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Low Information Fans

Daniel_ek_chairGuest post by Lucas Gonze (@lucas_gonze) for sidewinder.fm, a music and tech think tank. 

In a recent interview, Daniel Ek, the founder and CEO of Spotify, addressed critics of their artist payouts. 

“They’re saying, oh, they’re just paying a fraction of a cent every time someone plays a song,” says Ek to Quartz, a digital news outlet. “And then you compare it versus the download revenue. Well, I can tell you it will take you 200 song listens before you make the same amount of money [as a download]."

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I made a playlist for putting my two year old son to sleep, but he isn’t interested in the whole thing. There are three and only three songs he wants. Over and over again, on repeat, 60 minutes a night, every night, month after month. My six month old’s taste is even less adventurous — the only thing he hears is the same white noise for babies track, looped all night long.

If you’re the artist who made those tracks, you are pleasing an audience which is inclined to big big play counts, and if you’re an artist who appeals to people who need more variety, you’ll have lower play counts. Two artists with the exact same number of regular fans can have very different play counts.

Two year olds are a great demographic, it turns out. Also kids of all kinds, up through the tweens. Also adults who don’t know a lot of music and tend to re-listen to the same things.

This sweet spot in the market is low information listeners, along the same lines as low information voters:

Low information voters, also known as LIVs or “misinformation voters”, are people who may vote, but who are generally poorly informed about politics.

Not only do artists who appeal to low information listeners get big play counts in absolute terms, they get big ratios. You only have so much listening time in the day, and you can only listen to one song at a time. Every song played crowds out another.

I share my Rdio account with my sons, and my taste is broad. But the artists I listen to, even the ones I love the most, only get a tiny share of my monthly $10. At most I play a track ten times in a month.

Well, except that my older son just started obsessing on a song that I had on for myself. Here’s hoping we can move on from the car song.

Sidewinder.fm is founded and edited by Kyle Bylin of Live Nation Labs. If you would like to contribute a post to be featured on the site, please reach out.

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6 Comments

  1. John Cage 4’33” was my favorite one-track loop, but then the release of 18’20” by Nixon came along.
    My nephew over-played “Johnny B. Goode” by Chuck Berry for a year. Cute as hell.

  2. Correct me if I’m wrong a low information voter is a slag on the voter. To the carry the metaphor to it’s conclusion he is saying listener are stupid?

  3. Awesome post Lucas. Good analogy with low information voters – although I think the consequences of low information voters effects everyone else whereas the consequences of low information listeners effects only the listener (and the royalty earners as you point out). If only it were the same with the voters (sigh).

  4. Nelson, I don’t think my two year old is stupid, I think that he’s two. And I think stupid people (for example, people on drugs) are often really into music, and not at all low information.
    Mike, nice insight turning around the beneficiaries. I mean, I think that the impact of low information listeners is very broad. For example, Pandora volume beats Spotify’s partly because it serves low information listeners better.

  5. Kev, I thought Rose Mary Wood’s remix of the Cage piece was sparking, brilliant, incandescent with creativity.

  6. I’m an obsessive person and I even sometimes like to zone out when listening to some of my “jams” or songs with great lyrics, are generally inspiring or soothing, so… Yeah, I’m a chronic repeater (and it sometimes bewilders my hon) but I do have many faves that definitely get their own time … and I’m not ALWAYS like this.
    But yeah… You’ve sold Spotify on me. I just re-downloaded it. (I hated it after a second try #1, haha.)
    Question; what about artist repeats, vs. just song? I’m currently comparing two versions of an Ellie Goulding song though I downloaded a bit more for repeating.
    I figure I’ll load Spotify when I want to do my crazy thang or for new songs I don’t have yet. … And to test things out; cool.
    Also, what about my library songs vs. the “starred” ones? Could I potentially “give” beyond the mp3 or CD investment??
    Now I see, apparently, track repeat is not a feature. That won’t end up working out. Boo, hiss. 😉
    Anyway, I don’t think I’m a low info fan!!! I’m a fledgling musician, too. :-\
    I think a low info listener would be someone who never considers beyond the radio.

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