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Guest post by Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0Many artists and industry execs may think that the Billboard charts are less relevant than they’ve ever been, but they’re still used as a measurement of success no matter how you look at it. That’s why it’s long been argued that the way that the charts count streams is insufficient. It appears that’s changing soon as the company has instituted a different way to measure streams to make the charts both fairer and a more useful way of determining just how successful a song or album is.According to Billboard, “Currently, Billboard has two defined types of streaming plays for the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart (and our other genre-specific hybrid songs charts): on-demand (such as Amazon Music, Apple Music, Spotify and YouTube) and programmed (such as Pandora and Slacker Radio), with on-demand having a greater weight. The Billboard 200 albums chart — and our other genre-based consumption-ranked albums charts — uses a single tier (equating 1,500 streams as one album unit) for on-demand audio streams (paid or ad-supported) from subscription services. Video streams and programmed audio streams do not contribute to the Billboard 200’s calculations, but are incorporated into the Hot 100.”Essentially, what that means is that streams are all measured the same regardless of if they’re from a free or paid subscription tier.As of the week of June 29th, streams on the Hot 100 will rate subscription streams with a full point value per play, ad-supported streams will receive a 2/3-point value per play, and programmed streams (like from Pandora or satellite radio) representing a 1/2-point value per play).Related articles








