can also follow Engage 2010 @wtengage and the official hashtag for the event is #wtengage

Apple Jumps Into The Smart Grid Smart Meter Green Energy Game With 2 New Patents

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Smart Meter Smart Grid Green Energy Fight Portland

Apple didn’t have to be at CES to own the place, as every other person in attendance seemed to discussing the so-called, and much-anticipated Apple “Tablet.” Beyond that constant chatter and rumor mill there was also the ridiculous excitement surrounding the 3D Televisions. Eric Bee over at Denuo summed up whether there is a “need” for 3D TV quite nicely:

The state of modern technology can be summed up by the TV in my hotel room. It was a 50″ flatscreen LCD, mounted beautifully into a wooden console, but displaying a blocky, stretched standard definition signal. Despite the investment made into purchasing these top-tier TVs, the hotel wasn’t using them to their full, high-definition potential. At CES, one could walk through miles of glistening technology, showcasing 3D images, immersive soundscapes, and internet-enabled everything, but to what purpose? Are consumers so over HDTV that they need a third-dimension? Is the world ready for an internet-enabled alarm clock? If the SD broadcast of ESPN greeting me every morning was any indication, the answer might be no.

Read the full article.

Obviously we’ll see soon enough how the “Tablet” and 3D TVs pan out. Meanwhile, the Green Energy, Smart Power Meter and portable electrons folks had a large spread of products and gadgets in the North Hall at the convention center. Twice has an article on a CES eco tour provided by some of those green companies.

Ampergen, a medium-sized player in the renewables and recharging portable battery business, had a large and varied spread of products, and it seemed each and every booth had many solar-powered devices and portable battery chargers. The companies that created the most buzz were the Energy Management or Smart Meter product companies such as the Best In Show finalist, Control4 and its Energy Management System 100.

The Smart Grid and Smart Meter trend is, pardon the pun, beginning to buzz like a ‘fridge… It’s no surprise that here in the Northwest, in the environmentally-friendly city of Portland, business people are beginning to huddle in local corporate offices to discuss this green trend and its implications for changing people’s behavior when it comes to energy use. Portland’s Mayor Sam Adams is heading to Washington, DC to push an energy-efficiency program that is intended to save energy while creating jobs. The Portland Tribune reports that “Clean Energy Works Portland is in a 500-home pilot phase. It was started last year with $1.1 million in federal stimulus funds. Participating partners include PGE, Pacific Power, Northwest Natural and the Energy Trust.

The big guys are getting involved too. The Google PowerMeter is a project of Google.org, Google’s philanthropic arm. Microsoft has its Hohm Energy Management Tool and now CNet reports that Apple is jumping into energy tracking with a couple of new patents.

As all these players start bringing the products and software applications to market it’s worth asking, what are the implications, and what does a large energy utility look like in the future, as people begin to have more direct control over their energy use?

Rishad Tobaccowala – Future Moves

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

Late last year I had the distinct pleasure of hearing Rishad Tobaccowala and Simon Mainwaring give a talk to some of Deb Morrison‘s students at the University of Oregon’s White Stag building in Portland, Or. Rishad has a way of explaining himself so thoroughly and incisively that he left me feeling like I was in 3rd grade..

This weekend, I came across an article, Future Moves, that he had written for the Economic Times of India. As usual he has some interesting insights into what we might call our digital future and how it will align with our analog existence. Here’s a couple of his thoughts below. Read the whole article here. I also recommend checking out Denuology.

REAL TIME SOCIAL PLATFORMS

SMS which is still the world’s most used communication medium is a social platform. But with 350 million Facebook users, tens of millions Twitter users and a range of local and international innovations (Google real time search) that combine real time and social we are going to see an explosion in the impact of both word of mouth and real time information . For instance in many ways the best way to keep abreast of the 11/9 terror in Mumbai was twitter and real time live streams. Expect every media company and consumer brand to invest in real time listening and response in 2010.

THE RISE OF THE POST DIGITAL WORLD

The world is going increasingly digital but a) the majority of media and marketing is analog and b) people are analog. Thus it is wrong to become overly hysterical even in advanced digital penetration countries by screaming about “digital at the core” ! What is important is people and their needs and passions at the core and most of us combine the real and virtual worlds in ways that allow us to connect, save money and time and pursue our passions. We use mobile tools to have real world meetings and we enhance real world occasions with digital augmentation. Just like Walmart stores are paying a lot of attention to digital capabilities one can expect digital companies like Amazon to have analog or real world presence . Today besides Kindle you will see Amazon stores and maybe even book stores just like Apple has its online store and its real stores.

News Institutions Moving Toward the Social Web – Slowly

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

In his post ‘News Orgs Take Social Media Seriously by Hiring Editors to Oversee Efforts‘ Sree Sreenivasan notes …”with interest the rise in the number of journalists with the title of social media editor (or something similar) within news organizations. This signals how seriously media outlets are taking social media, thinking about it strategically and incorporating it into workflows and overall output.”

While this may be true, there are still internal institutional hurdles to get over as noted in this succinct comment on Sreenivasa’s post:
Social Media News Organizations Sree Sreenivasan

Shooting Ourselves in the “Engagment” Face

Friday, January 8th, 2010

It all started Thursday morning when I saw this tweet. Describing himself as “In the zone”, the author proceeds to spend three minutes railing against the concept of ROI in web based marketing, claiming that ROI is the tool of the fearful and that key to effective marketing is…something else. This type of proud and boastful ignorance is so common in marketing, it’s almost not worth even responding to, but for some reason, Meerman really got under my skin.

This line of “logic” typically centers around two basic concepts:
1) You can’t measure the ROI of T.V. or Billboards, or any number of other marketing efforts, so why are we worried about it for the web?
2) ROI is outmoded, and what we should be looking at is some “brand new” RO_ fill in the blank. The current favorite is something called “Return on Engagement”. Ugh.

Now, this topic is a big part of why I helped found Fight, so maybe I’m a little more sensitive than others, but this is something that has affected every agency I’ve worked for, and every agency every one of my friends has worked for. My feeling is that as long as we, as an industry, wave our hands at this, we’re just going to keep fighting the battles with our clients that we always have. Until we embrace our role, and benefit, to the business of our clients, we’ll always be the ones with the shrinking budgets, forced to justify everything we do in some sort of aesthetic argument with people who may or may not have any understanding of what we do. Instead of looking at ROI as a limit to creative freedom, we should be embracing it as our single best path forward in expanding that freedom.

Looking at point 1) Can one measure the ROI of a billboard or a T.V. spot? Possibly. I would say probably. But lets say for the sake of argument that we can’t. What does that have to do with anything? Shouldn’t we be measuring the value of our work where ever we can? And besides, the web stands to be possibly the most important marketing tool available precisely because it can be so well measured. I have no idea why we’d ignore such a powerful aspect to this medium.

As for point 2) The fact of the matter is this: Every single thing our clients “invest” (or, for clarification, pay us) in, has some sort of “return”. The fact that aspects of this return may be hard to measure doesn’t mean it’s not there. Without knowing what to measure, and how to measure it though, we’re left just guessing if our work has any value. Worse, we can’t prove its value to our clients. The real problem here arises when agencies fail to ask questions of their clients at the start of projects. Is increased sales the reason your client came to you? Then you better be sure you design a program to increase sales, and then measure your results. Is “engagement” the most important thing to them? Then the return on their investment is a demonstration of increased engagement. Find out how to measure that.

Continuing to ignore the role of ROI in marketing, or worse, couching it in some sort of pseudo-science, is not just a sign of systemic laziness in our industry, it’s keeping us in the backseat when it comes to our role in business when we should helping to lead the way.

NOTE: This was originally posted on thisisviolence.net

Fight Speaking Engagements for Q1 2010

Monday, January 4th, 2010

SAO Portland Event

Phoenix Forum: Wednesday, January 13, 2010. 4:30pm-7:00pm
At Pinpoint Logic, 1104 NW 15th Avenue Portland, OR 97209
Map this event » Register here.

Strategies for Business Growth During the Recession

Panelists
Dave Allen, Co-Founder at Fight
Ken Westin, Founder and CEO at ActiveTrak, Inc. (also known as GadgetTrak, Inc)
Justin Yuen, President at For My Innovation (FMYI)

CES Las Vegas Event

International CES Conference, Las Vegas January 7th – 10th 2010

Rethinking the Future of Creative Works: Business and Policy Challenges

January 7th 1:30PM. Room N262, North Hall LVCC

Moderator: Declan McCullagh, Senior Correspondent, CBSNews.com
Panelist(s):
David Allen, Co-Founder Fight, LLC
Jim Griffin, President, Choruss LLC
Michael Robertson, CEO, MP3tunes
Hank Shocklee, Music Producer, Founder of Public Enemy and President, Shocklee
Gigi Sohn, Co-Founder and President, Public Knowledge
Fred von Lohmann, Senior Staff Attorney, Electronic Frontier Foundation

Webtrends Engage 2010 Event

Webtrends Engage 2010 New Orleans February 1st – 5th

Sessions & Workshops
Executive Track: Tuesday February 2nd 2:30 – 3:30
An Introduction to Iterative Marketing
Presenter: Justin Spohn, Fight, LLC

SXSW 2010 Event

SXSW Music and Media Conference 2010

Social Networks and the Future for Musicians. Wednesday March 17th, Time TBD

Moderator: Brian Zisk
Panelists:
Dave Allen, Fight, LLC

Dear Marketers – The Web Is Not A TV Channel

Monday, January 4th, 2010

On David Foster Wallace, the Social Web and How We Watch Now

Most Photographed Barn in America
The Most Photographed Barn In America – Credit: Jeff Clow/Flickr

This essay was inspired by David Foster Wallace’s own essay, E Unibus Plurum; Television and U.S. Fiction [1993,] on how television is an incredible gauge of the generic and how [at the time] that affected new fiction writing. It appears in his collection ‘A Supposedly Fun Thing I Will Never Do Again.’ Wallace also discusses, rather neatly, another influence of mine – Don Delillo’s novel White Noise, written 25 years ago. From Wikipedia – “White Noise explores several themes that emerged during the mid-to-late twentieth century, e.g., rampant consumerism, media saturation, novelty intellectualism, underground conspiracies, the disintegration and re-integration of the family, and the potentially positive virtues of human violence. The title “white noise” may be a metaphor pointing to the confluence of all of those aforementioned symptoms.”

Cheap Holidays In Other People’s Misery

In the past two decades TV viewers in the U.S. stepped up to another level of armchair voyeurism – glueing themselves to the screen as they voraciously gobbled up untold amounts of reality TV garbage. [The Sex Pistols had a great song back in 1977 called Holidays In The Sun which included the lyric - 'Cheap Holidays In Other People's Misery.' I mention it here, as it seems rather fitting.]

As we begin a new decade, 17 years since Wallace wrote that essay, how we “watch” has now changed forever. We view the social web through a TV-shaped monitor but the similarities end right there. 17 years ago, as much as any outgoing, wildly exhibitionist young person would have loved to expose themselves [literally and figuratively] on a reality TV show, they couldn’t. That was because of the walled garden approach those TV show’s producers took – you had to be invited, you had to audition. Now, the simple act of opening your browser means you are unequivocally participating in the social web – a wholly different technology and distribution platform – so hey kids, be our guest, go crazy! And they do.

I am not attempting to make a preemptive strike against TV watching here, nor do I wish to foment a TV versus social web debate – I’m far more interested in exploring the distinct differences in these mediums. The same year that Wallace wrote his essay, saw the debut of the NCSA Mosaic web browser. Marc Andreessen, who led that development team, went on to start Netscape, a company that brought us the browser of the same name, which became enormously popular and accounted for 90% of all web use at its peak. [Source: Wikipedia]

Much has unfolded since, as browser development moved through various iterative stages, yet 17 years later, many brands and their agencies still struggle to fully comprehend the difference between TV advertising and the strategic approach that is required to utilize the social web.

The history of the web is short, and as a modern phenomenon it has a shorter history than TV, although its initial take up rate was almost identical – 10 years to get to 80 million users. [The chart referenced in that link presumes the Internet became public in 1989 so it covers the decade through 1999.] Let’s also remember that before TV, radio was the media of choice for receiving information, so the Internet take up rate in the decade ‘89 – ‘99 is impressive, as it was competing against a modern, built-out version of TV networks and a larger modern radio spectrum, for attention.

The Social Web

If Wallace were still alive today, he would have had an awful lot to say about the explosion of people using the Social Web. Especially when you take into consideration how in his essay, he noted that people held a lot of disdain for TV, yet they were unable to not watch it. He would surely have noted that the rapid rise of social networking was an ironic parallel of being unable to not watch TV, as “Wallace used many forms of irony, focusing on individuals’ continued longing for earnest, unself-conscious experience, and communication in a media-saturated society.”

Wallace wrote almost as if he were writing for the web, especially with his use of extensive footnotes – On the Charlie Rose show in 1997, Wallace claimed that the notes were used to disrupt the linearity of the narrative, to reflect his perception of reality without jumbling the entire structure. He suggested that he could have instead jumbled up the sentences, “but then no one would read it.” [Source: Wikipedia.]

As we now know, the web is anything but linear. What Wallace was attempting to achieve with his literature, the web provides immediately. Vannevar Bush considered this promise, along with an explosion in knowledge, in 1945 when he wrote As We May Think.

The Web Is Just One Application on The Internet

One thing is also certain – the web and TV are two entirely different platform technologies. It feels odd to have to write that sentence, yet here we are on the cusp of 2010 and we still see badly executed brand campaigns online; where those inside the agencies who conceived of their client’s online campaign, appear to be convinced that web users surf the web just as they surf TV channels. They seem to forget, as Wired Editor-In-Chief, Chris Anderson, reminds us, “that the Internet is the once-a-century invention. The Web is just one application upon it. There are, and will be, others.”

Application, medium, platform, there is much that is constantly shifting on the current application medium, the web. And as Marshal McLuhan said – “The medium is an environment that produces effects.” He suggests in a TV medium, that it’s the television circuits, screen etc. that are the ad coaxing us to buy. In 2009 that means it’s the bits, bytes and code that are tantalizing us online…that may be as close to TV as the web gets.

Here’s an extract from an academic paper titled Internet Users and TV Audiences:

“What needs to be considered is how users conceive and use the medium. Because the decision to adopt a medium is dependent on users, not on the functions in the medium, therefore, we need to focus on perceptions and actual uses of it.

Before embarking on any online effort, clients should be in a position to ask hard questions of their advertising or marketing agency, because what’s being said here, is that strategy should be based on actual user experience, not on presumed or expected use. There is no “build it and they will come” on the web.

We need someone with Wallace’s insightful genius to write E Unibus Plurum; Advertising, Marketing and the Social Web.

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Anthropology, Technology, The Social Web and Advertising

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Social Media, Blogs and Advertising Social Media, Blogs and Advertising Social Media, Blogs and Advertising Social Media, Blogs and Advertising

As we approach 2010 and the new decade, I decided to revisit this essay, one I originally wrote and posted in June of 2008. For much of this decade, social media as an idea, term or simply a phrase, has been willfully bandied around by agencies, social media “consultants” et al, as if it was the cure-all for any brands’ online presence. White noise engulfed common sense; nature, particularly how humans behave in society, was hardly ever considered as marketers embraced what they considered, the white hot future wrought by technology. That lack of consideration of human behavior on the web when it came to an online brand strategy, I believe, was an early mistake that really muddied the waters.

Just this week, in a post titled “Texting Isn’t The Distraction, Driving Is: A Parable For Social Business” Stowe Boyd wrote:

“In the social business context, this is similar to the acceptance of the personal element of social networking online, the acceptance that human life is lived in specific connections with other specific people, not in some generalized business context where workers are interchangeable parts.

Management often responds to the adoption of social tools the way that public policy has responded to texting while driving: they make it illegal to be social while working.

The far-sighted response will be to make it easier to gain the benefits of social business, and to rethink the organization and management of work around human nature instead to [sic] persisting in trying to ‘rise above’ what makes us people in the first place.”

That last paragraph, linking human nature to the benefits of social business, is a good jumping off point as any for how to discuss an online brand strategy with clients. Social Media has often been offered as a panacea, or a “solution” to a “problem” that doesn’t actually exist. Good strategy requires that hard questions be asked of how people, when using the social web, will interact with your brand. What would they naturally do?

What follows is the original post with changes or updates marked as so – [Update] or [Edit]. 18 months is an eternity on the web, but on re-reading this it seems, that with regard to social networking, change has been incremental at best. After all, we are still debating the difference, if there is any, between digital and traditional agencies.

June 2008
These days the advertising and marketing world is all abuzz with phrases such as – Social Media, Social Advertising, Facebook Ads, Mass Media Networking Advertising…..etc, etc.. In the last two weeks I have been a panelist at the L I S A seminar in Portland and the Hawaii MusicTech Conference in Honolulu. L.I.S.A., which is an acronym for Lessons In Social Advertising, was aimed at marketers and advertisers who haven’t yet worked out how to advertise effectively in social networks. It focused on topics such as ‘What is social advertising?’ and ‘How do you get young people to recommend your brand?’ The Hawaii MusicTech panel discussed how musicians could effectively use social networks such as Facebook and MySpace to reach an audience and communicate with them. Two sides of the table as it were. One group wants to advertise, or push, their messages to a mass audience, while the other wants to create a network of like-minded people who hopefully will pull content such as free MP3s and then “evangelize” on behalf of the musicians by spreading messages by electronic word of mouth.

To understand and embrace social networking is to place the idea that says “technology makes this possible” to one side and embrace the idea of the basic human need to stay in touch with other like-minded people at all times. As Clay Shirky says “The desire to be part of a group that shares, cooperates, or acts in concert is a basic human instinct.” Think about rock concerts for a minute….. Those “experts” that take a position on social networking and advertising come at it from a technological point of view, as in “technology has created the means for everyone to be connected and to stay in touch.” I disagree with that statement because it removes nature from the game. It is entirely natural for humans to want to interact as often as possible as we are all social animals. Cities are no more artificial (technological) than the hives of bees, therefore the Internet is as natural as a spider’s web. People who believe that technology is driving our online interactions are missing the point, as John Gray, professor of European thought at LSE has written – “we ourselves are technological devices, invented by ancient bacterial communities as a means of genetic survival.” Bottom line – social networking, [edit] on and offline, is as natural as apple pie as we all want to be as connected as possible – we can’t help it.

To some, online networks might be seen as mere antidotes to boredom at work, school or college, yet these new social networks do more than simply transmit one-way information about their members, they can change behaviour by propagating moods. These days we can all share “news” really fast, even about ourselves – for example, my Facebook or Twitter status might say “I’m heading to the beach in Waikiki…” and the mood that simple statement makes might become very contagious.

The Internet confirms what we have all known for a long time – the world is ruled by the power of suggestion but in the case of social networking it is often “influencers” that lead the suggesting. Then suggestions might become “group think.” John Gray writes – “in evolutionary prehistory, consciousness emerged as a side effect of language. Today it is a by product of media.” [Update N.B. - I prefer the straightforward use of the word media, especially re the social web] So, the question currently being asked by companies and advertisers is “how do we market and advertise to social networks?” Having to ask that question suggests the rocky ground that online advertisers are standing on.
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Beware of Social Media Snake Oil And Those Selling It

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

Toyota Terror Campaign Fails
Toyota’s Social Media “Terror” Campaign Backfires, Ends Badly

Here we have a very timely article from Business Week, that jumps right in and says what many of us surely know – that those so called “social media experts” offer up “advice” that is too rigid and provides little flexibility for differing situations—or outcomes. The mantra is – Be transparent, engage with your customers, break down silos. Yet these strictures don’t always make business sense, nor do they necessarily align with a businesses overall brand strategy. For example the article points to the disastrous Saatchi & Saatchi promotion for the Toyota (TM) Matrix.

Fight’s Rob Shields wrote here recently, Do You Need a Ferrari Or a Freight Train? As he says “Knowing what you are actually trying to do, and how it furthers your business, will help you choose what tactics to engage in.”

Read the Business Week article and then think twice before you buy a ticket to another panel discussion or seminar, where “experts” announce that they will teach you how to use Twitter, build a Facebook Fan page, set up a blog and give you answers to Social Media.

Excerpt from the Business Week article:

“For business, the rising popularity of Facebook, Twitter, and other social media Web sites presents a tantalizing opportunity. As millions of people flock to these online services to chat, flirt, swap photos, and network, companies have the chance to tune in to billions of digital conversations. They can pitch a product, listen to customer feedback, or ask for ideas. If they work it right, customers might even produce companies’ advertising for them and trade the ads with friends for free. Starbucks (SBUX), Dell (DELL), and Ford Motor (F) have all testified to the magic social media can create.

But the same tools carry risks. Employees encouraged to tap social networking sites can fritter away hours, or worse. They can spill company secrets or harm corporate relationships by denigrating partners. What’s more, with one misstep, one clumsy entrée, companies can quickly find themselves victims of the forces they were trying to master. Thousands of bloggers attacked Motrin last year because of an advertisement from the Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) brand they found demeaning to mothers.”

Read the rest of this article.

Dear Musicians – Please Be Brilliant or Get Out of The Way

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Dear Musicians Fight Portland

Towards a New Music Business Model And The New Thinking That Is Required.

The future does not fit in the containers of the past.” – Rishad Tobaccowala

“..we are now in an era where spectatorial culture is giving way to participatory culture”. Henry Jenkins director, Comparative Media Studies Program at MIT.

I give thanks once again to Brian Zisk and his incredibly motivated crew for inviting me to speak at the upcoming SanFranMusicTech event on December 7th in San Francisco, and later at the SXSW Conference in Austin in March 2010. Brian is one of the organizers of SanFranMusicTech and is moderating the panel that I will be on at SXSW. [If you've never attended SanFranMusicTech I would encourage you to do so. It's a wonderful, energetic mix of entrepreneurs, tech experts, musicians and thought leaders in the digital space. In other words it's not just for musicians or techies...] The panel discussions will revolve around the premise of how, or if, musicians are using the tools available to them on the Social Web.

I have written this essay as a prelude to the upcoming panels, both to outline my views on the subject in advance, and also as a way to organize my thoughts and past essays into one place. The debate surrounding online music distribution still evokes passion from critics and supporters alike, the most vocal being musicians who believe that I am working to make music free online and therefore deny them income from CD sales. Nothing could be further from the truth, I simply argue that musicians need to monetize everything around their musical output and stop dreaming that CD sales will one day return to previous levels; where the 2009 equation means 100k is the new 1mm, 10k is the new 100k etc. I should point out for the record that I am focusing almost exclusively on non-mainstream, independent musicians. [Although there is no reason at all that mainstream, commercial artists shouldn't be doing the same thing.]

It Has Been Almost Fifteen Years

It has been more than a decade since I was last fully immersed in the recorded music business [and then only peripherally as GM of eMusic.com,] and I have long held out hope that musicians would ditch the old media model, both the business and the manufacturing sides, and fully embrace the huge possibilities that the unfettered social web allows them – asymmetrical distribution as opposed to old media distribution silos, two-way communication with music fans as opposed to old media PR, and marketing tactics and an unparalleled universal sandbox in which to experiment.

Fact Fight Portland

I am still waiting. Unfortunately my patience is now wearing thin. And my impatience is no longer with the record labels, it’s with the musicians. Despite all the data and untold amounts of writing about the decline in music sales, mainly the fall off of CD sales, musicians appear to be sitting on their hands. The reason I am no longer impatient with record labels is because their business model is transparent – they exist to make money from musicians. On the other hand, musicians are [or ought to be] immersed in their art; no one guarantees a living from the arts, but talk to the average musician about internet music distribution and you will often hear the same refrain – “downloading and file-sharing is killing music and denying me a living..” [BTW, that is not the best argument in the for and against wars of online music distribution; in the USA musicians conveniently forget that MTV and commercial radio is built on the back of musicians and those companies don't pay royalties for that privilege. You can include MySpace in there too.]

I have long argued that musicians need to drop the notion of making money from CD sales through record labels and concentrate on making money from the experiential awareness that surrounds their brand; a brand they own, no one else. The downside to this for musicians is that they need to get organized and work hard, or arrange for what I call the “fifth Beatle” to help with online communications, selling merchandise etc. Consider this from Russell Davies

Creating music is only the first step to creating something valuable and timeless. For instance, David Byrne played a building. Music released as part of an event is the future – Radiohead’s release of In Rainbows was the first step toward the album release as event, if it’s an album at all.. How it’s done is also important. The container has changed forever. Remember what Rishad Tobaccowala has to say to advertising agencies trying to embrace the social web – “The future does not fit in the containers of the past.” It is no different for bands. The organizing principle of recorded music is now in the hands of musicians, not technologists, not record labels. Consider this or perhaps release your music like this.

As I have written before: “Control has moved from the few to the millions of many. If dull labels and dull bands keep offering dull, flat, non-experiential product – e.g. a CD, they will go the way of the Dodo. Consider what Cirque Du Soleil provides as an experience compared to Barnum and Bailey’s circus. Or Burning Man compared to your average music festival.”

Valuable and Timeless – Some Examples

So who is working at the edges of independent rock music for instance? Below are but a few examples of musicians currently providing what I feel is valuable and timeless work; I consider valuable and timeless as ‘worth spending time in the present with,’ as time is our one truly finite resource; art does not necessarily exist to entertain us, it should fill our time with wonder.

From left to right: Karin Dreijer Andersson as Fever Ray, Radiohead‘s 52 minute long ‘Scotch Mist,’ Dirty Projectors Stillness Is The Move video, Sunn 0))) live as reviewed by Sasha Frere-Jones, Patti Smith, back in the 70′s performing Horses on British TV and DJ Spooky performing on Earth Day in Washington, DC. [I know I'm walking on thin ice here as music taste, as with one's taste in art, is highly subjective, but...] Click on the images to link to content.

Fever Ray Radiohead Scotch Mist Dirty Projectors Sun 0))) Patti Smith DJ Spooky
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