While superfans have traditionally sought to develop a personal connection with artists, the "shuffle age" of streaming has brought with it the streaming superfan, who instead seeks to continuously broaden their musical knowledge base as a means of increasing their social capital and confidence in their own tastes.
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Guest Post by Cherie Hu, this first appeared on on Forbes.comThe latest statistics on the behavior of streaming subscribers are upending conventional understandings of how and why we consume music.Last week, media and technology analysis firm MIDiA Research released an infographic on streaming users’ listening habits. According to the graphic, 58% of streaming subscribers listen to an individual album or track only a few times, while 60% of subscribers engage in this behavior due to the desire to discover more new music. These numbers are significantly higher compared to the 30% and 27%, respectively, of overall music consumers with those attitudes, implying that paying subscribers tend to exhibit more casual listening behavior.These findings put into question historical understandings of music fandom, and have particular urgency in today’s music landscape where streaming revenues are surpassing physical sales for the first time. Indeed, streaming is one of the fastest-growing music formats today: the 2014 Nielsen Music U.S. Report declared record levels of on-demand audio streaming in 2014 at 78.6 billion streams, a 60% increase from 2013. Spotify itself has over 20 million paying subscribers as of June 2015, a 100% increase from the previous year.Although features like these demonstrate Spotify’s data-mining prowess and leverage streaming users’ predictive power of artist popularity, they do not effectively foster closer artist-fan relationships in tandem with their tastemaker cultivation. While the streaming superfan becomes stronger, the artist superfan becomes weaker. A Spotify user may take on the role of influencer and successfully expand the reach of this “Find Them Next” playlist to a further audience, only to lose interest and dive into a separate discovery cycle with another roster of emerging artists. In the crowded music-streaming world, the earliest customers are not necessarily the most devoted.In addition, in an economy of attention and abundance, monetary investment is akin to personal and emotional investment. As subscribers are investing money in streaming services, therefore, it is these services, not the artists behind them, who may actually come to hold more emotional power in the industry. This leads to a critical gap where users find value in the opportunities for discovery and tastemaking that streaming platforms provide, but cannot go beyond those platforms to access the artists who are, in many cases, in more dire financial need.Given the increasing popularity of paid streaming and the fleeting behavior of its users, how can we retain traditional superfan engagement and restore emotional power to creators? Below are three solutions which the mainstream music industry has tackled with mixed success, and must continue to pursue.
- Increase opportunities for direct artist-fan engagement on streaming services. As previously stated, artist superfandom necessitates bidirectional conversation to foster more intimacy; by incorporating an artist-fan conversation platform into services like Spotify, the two forms of superfandom can coexist. Apple AAPL +0.00% attempted to make this symbiosis a reality with its Connect feature on Apple Music, but has faced criticism for erring on the more one-directional side—artists seemed to be using the platform solely for concert or album promotion purposes, leaving little incentive or opportunity for engagement in the other direction.
- Enable listeners to subscribe directly to artists, not just to intermediary platforms. Investing a larger portion of money directly in artists would increase long-term emotional commitment on the part of fans, while maintaining the familiarity and convenient regularity of a subscription model as well as increasing artists’ financial empowerment. Examples of existing products in this space include Patreon (users pledge to pay a fixed amount of money for each product a given artist releases) and Drip (monthly subscriptions to select artists and artist collectives).
- Use streaming data intelligently to identify genuine artist superfans. In some ways, the vast influx of streaming data makes it easier to pinpoint outliers and true superfans who stream a particular artist or album much more than average, subsequently allowing services to deliver personalized advertising to these superfans. The Bandpage/Rhapsody partnership, whose targeted, timed push-notification messaging to fans has reported a 50% higher engagement rate, is a successful example of using insights from data to cater to a diverse range of streaming users.
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