Lady Gaga Says $0.99 Albums Make Sense, Especially For Digital
from the understanding-how-this-works dept
You may have heard that Amazon did a deal recently with Lady Gaga, in which it offered up her entire new album for $0.99. While Amazon did have some technical difficulties in making this work, it resulted in some mindless criticism, in places, that Gaga was “devaluing” her own work. We hear this argument all the time, when it comes to free music, as well — where people suggest that giving away music “devalues” the music. This shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the difference between price and value. Just because something is cheap, it doesn’t mean that the value is diminished.
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, where Lady Gaga is asked directly about this issue, she almost seems offended, and notes that, especially when it comes to digital, pricing an album at $0.99 is perfectly reasonable, since it helps spread the music. After being asked if she thought her album was “worth” more than $0.99, she emphatically replied:
“No. I absolutely do not, especially for MP3s and digital music. It?s invisible. it?s in space. If anything, I applaud a company like Amazon for equating the value of digital versus the physical copy, and giving the opportunity to everyone to buy music.”
This isn’t too surprising, given Gaga’s previously stated views on her use of free to get her music out there, as well as her encouragement of people to download unauthorized copies. However, it’s nice to see her make this point again.
Now, to be fair, she also notes that Amazon covered “the difference” with these albums as part of a promotion — meaning that she (well, her label) got more than $0.99, but that’s a separate issue than the whole question of the “perception” from giving away the music at such a low price.
Later in the interview, she makes another point that we’ve been making for a while, which is that record labels certainly make sense for some people, but the exciting thing today is that you don’t “need” the label any more. She points out that she certainly needs her label, which is great, but that many artists don’t need to go that route, saying, “not everybody needs a record label” any more. She also points out that the really valuable thing she’s done is build a really strong connection with her fans, and it’s that kind of authentic connection that makes her audience so valuable. These are all points that plenty of us have been making for years, and it’s great to see such a prominent musician making the same points.
Filed Under: business models, economics, free, lady gaga, music
Comments on “Lady Gaga Says $0.99 Albums Make Sense, Especially For Digital”
Lady Gaga just wants free music.
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Yeah, what does she know. It’s not like she’s an artist or anything…
Oh wait…
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Artists are weak and need to be protected by governments and corporations from the public. Why do you hate art?
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She was born into a wealthy family. Money doesn’t have a lot of meaning to her. Must be nice…
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Seriously, where’s her unbridled greed?
Re: Money Smart...
A buck from everyone on the planet 🙂
She should wear a dress made of MP3s at her next concert.
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But then everybody will be able to see his penis…
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Technically, you can be XX and still have a penis. Besides, who cares? IT’s the show we’re here for!
Of course she doesn't care
Last I heard, Lady Gaga is one of those artists that has a 360 deal. If I am correct in my understanding, her label is willing to lose a little on recording sales because they get a chunk of EVERYTHING she does.
But it is nice to here her speak out for reasonable priced music. The industry probably wants a million more Gagas ( they just wish they could price her higher ).
Re: Of course she doesn't care
Her label didn’t lose anything. It was Amazon that took the lose, but that was done on purpose to prompt their Cloud service. So, in reality, everyone (Gaga, the label, and Amazon) made out.
Re: Re: Of course she doesn't care
But she’s bankrupt now though…
Re: Re: Re: Of course she doesn't care
No. Supposedly she got herself in a lot of debt extending her tour the first time, but she has plenty of money. She’s friggin number 4 on the Forbes celebrity list, ahead of Tiger Woods.
http://www.forbes.com/2010/06/22/lady-gaga-oprah-winfrey-business-entertainment-celeb-100-10_land.html
Makes complete sense.
Now just get ebooks in that same range.
Re: Makes complete sense.
Some authors (cough ahem LIKE ME sneeze) do sell eBooks for $.99. In fact, shameless plug aside, the Kindle store is full of them….
Re: Re: Makes complete sense.
I know several people doing very well selling $0.99 ebooks. They’re eating the big publishers’ lunch.
Re: Re: Re: Makes complete sense.
And I know several people selling on kindle who make 2 sales a month, as well as several people with mainstream publishers making high-six figures. Anecdotes FTW!
Re: Re: Makes complete sense.
Can I just paypal you the .99 and have you email it to me? Not a fan of kindle’s reader.
Re: Re: Re: Makes complete sense.
No, but you can go download it for free from DocStoc and then pay the $.99 at Kindle if you think it’s worth it. Would that work for you?
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/78232116/Midwasteland
Re: Re: Re:2 Makes complete sense.
I should also make clear that the highest praise you could give me would be to share this as widely as possible, assuming you like it enough to do so. That includes emailing it to others, pointing people to the DocStoc page via social media, or putting it up as a torrent.
Hell, I’d gladly give you explicit written permission to do so…
Re: Re: Re:3 Makes complete sense.
Hell, I’d gladly give you explicit written permission to do so…
I’ll just point ’em to this comment 😛
I’ve tried DocStoc. Holy cow. Can’t get past the “sign up for premium membership” page. Any tips (or other links?)
Re: Re: Re:4 Makes complete sense.
Wait…really? You can’t DL it w/o signing up for a premium membership? I don’t think that’s right.
Whatever, just email me at tim at diggrp.com and let me know what form you’d like it in (PDF/EPUB/DOC/DOCX)…
Re: Re: Re:5 Makes complete sense.
You might be able to get it without a premium account, but they’ve made it pretty tough if you can. You should maybe consider doing your own page with a tip jar.
Email sent.
Re: Re: Re:6 Makes complete sense.
responded….
Re: Re: Re:6 Makes complete sense.
This.
I hate to say she has a brain on her, but that’s just me being biased and irritated towards her music. Either She or her management knows how to drive a pop market; music is the advertising, concerts are the income, so might as well push that crap out for free.
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Why should you begrudge her having intelligence just because you have differing tastes than she?
Her album didn’t stay priced at 99 cents. Temporarily lowering the price to garner attention doesn’t amount to something worth noticing here. If she’d permanently lowered the album prices of her entire catalog to 99 cents she’d be making good her word.
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You forget, she probably doesn’t really own her albums. She (It?) seems to know that digital albums are priced too high from her comments. But you can blame that on her label.
Yes, but she also is overreaching with copyright law to control how photographers take pictures of her. http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/photographers-respond-to-lady-gagas-new-copyright-demands-20110307
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I don’t see the problem with what she’s been doing. I mean its not like its a public event, or a private event set up by the photographer. Granted what she is asking is a little difficult to control in regards to the thousands in the audience, however it does limit the access granted for up close photography. However the event is a private (purchased access) event, arrange by, and performed by Lady Gaga (by Lady Gaga in this statement I mean her, her producers, and her support staff). They arrange the lighting, they arrange the costumes, they arrange the poses, and yet a unrelated photographer has the right to snap a picture and claim rights to the picture even though all of the creative work is done by Lady Gaga and her crew?
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This exact attitude is one of the recurring problems in these debates. You say ALL of the creative work is done by someone else, but that seems to devalue the photographer’s role. It can be very difficult to get that perfect frozen moment in time and a good photographer knows how to capture that, and it certainly can be hard work. I am sure the photographer thinks that the PHOTOGRAPHER does all of the work, and would exclude Lady Gaga and her crew. That doesn?t seem fair either. So many people seem to overvalue the work of one party ( usually themselves) and undervalue the work of another. Maybe it would make more sense to SHARE the credit for the creative work.
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While Lady Gaga?s attitude on labels may seem forward looking and her attitude toward these photographers may seem draconian and thus opposite, both may be related to an underlying idea ? the idea that some artists have no need for labels and that some artists also have no need for photographers. Artists can do it all on their own now. Or at least some can.
Lady Gaga is pretty smart for a guy.
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as a fellow member of /d/ I’m ok with this.
Bravo Gaga, record labels you listening up??
The biggest and top selling artist in the world right now is telling you what we’ve been saying all along.
The change is coming!
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Too bad the 99 cent version is censored by Amazon. I’m willing to wait for it to be at the used CD store to get it without the amazon nannyism.
Good For Lady Gaga
I agree with the queen of freak herself: digital content should be cheap! Cheap!! CHEAP!!!
They’ll make it all back on the tours.
She sold more than a million copies of her latest album, and I doubt very highly that more than a small percentage were sold at a low price. She can talk all she wants, but the reality is that her albums are priced like everyone else’s.
The only difference? She’s a total media whore and knows how to get coverage everywhere, including here.
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Wait, artists shouldn’t promote themselves? You ACs will bitch and moan about anything in your clueless attempts to vomit a relevant point.
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You highly doubt a small percentage were sold at $0.99?
I guess that makes perfect sense. I mean, if I wanted to buy an album, I probably wouldn’t buy it at the cheapest price point available, you know, because I’m not a human being.
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I doubt very highly that more than a small percentage were sold at a low price. I suspect that would be a special, a limited number, a limited time, etc. Basically, most people would have paid a price in the range of $15 for the same thing.
You would want the low price point, but I doubt very many people actually got it.
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Wrong. When the promotion was over, the price went up to $6.99.
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Hits Daily Double credited the bulk of Gaga’s first-week digital sales to the Amazon deal. http://www.hitsdailydouble.com/news/newsPage.cgi?news08553
Gaga’s a guy?! Noooooo!!!!!!!!!
She knows she doesn't get paid on album sales
From my understanding, she (or any artist) doesn’t get paid all the much on album sales so getting the music out there will fill her concerts where she does get paid. Sounds like she understands the value of free and the new business models around it.
there was an article on NPR this morning that had more information as well. It even dips into some CwF +RtB
http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2011/06/02/136852702/born-this-way-and-the-end-of-the-album-as-we-knew-it
btw, 440,000 of those 1 million copies were the $0.99 amazon downloads. not to shabby.
Value vs Price vs Worth
Price vs Value is something mentioned frequently here. I’d like to replace “value” with the new term “Worth”, and use its to come to a better understanding of how all three work together in a way that helps explain what’s going on with digital goods.
Now, we can define “Worth” as the total benefit (including both monetary and other benefits) to an individual or society. Clearly, cultural works like music, art, and film have great worth to our society.
Price is, of course, separate from Worth. In fact, Price for a work should _always_ be less than the Worth of a good (but perhaps somewhat more than it cost to produce). If a good were not worth at least the price, no one would buy it.
From the perspective of the consumer, “Value”, then, is the difference between Worth and Price. The greater the difference, the more Valuable the good is to the consumer.
I say all this because it speaks directly to the idea the a low price for an album devalues it. In fact, we see here that the opposite is true: lowering the price of an album _increases_ the value created from the work.
I really don’t like her music or image but I have to give kudos on this. We need more musicians to come clean on this topic.
Boycott the RIAA
HIGH prices that devalue products
When you set a price tag on an infinitely reproducible collection of bits, You are essentially removing any potential value from the product in the eyes of the consumer, making it undesirable because of it’s unnatural price. It’s HIGH prices that devalue products, not low ones.
Re: HIGH prices that devalue products
So you’re essentially saying that selling digital goods for ANY price makes it worthless? This is very much the opposite of true, or at the very least, not true for everyone. Many people, myself included, are perfectly comfortable paying for mp3s. Now obviously there DO need to be price considerations, but saying “charging makes it worthless” is silly.
Re: Re: HIGH prices that devalue products
Yes.
Re: Re: Re: HIGH prices that devalue products
Do you have any evidence to support this, or are you just talking out your ass? For instance, the fact that tons of people buy digital mp3s and ebooks seem to suggest that a pricetag does not, in fact, make digital goods “worthless,” at least to many people.
Unless you’re trying to argue that they’re worthless because you can’t resell them, which is a hilariously poor argument, as people have paid for unresellable services since the beginning of time.
Re: Re: Re:2 HIGH prices that devalue products
Technically speaking, they are ‘priceless’, as in, they have no price. This is not the same as having no value. The value can often be in the way the product intersects.
As an example, I’ll use Good Old Games. They sell older videogames and try and ensure compatibility with modern tech. Now, for most of these games, there is no DRM. However, there is a premium, and the items are all in one place. The value here is convenience.
Re: Re: Re:2 HIGH prices that devalue products
OK, sure. check out the above poster’s comment on value v. worth v. price, value should be what satisfaction you experience paying for an item, worth should be what it means to you and how you can exploit it, price is what is set by the seller. In an era where a digital network reduces the price and worth to just north of zero, crazy things happen in the calculation of value, you can still exploit infinite value from a priceless item, it’s not anything new, radio figured this out 50 years ago. look at craigslist, 99.99% of their “product” is free, but it has tremendous value, they still manage to PRINT money. every album gaga gives away for free, increases the value of the concert ticket, which in not infinitely reproducible, therefore increasing the demand in the marketplace, and affecting the price.
From the article:
“Just for perspective, that means a larger number of people bought Born This Way for 99 cents from Amazon last week than have bought any album at all, in all formats combined, in any single week all year long.”
Hopefully we start to see more albums priced like this.
Good Gaga
Well, while she looks ridiculous to these tired middle aged eyes, and that name! But the girl’s got some brains under her fluff.
Had to laugh at the idiot interviewing her; he sounded so appalled at the 99 cent deal. LOL
To me her music has zero value as I’ve only just heard of her about 2 weeks ago and am not at all interested (yeah, I know, never mind…) but more power to her. May she never travel the path of Brittany Spears.
Lady Junk
is what’s under the hood and she’s definitely thinking like a consumer regarding the music.
A world without music would be like a world without air to breathe, absolutely unlivable.
Last I checked, air is still free.
Makes complete sense.
Hear! Hear! Charging more than $10 for an e-book seems like a rip-off. And considering how much I read, costs me a good chunk of change.
$0.99 albums certainly make sense…. if Amazon is paying the difference!
Saying artists don’t need labels is fine when you’re signed to Universal – who sealed deals with Amazon, Farmville, Best Buy and HBO to promote your new album.