Music Discovery Channels and The $1M Question
The first five items in the “top ten list” of mobile music downloads usually represent about 40% of all downloads. This outstanding figure raises two paramount questions asked by all players in the music industry: how do people discover new music and how can the players help people discover more and more? For the players in the music industry, discovering more music means consuming more. So how do we really get exposed to new music?
One of the main channels for exposure to new information as well as to new music is the mass media. In other words, who hasn’t listened to the radio while driving and got to hear the new single released by the most popular artist? Another channel of exposure is recommendations. Everyone has a "broker" in his social network, who is someone that really knows music and recommends new music and music worth listening to. Brokers are regarded as unbiased, authentic and reliable. Brokers are people that you trust and like their taste and they can be friends, broadcasters, or even music critics...
So heading to the million dollar question, how can these channels be leveraged to promote more mobile music? The first example of leveraging mass media to discover music comes from South Korea. Korean operators invested in new technologies in order to create a more convenient user experience for buying ringback tones. Both KTF and SKT use QR codes. QR codes are 2D codes which are published in newspapers, bus stops, billboards etc’ and contain information which is captured with a cameraphone (like in the illustration above). The cameraphone reads the information stored in the QR code and the user gets his\her new ringback tone (for a commercial of QR codes follow this link to Youtube). The second example is using video clips on a music channel. While the clip is playing, a bubble of information appears on the screen offering the viewers to get this song as their new ringback tone by sending a short code via SMS. Both examples leverage existing user behavior as well as impulsive buying.
A more “techie” channel of exposure is through several web based applications. These applications are actually the technological equivalent of the recommendation mechanism mentioned above. By this I refer to many cool companies like Pandora and Musicovery that developed web tools to discover new music based on tagging, categorizing (Pandora’s music genome project is really worthy of note) and community’s recommendations (usually done by ranking). Musicovey took it a step further with links to iTunes and Amazon.
In the mobile arena, one of the pioneers is MyStrands which just launched its Social Player last week. MyStrands offers a “music player for mobile devices (Symbian Series 60, 3rd edition) with two main characteristics: it is a music discovery tool and a strong community builder”. As a music discovery tool, it provides real-time recommendations of songs that are similar to the currently-playing song. Also, 30′ clips of the recommended songs can be streamed to the mobile device, and users can always learn more about the songs on MyStrands mobile website. To watch MyStrands' demo and more just follow this link.
Hopefully, in the future we will see more of these discovery applications in the mobile arena. If operators and content aggregators would enter this field, we could enjoy a wide range of new services. Imagine getting exposed to new music through the mobile and then being able to set it as a ringback tone in just one click…


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